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Charlene Richard
Charlene Richard
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Charlene Marie Richard (January 13, 1947 – August 11, 1959) was a twelve-year-old Catholic Cajun girl from Richard, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, (30°25′18″N 92°18′46″W / 30.421788°N 92.3127187°W / 30.421788; -92.3127187) in the United States. She has become the focus of a popular belief that she has performed a number of miracles. Local Catholic clergy and diocesan officials permitted, promoted, and participated in the popular veneration of Richard for years prior to her being named a Servant of God.[1][2][3]

Key Information

Life and final illness

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Charlene was the second-oldest of ten children born to Joseph Elvin and Mary Alice Richard. Adults and children who knew her considered her to be smart but otherwise unremarkable. She was a devout Catholic but no more so than was customary in the local Cajun community.[1] Richard's mother said, "She liked sports and was always busy with something. She went to church and said her rosary, but she was just a normal little girl."[4] In May 1959, after reading a book about St. Therese of Lisieux[Note 1] Charlene asked her grandmother whether she, too, could become a saint by praying like St. Therese.[1]

After reporting appearances of a tall woman in black who vanishes, and her teacher recommending that she was not herself, her mother took her to a physician.[5] As a result, only two weeks before her death she was diagnosed with acute lymphatic leukemia and hospitalized at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Lafayette, Louisiana.[2][6] At the request of her family, she was informed by the hospital chaplain, Joseph Brennan, a newly ordained Catholic priest, that she was going to die.[7] the priest introduced her to the Catholic doctrine of redemptive suffering.[8] Though the illness was painful, she remained cheerful, meekly accepted her fate, and offered up her suffering to God.[2] Fr Brennan was deeply impressed by her faith and visited her daily.[2] While dying, Charlene prayed for other individuals to be healed or to be converted to Catholicism.[1][2] The Director of Pediatrics at the hospital, Theresita Crowley, a Catholic nun, also witnessed her calm acceptance of suffering and prayers for others. Fr Brennan and Sister Theresita have testified that those for whom Richard prayed recovered from their illnesses or became Catholic.[1] Charlene died on August 11, 1959, and was buried in Richard, Louisiana.[2]

Before her death, Fr Brennan and Sister Theresitay began telling people about Charlene Richard, and the girl's family became aware that there was a belief that she was "special".[1] Fr Floyd J. Calais, a Catholic priest who was at the time the chaplain of Charity Hospital in Lafayette, was a close friend of Fr Brennan. In 1961, Fr Calais began praying to Charlene Richard to be assigned to a parish.[9] He was assigned to St. Edwards parish in Richard, Louisiana — Charlene Richard's burial place—that same year. Once there, he discovered the need to raise money to build a new church there. Calais says that he was "invited to retreats and recollections, and began speaking about Charlene, how she achieved grace before she died" and about the need for money to build a new church in the parish. "People started going to her grave," he said, "and began sending checks to build the church. What I thought would take 8–10 years took 2 1/2."[2][Note 2]

As early as the late 1960s and by 1972 at the latest, prayer cards marked "for private devotion only" with a photograph of Charlene Richard, a prayer to her, and a prayer for her beatification were in circulation and xerographic copies were frequently being sent to individuals in need of help. A 1975 series of articles about Richard in the newspaper of the Lafayette diocese spread the cult and were republished in a booklet, Charlene, A Saint from Southwest Louisiana, in 1979. Testimonials by individuals who believed that they had benefited by prayer to Charlene were added and the booklet was again republished in 1988.[1] A widespread belief formed in the area that Charlene Richard would intercede in heaven for people's prayers to be answered.[10]

By 1989, the belief had spread outside the Cajun area.[7] Hundreds of people were visiting Richard's grave each week, which had been illuminated so visits could occur in the evening and a box had been provided in which to leave written petitions to Charlene Richard.[4][11] On the thirtieth anniversary of her death that year, an outdoor Mass was held there which was attended by four thousand people and which was covered by Louisiana television stations and the Cable News Network, and was reported in newspapers in Louisiana, Dallas, Houston, Miami, Orlando, Albany, and Seattle.[1][4][7][9][11][12][13][14][15] The media coverage resulted in knowledge of Richard spreading world-wide, with interest in her expressed in Yugoslavia, Croatia, Australia, and Africa.[1] Approximately a thousand people attended anniversary Masses there in both 1991 and 1999, with about 400 attending in 2007, and thousands come to her grave each year, including chartered buses from New Orleans.[10][16][17]

