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French Nun Says Church to Rule on Cure by John Paul II

By ELAINE SCIOLINO
Published: March 31, 2007
PARIS, March 30 - If the story Sister Marie Simon-Pierre told Friday is
true, then Pope John Paul II exercised miraculous powers from beyond the
grave. A proven physical miracle is an important qualification on the road
to sainthood.
Smiling and strong-voiced, the 46-year-old nun stepped out of her quiet life
of prayer and good works and stood in front of a wall of cameras to proclaim
that the pope cured her of Parkinson's disease two months after his death in
2005.
"I have been cured," she told journalists gathered for a news conference in
Aix-en-Provence. "My healing was the work of God through the intercession of
Pope John Paul II."
But she refused to call her recovery a "miracle," saying such a designation
is the responsibility of the Vatican.
"All I can say is that I was ill and now I am cured," she said. "It is for
the church to say and to recognize whether it is a miracle." The veracity of
her story is crucial to making Pope John Paul II a saint.
The pope has already been put on a fast track to sainthood. Only 26 days
after the pope's death, Pope Benedict XVI, his successor, waived the
five-year waiting period to begin the process of beatification, the first
step toward sainthood.
But John Paul needs one verifiable miracle to be beatified, which means that
one has reached heaven and can be referred to as "blessed." Sister Marie
Simon-Pierre's case has been chosen as the first potential miracle.
A second miracle is generally required for canonization as a saint. Miracles
can be waived for those who die as "Christian martyrs."
The French nun's case had been revealed during the course of a Vatican
investigation on behalf of Pope John Paul's sainthood, but only on Friday
did she publicly recount her story.
Dressed in a white nun's habit and veil with a black sweater, and carrying a
knapsack over her shoulder as she walked through a garden, she seemed
slightly overwhelmed by the media attention.
She was told in 2001 that she was suffering from Parkinson's, a degenerative
disease of the nervous system. Over time, she said, her symptoms worsened
until she had difficulty walking, writing and driving a car. She could not
sleep. Her hands trembled. Her body was racked with pain.
The late pope became an inspiration for her because of his own very public
suffering from Parkinson's disease in the decade before his death on April
2, 2005.
It also became too painful for her to watch him on television, because, she
said, "to be honest, I saw myself in the years to come in a wheelchair."
But her fellow nuns, the Little Sisters of Catholic Maternity Hospitals in
Puyricard near the southeastern town of Aix-en-Provence, prayed to the pope
for her recovery.
In June 2005, exactly two months after the pope's death, she asked to be
relieved of her duties as supervisor of a 40-bed maternity ward. Her mother
superior told her to write John Paul's name on a piece of paper, but the
words were illegible.
Later that night after her evening prayers, she heard a voice from within
telling her to pick up a pen and write. She followed her lights, and was
stunned to see that she could write legibly again.
When she awoke early the next morning, she said she felt "completely
transformed."
"I felt that my body was no longer the same, and that I was no longer the
same," she said, adding that it was "a bit like a second birth."
After her recovery, she told one of her fellow nuns: "Look at my hand. It is
no longer trembling. John Paul II has cured me."
She said that her neurologist was astounded when he saw her soon after her
transformation. She has not had to take medication or seek treatment since.
Last year, she was transferred to another maternity hospital in Paris run by
her order.
Only once before has a pope put a candidate for sainthood on a fast track.
In 2003, Pope John Paul II accelerated the canonization process for Mother
Teresa, the winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for her care of the poor of
Calcutta who died in 1997.
But a grass-roots campaign to make the late Pope John Paul II a saint began
immediately after his death. Cries of Santo subito! - Sainthood now! filled
Saint Peter's Square during his funeral.
Msgr. Slawomir Oder, a Polish cleric in the diocese of Rome, has organized
an official campaign to push for quick sainthood. He has said he has
received reports of more than 130 miracles attributed to the late pope. But
he is focusing on the case of Sister Marie Simon-Pierre because other cases
may take longer to verify.
"The scientific evaluation of cancer cures would have required a wait of 8
to 10 years," he said recently.
Pope Benedict has given mixed signals on his approach to sainthood.
In addition to putting the late pope's canonization on a fast track, he
fueled speculation that sainthood was imminent when he expressed hope last
May during a trip to Poland, John Paul's homeland, that the process would
conclude "in the near future."
As a cardinal, however, Pope Benedict said several times that he was not in
favor of naming an excessive number of saints. He was believed to have been
aligned with conservatives who looked askance on Pope John Paul's record
canonization of saints during his 26-year papacy.
Sister Marie Simon-Pierre and Archbishop Claude Feidt of Aix-en-Provence are
now heading to the Vatican, where her case will be presented. They will
attend a Mass in Saint Peter's Square marking the second anniversary of John
Paul's death, when the dossier of documents for beatification will be turned
over to the Vatican's congregation for saints.
A team of doctors and other experts appointed by the Vatican will decide
whether her recovery was a miracle.
Described by her fellow sisters as a gentle woman who had intended to keep
her identity secret, the nun said Friday that in her decision to speak
publicly, she drew inspiration from Pope John Paul II.
"He never shied away from the cameras," she said. "And I believe today he
gives me necessary strength, and I think that today he is with me."

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