Diocese opens beatification cause for Italian priest who served decades in PH


By Leslie Ann Aquino

The Diocese of Parañaque formally opened on Feb. 1 the cause for the beatification and canonization of Italian Rogationist priest Father Joseph Aveni.

Italian Rogationist priest Father Joseph Aveni Italian Rogationist priest Father Joseph Aveni (Facebook)

According to a Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) News post, the opening of the cause means Fr. Aveni can now be referred to with the title “servant of God,” and that the diocese will open a formal inquiry into his life and works.

Known for his life of prayer and spiritual gifts, Fr. Aveni was born in Tripi, Messina on Dec. 5, 1918, to a “pious family."

Learning catechism at an early age, he grew into a prayerful young boy and after finishing elementary school, confided that he wanted to be a priest.

At the age of 13, he began religious formation at the Apostolic School of the Rogationist Congregation in the Avignone Quarter of Messina. On July 15, 1945, he officially became Father Giuseppe Aveni.

Before turning 30, he became novice master in Trani, where he developed a reputation as a “true master of the spirit,” stewarding the formation of generations of young Rogationists.

Nine years later, he was called to Rome to be Director of the Theology Students. In 1959, he resumed the office of novice master in Florence, and then in Zagarolo until 1972, when he was assigned as spiritual father at Christ the King Seminary in Messina.

In 1974, Fr. Aveni was elected Vicar General of the Congregation. After his term ended in 1980, he was assigned to the mission in the Philippines, where he assumed the post of novice master at the age of 62.

While carrying out his mission, he also dedicated himself to the sacrament of reconciliation and spiritual direction of seminarians and nuns from different congregations in the diocese.

He fell in love with the Philippines and never wanted to leave it.

After stepping down as novice master in 1991, Fr. Aveni continued dispensing spiritual direction and leading a life of fervent prayer.

Later in the decade, after falling mortally ill, “he offered his sickness for the intentions of the Holy Church, for the glory of God, for the salvation of souls, for the conversion of sinners, and especially for the increase of vocations in the whole Church.”

“In complete obedience to the will of the Almighty, he submitted himself to the care of his doctors and to the loving embrace of those around him, just as he had done all his life,” the congregation said.

Fr. Aveni died at the Rogationist Seminary in Parañaque City in 2010 and was buried at the Manila Memorial Park.

Founded by Saint Hannibal Mary di Francia in 1896, the Rogationists began their mission in the Philippines in November 1976 and now has 19 communities in the Philippines and in other parts of Asia-Oceania.

The opening of the sainthood cause of Fr. Aveni was held at the National Shrine of Mary Help of Christians.