Position of the Catholic Church

[edit]

Though no beatification process had begun for Richard, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Lafayette began collecting in 1991 testimonials about reputed help obtained through her.[16] Unlike the traditional support for beatification, which begins with popular devotion and is only later recognized by the church, support for Richard began outside her immediate home area and was first promoted by the clergy, beginning with Brennan, Crowley, and Calais. The bishop of the Lafayette diocese at the time of her death, Maurice Schexnayder, visited her grave multiple times and referred to her as a saint.[1] Another bishop of the diocese, Harry Flynn, presided at the thirtieth anniversary Mass in 1989, along with sixteen other priests.[9] The diocese also approved the creation of a private organization, the Friends of Charlene, to spread her story.[16]

In January 2020, Bishop J. Douglas Deshotel of the Diocese of Lafayette opened the cause of Richard's beatification during a Saturday Mass at the Immaculata Center in Lafayette, along with Arnaudville teacher and evangelist Auguste Nonco Pelafigue. Following the mass, Richard and Pelafigue were officially named Servant of God.[18][3]

On November 17, 2021, the USCCB meeting in Baltimore, Maryland voted to advance the cause of Charlene's beatification and canonization.[19]

Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Charlene Marie Richard (January 13, 1947 – August 11, 1959) was an American Cajun Catholic girl from the rural community of Richard in . The second eldest of ten children born to a father and a home nurse mother in a bilingual French-English household, she lived a simple life marked by strong faith and community involvement until her death at age twelve from acute lymphatic . Affectionately called the "Little Cajun Saint," Richard is recognized as a in the , venerated for offering her physical sufferings to God in union with Christ's Passion for the conversion of sinners and the healing of others. Her cause for and , opened in 2020, has advanced significantly, with the Vatican approving an investigation into her life and heroic virtues by mid-2025. Richard's early years were typical of a devout Cajun family in 1950s , in a rural community named after her ancestors, who were among the Acadian settlers who arrived in in 1764. An active parishioner at St. Edward Catholic Church, she received her First Holy Communion, attended regularly, and showed deep devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary by placing flowers near the family . Known among peers for her kindness, she captained the girls' basketball team at Acadia Parish Middle School and courageously stood up to bullies, earning admiration as an ordinary yet exemplary child. Inspired by St. , the "Little Flower," Richard embraced a of small sacrifices and love for God amid everyday rural life. In early 1959, at age twelve, Richard was diagnosed with acute lymphatic and hospitalized in , where she spent her final months. Despite severe pain, she prayed the daily, received frequent Holy Communion, and explicitly offered her suffering for others' spiritual and physical healing, telling visitors she wanted to go to heaven to help people from there. She died peacefully on August 11, 1959, and was buried at St. Edward Church, where her grave has since become a site of pilgrimage drawing thousands annually for reported healings and answered prayers. Following her death, accounts of miracles attributed to her , such as the 2024 healing of an unborn with severe prenatal diagnoses after a and pilgrimage to her gravesite, have fueled devotion and supported her sainthood cause. By August 2025, marking the 66th anniversary of her death, the Vatican had reviewed over 1,000 pages of documentation and positioned her cause "very close" to declaring her , the step requiring proof of before a for . If successful, Richard would become Louisiana's first canonized , symbolizing how works through humble, everyday lives in the American South.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Charlene Marie Richard was born on January 13, 1947, in the small rural community of , located in . She was the second of ten children born to Joseph Elvin , a sharecropper who worked the land in the area's rice and crawfish fields, and Mary Alice Matte Bourgeois , who served as a home nurse. The family belonged to a devout Cajun Catholic lineage of Acadian descent, tracing their roots to 18th-century ancestors who founded the hamlet of in 1764 amid the boggy farmlands of southern Louisiana's region. The Richards resided in a modest in this tight-knit, French-speaking community, where daily life revolved around agricultural labor and . Post-World War II Cajun was characterized by rural economies centered on farming and , with families like the Richards navigating economic challenges through and communal support amid a cultural resurgence of , language, and customs such as zydeco dances and watermelon gatherings. The household emphasized , with the family speaking French at and gathering nightly to pray the before a , of the Virgin Mary, and family . As a newborn, Charlene was baptized shortly after her birth into the Catholic faith at St. Edward Church, the wooden WWII-era parish in that served as the spiritual heart of the community, surrounded by oak trees and adjacent to local pastures. This early integration into the parish reflected the deep-rooted Catholic practices of her Acadian heritage, setting the foundation for her upbringing in a faith-centered rural environment.

