Published Tuesday, January 27, 1998, in the Miami Herald

Pope voices hope of sainthood for 2 Cubans

Before returning to the Vatican from Cuba on Sunday, Pope John Paul II voiced hope that the 19th Century Cuban priests Felix Varela and Jose Olallo soon may be elevated to sainthood.

At a meeting in Havana's cathedral with priests and seminarians, the pontiff said ``we hope that their canonization process may be concluded soon and that they may be invoked [as saints] by the faithful.''

Varela was ``faithful to his priesthood and an active promoter of the common good of the entire Cuban nation,'' John Paul said.

He described Olallo, a priest from Camaguey province who founded the medical Order of St. John of God, as ``a witness for mercy, whose exemplary life in the service of the neediest is a productive example of life devoted to the Lord.''

A social reformer and abolitionist, Felix Varela died in St. Augustine, Fla., in 1853 at age 65, after a lifetime of opposition to Spanish rule of his homeland. The last 30 years of his life were spent in self-imposed exile in the United States.

Canonization is a slow-moving process. Vatican researchers are looking for proof of a miracle that can be attributed to the intercession of the two priests, such as a healing that has no scientific explanation.

The Catholic Church requires proof of one miracle for beatification -- the determination that the candidate is in heaven -- and one for canonization.

Copyright © 1998 The Miami Herald