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British teen won’t be canonised as planned following Pope’s death

The canonisation of a British Italian teenager as the first millennial saint has been postponed due to the Pope’s death.

Carlo Acutis, who died of acute leukemia in 2006 when he was 15, created a website cataloguing more than 100 eucharistic miracles recognised by the Catholic church.

The young web designer started the site in 2004 and worked on it for two and a half years.

It was unveiled just days before he passed away.

Each miracle on the site was translated into twenty languages and accompanied with images, maps and video.

Around ten years ago a group of priests and friends of Carlo started an initiative to have Carlo sainted.

He was named “venerable’ in 2018 after the church recognised his virtuous life, and his body was taken to a shrine in Assisi’s Santuario della Spogliazione.

He was then declared “blessed” in 2020 after the Vatican dicastery, which studies sainthood processes, found the “scientifically inexplainable” recovery of a sick child in Brazil was down to the youngster touching one of Carlo’s t-shirts.

Last year, the church attributed a second miracle to him – the complete recovery of a Costa Rican student in Italy from major head trauma in a bicycle accident after her mother prayed at Carlo’s tomb.

This paved the way to his canonisation, which was supposed to happen next Sunday, April 27, but will now be postponed.

Carlo was born on May 3, 1991, in London to a wealthy Italian family, and grew up in Milan.

While he enjoyed regular pastimes for someone his age, including video games, time with his friends and hiking, he also taught catechism in a local parish and did outreach to the homeless.

His preserved body is currently on display to the public at a church in Assisi.

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1 Comment

  1. chinenye idika says:

    sorry

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