Childhood and Community

Charlene Richard grew up in the rural community of Richard, Louisiana, in Acadia Parish, attending Catholic school until second grade and then Richard Elementary School through sixth grade. She was known as a diligent student who rarely missed classes, engaging in standard elementary subjects such as reading, arithmetic, and basic history, while participating in school plays and summer programs at nearby St. Edward Church. Extracurricular activities included sports like softball and basketball, where she excelled enough to captain the girls' team at Acadia Parish Middle School, reflecting her energetic and competitive spirit. Her everyday experiences were typical of a Cajun childhood in 1950s southwest , filled with playtime alongside her nine siblings, including imaginative games like pretending to celebrate with her brother John Dale. The family enjoyed simple outdoor pursuits such as horseback riding and baking cookies together, often gathering for meals that highlighted local Cajun traditions like rice-based dishes and when available. Community events in Acadia Parish revolved around family-oriented festivals and church fairs, where music and dancing were central, drawing from the area's strong musical heritage. These gatherings fostered a sense of shared rural life amid the flat prairies and rice fields, emphasizing humility and mutual support among neighbors. In the tight-knit farming community of , Charlene interacted easily with peers, earning affectionate nicknames like "" for her lively, sometimes mischievous personality, and she was unafraid to stand up to bullies. As the second of ten children in a family, she contributed to household chores while embodying an unassuming cheerfulness that endeared her to friends and family alike. Around age 10, her family relocated from nearby Church Point to during her year, allowing her to immerse fully in the more rural environment and local activities. This adjustment highlighted the close proximity of Acadia Parish communities, all within the broader Lafayette-area cultural sphere, where French-Cajun language and traditions persisted alongside English. The family's strong Catholic influence subtly shaped her early through daily prayers and at St. Edward, integrating faith into community life without overshadowing her ordinary joys.

Illness and Death

Diagnosis and Medical Course

In the summer of , Charlene Richard, then 12 years old, began exhibiting initial symptoms of illness, including unusual and a departure from her typically energetic demeanor. Her mother, Mary Alice Richard, promptly consulted a local physician, who conducted examinations leading to further medical evaluation. In July 1959, Charlene was formally diagnosed with acute lymphatic leukemia (also known as acute lymphoblastic leukemia), a rapidly progressing cancer affecting the lymphoid tissue and bloodstream. The family decided to seek specialized care, resulting in her hospitalization at in , on July 27, where treatment commenced. Medical interventions included , though in 1959, such treatments offered limited efficacy for this disease, with overall survival rates under 10 percent for pediatric cases. The disease advanced swiftly over the following weeks, marked by intensifying symptoms such as severe pain, persistent fatigue, and recurrent infections that weakened her condition further. Despite the family's ongoing consultations with doctors and commitment to the hospital regimen, Charlene's health deteriorated progressively until her death on August 11, 1959, sixteen days after admission. During her treatment, spiritual guidance from Fr. Joseph Brennan provided some familial support amid the medical challenges.

Final Days and Demise

In late 1959, Charlene Richard was admitted to Hospital in , where she remained bedridden as her acute lymphatic progressed, causing increasing pain over the subsequent weeks. Her condition deteriorated rapidly during this period, confining her to the hospital bed and requiring medical care under the supervision of attending physicians. On August 11, 1959, Richard died at 7:35 p.m. from complications of leukemia, surrounded by her immediate family members at the hospital. Despite the severe pain she endured, she maintained a calm demeanor in her final moments. Funeral services for Richard were held at 9 a.m. on August 13, 1959, at St. Edward Catholic Church in Richard, Louisiana, followed by burial in the adjacent St. Edward Cemetery in a simple Catholic rite. Her parents, Joseph Elvin Richard and Mary Alice Richard, along with her nine siblings, experienced profound grief in the immediate aftermath, as did members of the close-knit rural community who attended the services. The local response at the time reflected a mix of sorrow and initial uncertainty, with the funeral drawing family and neighbors but not yet the widespread attention that developed later.

