Saint Joseph Freinademetz, S.V.D. | |
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Missionary to China | |
Born |
Badia, County of Tyrol, Austrian Empire |
April 15, 1852
Died | January 28, 1908 Daijiazhuang, Jining, South Shandong, Chinese Empire |
(aged 55)
Venerated in |
Roman Catholic Church (Society of the Divine Word), (China) |
Beatified | 19 October 1975 by Pope Paul VI |
Canonized | October 5, 2003 by Pope John Paul II |
Feast | January 28 |
Saint Joseph Freinademetz, S.V.D., (Chinese name: 聖福若瑟 / 圣福若瑟, pinyin: Shèng Fú Ruòsè) (April 15, 1852 - January 28, 1908) as a member of the Society of the Divine Word, was a missionary in China. He has been declared a saint by the Catholic Church.
Freinademetz was born the fourth among the 13 children of Giovanmattia and Anna Maria Freinademetz in Oies, a section of the town of Badia, which was then in the County of Tyrol, a part of the Austrian Empire, now a part of Italy. He studied theology in the diocesan seminary of Brixen and was ordained a priest on July 25, 1875. He was assigned to the community of San Martin de Tor, not far from his own home.
During his studies and the three years in San Martino, Freinademetz always felt a calling to be a missionary. He contacted Arnold Janssen, founder of the Society of the Divine Word, a missionary congregation based in Steyl, Netherlands. With the permission of his parents and his bishop, he moved to Steyl in August 1878, where he received training as a missionary.
In March 1879 he and his confrere Johann Baptist von Anzer boarded a ship to Hong Kong, where they arrived five weeks later. They stayed there for two years. Freinademetz was based in Sai Kung until 1880 and set up a chapel on the island of Yim Tin Tsai in 1879. In 1881 they moved to the southern region of the Province of Shantung, to which they had been assigned. At the time of their arrival, there were 12 million people living in that province, of which 158 had been baptized.