Spiritual Life

Catholic Upbringing and Practices

Charlene Richard was raised in a devout Cajun Catholic in rural Richard, Louisiana, where faith formed the cornerstone of daily life. As the second of ten children born to sharecropper Joseph Elvin Richard and nurse's aide Mary Alice Richard, she grew up immersed in the traditions of Acadiana's Catholic community. The family regularly attended at St. Edward Church, their local , often going three times a week in addition to Sundays, which reinforced their communal worship and sacramental participation. Central to their home life were Cajun Catholic practices such as nightly family prayers and recitations of the , which Charlene kept by her bedside alongside her . These routines, passed down through generations, included devotion to Our Lady, evidenced by Charlene placing flowers near a home prayer table, and participation in local feast days that blended faith with cultural heritage. At around age seven, Charlene received her at St. Edward Church, a milestone that deepened her engagement with the sacraments and marked her early commitment to the Church. Signs of Charlene's budding piety emerged in her pre-teen years through involvement in children's classes at the parish, where she absorbed teachings on scripture and saints. She aspired to serve as an , often playing with her brother John Dale at home, and eagerly read religious books, including the story of St. Thérèse of Lisieux, which inspired her personal relationship with . Guidance from her family—such as her grandmother's encouragement to "do our best"—and local priests further nurtured this faith, fostering a joyful spirituality that later informed her response to illness.

Offering of Suffering

During her hospitalization, Charlene Richard was profoundly influenced by the teachings of Fr. Joseph Brennan, the hospital , who introduced her to the Catholic concept of —the idea of uniting one's personal pain with the Passion of Christ to participate in the redemption of others. This doctrine, rooted in passages like Colossians 1:24 where St. Paul speaks of completing "what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake of his body, the church," resonated deeply with Charlene, who had received a solid foundation in Catholic faith through her early education and family practices. Charlene consciously embraced her illness as an opportunity for spiritual offering, expressing a desire to "offer up" her sufferings for the benefit of others, including the conversion of sinners and the of the sick. Each day, she would ask Fr. Brennan, "Who shall I offer up my sufferings for today?" and followed his suggestions to pray for specific individuals, such as terminal patients or non-Catholics, many of whom reportedly experienced conversions or recoveries following her . In one notable exchange, when Fr. Brennan gently explained that the Blessed Mother would come for her at the end, Charlene replied with childlike trust, "When the Blessed Mother comes, I will tell her that Father says ‘hello,’" illustrating her serene acceptance and focus on others even in pain. Her interactions reveal poignant anecdotes that highlight this sacrificial mindset; for instance, she requested that those around her pray the not for her relief but for the souls of others, and she once told a member, "Then I will do my best," in response to a suggestion that she could become a through her endurance. Fr. Brennan later reflected on her as a model of , noting that she "wrote the on how to die" by transforming into an act of love. Theologically, Charlene's approach exemplified the mid-20th-century Catholic notion of a "victim soul," a person who voluntarily offers their trials in union with Christ's sacrifice on the for the salvation of the world, as echoed in the (no. 1505) on suffering as a path to redemptive participation in ' saving work. This concept, popularized by figures like St. Thérèse of Lisieux, emphasized that even ordinary individuals could contribute to the Church's mission through patient endurance, a principle Charlene embodied without fanfare.

Veneration and Cause for Sainthood

Posthumous Devotion

Following Charlene Richard's death on August 11, 1959, local families in Richard, Louisiana, began visiting her grave at St. Edward Cemetery almost immediately, leaving flowers as votive offerings and reporting instances of healings attributed to her intercession. These early visits were driven by testimonies from those who knew her, including accounts of physical recoveries and spiritual consolations shared within the tight-knit Cajun community. Clergy such as Father Joseph Brennan and Sister Theresita Crowley noted specific cases where individuals for whom Charlene had prayed during her illness experienced relief from ailments or embraced the Catholic faith. The story of Charlene's faith and suffering spread rapidly through in Cajun , with families recounting her example of around kitchen tables and at community gatherings. This grassroots transmission embedded her narrative in local culture, emphasizing her childlike as a model for enduring hardship. By 1972, xeroxed prayer cards featuring her photograph, a brief , and an intercessory for private devotion were widely distributed, further disseminating her image and encouraging personal petitions. By the , an informal of devotion had grown, marked by annual pilgrimages to her gravesite where devotees left ex-votos such as rosaries and letters alongside flowers. newspapers covered the increasing visits, highlighting stories of answered prayers, while national outlets like later amplified the phenomenon. The devotion peaked visibly at the 1989 thirtieth anniversary at St. Edward Church, which drew approximately 4,000 attendees to honor her memory outdoors near the cemetery. The Richard family played a central role in sustaining this , with Charlene's mother, Mary Alice Richard, preserving family letters and testimonies of intercessions received shortly after her daughter's death. Father Brennan, who had accompanied Charlene during her final days, actively shared accounts of her spiritual influence, documenting how her prayers continued to aid others and encouraging the community's piety through personal anecdotes. This familial and clerical involvement helped maintain the devotion's momentum amid evolving Church processes in the 2010s.

Formal Recognition by the Church

In 2015, the Diocese of Lafayette received a to open the cause for and of Charlene Richard, marking the initial official step toward formal recognition of her holiness. This , supported by local devotees and the Friends of Charlene organization, prompted the diocese to initiate the investigative process required under . Following years of preparation, Bishop J. Douglas Deshotel officially opened the cause on January 11, 2020, during a ceremony at the Immaculata Chapel in , thereby declaring Richard a —the first stage in the path to potential sainthood. The diocesan phase then involved a thorough collection of to assess Richard's exercise of , including interviews with surviving family members, contemporaries, and medical personnel who knew her, as well as examinations of her personal writings, records, and testimonies from her final days. These materials underscored her profound , in suffering, and childlike , aligning with the Church's criteria for sanctity in laypersons. The tribunal, appointed by Bishop Deshotel, ensured compliance with the norms of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, compiling documentation that highlighted her voluntary offering of suffering as a spiritual exemplar. Advancing the cause nationally, the Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) conducted a consultation during their November 2021 plenary assembly in , where the bishops unanimously endorsed the diocesan findings by . This affirmation, presented by Bishop Deshotel, forwarded the case to the Vatican for review by the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints, emphasizing Richard's potential as a model of holiness for modern families and youth. Throughout this foundational phase, the prepared a theological positio—a comprehensive scholarly document synthesizing the evidence of Richard's —with particular focus on her innocent, trusting as a pathway to heroic sanctity, distinct from adult models of . This document, rooted in theological of her life and intercessory devotion, was positioned to support the Vatican's evaluation of her cause.

Progress Toward Canonization

The diocesan phase of the investigation into Charlene Richard's life and virtues concluded on January 13, 2024, during a ceremony at St. Edward Church in Richard, Louisiana, after which the collected documents—comprising thousands of pages of testimonies—were forwarded to the for the Causes of Saints in the Vatican for review toward a potential declaration of heroic virtues and the title of . The Roman phase of the process officially commenced in August 2024 with the opening of these materials in . In 2025, significant advancements continued, with the Vatican formally accepting and approving the diocesan investigation into 's life and virtues in June, as announced by the Diocese of Lafayette. By August 2025, the for the Causes of announced its examination of the submitted evidence, including reports of intercessions, positioning as a candidate who could become the first canonized born in if the process advances fully. This development was highlighted during the annual memorial Mass for on August 11, 2025, at St. Edward Church, where diocesan officials noted she is "very close" to being declared . Under the norms of , the next procedural requirement following a positive judgment on heroic virtues is the verification of at least one attributed to Richard's —such as an inexplicable medical healing—for her , after which a second would be needed for . The Charlene Richard Foundation, established to advocate for her cause, has played a key role in compiling and promoting the evidentiary materials, while the Conference of Catholic Bishops provided early canonical affirmation in 2021 to support the process's progression. This formal momentum builds on the widespread early devotion to Richard that initially prompted the cause's initiation.

Legacy

Cultural and Regional Impact

Charlene Richard has become integrated into Cajun oral traditions as the "Little Cajun Saint," embodying humble faith and resilience amid the rural hardships of southwest Louisiana's Acadia Parish. Her story, originating from personal narratives shared by local clergy and family in the French-speaking community of Richard, Louisiana, has been transmitted through generations via storytelling at family gatherings, church socials, and community events, symbolizing the enduring Cajun spirit of endurance and piety in the face of adversity. Media and artistic representations have further elevated her as a within Cajun culture. Books such as Charlene: A From Southwest (1988) and Charlene: The Little Cajun (2002) by Barbara Lenox Gutierrez document her life and legacy through interviews and local accounts, while a 3.5-hour KSLO radio tape compiles community testimonies. Artistic works include the Cajun CD by musician Ray Richard and a play performed by Caroline McGee, drawing from regional identity themes in Pointe : A Study of Place and Identity. On screen, she featured in a 2001 episode of , and documentaries, such as "The of Charlene Richard, 'The Little Cajun '" (2023) and segments from St. Thomas More Catholic High School (2025), highlight her for broader audiences. Essays in the Louisiana Folklife series, including "Charlene Richard: , Transmission, & Function of a Contemporary " (1994), analyze her role in preserving Cajun . Community events in Acadia Parish reinforce her cultural presence, with annual commemorations at St. Edward Catholic Church in drawing thousands since 1989, including the Anniversary Mass on the Friday nearest , which features music, fairs, and historical reenactments as seen in the 2000 Charlene Fest. These gatherings foster local pride and educate youth on Cajun heritage, though formal school programs remain tied to broader parish initiatives rather than dedicated curricula. Tourism to has grown, with her gravesite promoted by the Acadia Parish Economic Development Corporation and the Cajun Scenic Byways as a key attraction, included in Department of Tourism plans for sacred sites tours alongside sites like Grand Coteau. Her broader significance lies in representing child saints within American Catholicism, particularly inspiring devotion in the American South by highlighting ordinary rural lives as models of virtue and community solidarity, a theme amplified by her ongoing cause for .

Attributed Miracles

Following her death on August 11, 1959, the family of Charlene Richard received an influx of letters reporting healings and conversions attributed to her during her final days of illness, with many describing impossible recoveries and sudden shifts to the Catholic faith. These early anecdotal accounts, documented in witness statements collected by local clergy, contributed to the rapid growth of devotion at her gravesite in St. Edward Catholic Church Cemetery, Richard, , where pilgrims began seeking physical and spiritual aid shortly thereafter. Among the reported intercessions, several notable physical healings stand out. In 1987, Jean Marcantel of Louisiana, facing a high-risk pregnancy with a preliminary diagnosis of Down syndrome for her unborn child, prayed to Charlene and visited her gravesite; subsequent medical evaluations confirmed the child was born healthy without the condition, and the daughter later became a nun serving in Tanzania. Another case, featured on the television program Unsolved Mysteries in the early 1990s, involved a young girl with advanced cancer who visited the grave, traced the cross on the tombstone, and experienced full remission shortly after, defying medical expectations. In 2008, Mary Lou Swanson of North Aurora, Illinois, suffering from debilitating limbic encephalitis for nearly a decade, touched the tombstone during a pilgrimage inspired by the same program; her symptoms vanished within 24 hours, leading to confirmed remission without further medication, as verified by her physician. More recently, in late 2024, a Catholic family in New York state diagnosed their unborn child at 20 weeks with severe ventriculomegaly and pontocerebellar hypoplasia—conditions typically leading to profound disability or early death—prayed a novena to Charlene, with the mother visiting the gravesite; a follow-up ultrasound showed resolution of the issues, and the baby was born healthy on December 27, 2024, as confirmed by neonatal testing. Beyond physical recoveries, the cause has gathered testimonies of conversions, emotional healings, and assistance to , often involving profound or renewed vocations after prayer at the site. For instance, reports include non-Catholics experiencing sudden conversions and receiving spiritual consolation during crises, all linked to invocations of Charlene's aid and documented through affidavits submitted since the cause opened in 2020. These accounts, while varied, emphasize themes of mirroring Charlene's own life. Validation of these intercessions follows the Catholic Church's rigorous process, as outlined in the Norms to be Observed in Inquiries about Miracles issued by the Congregation for the Causes of Saints. A diocesan , including medical experts and theologians, investigates each claim for scientific inexplicability and moral certainty of divine origin, requiring sworn testimonies, medical records, and exclusion of natural explanations before submission to the Vatican. Cases like the 2024 birth are currently under such review, with at least one approved needed for .

References

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