Assumption of Mother Mary:
Madhu feast celebrated today
By COMMODORE SHEMAL FERNANDO - RSP, USP, MSc
In the liturgical calendar of the Catholic Church, five important
feasts that mark important milestones in Mother Mary’s life are
celebrated; 25th March - the Annunciation of the Lord when the Angel
Gabriel met Mary; 2nd July - the Visitation Day where Mary met
Elizabeth, mother of John the Baptist; 15th August - the Assumption when
she entered Heaven; 8th September - the day of her Birthday; 8th
December - the Day of Immaculate Conception.
Of the five, the 15th August Feast became the most popular at Madhu
Shrine and the period of the feast is well known as the Madhu Season.
The renowned shrine has been a place of adoration for people from all
faiths and walks of life in Sri Lanka for over 400 years. Although, the
war that has been raging in the country for three decades stopped the
flow of devotees to the sylvan shrine, it nevertheless remained in the
hearts and minds of the faithful over the years.
Madhu which is believed by the Catholics to be a shrine of miraculous
healing power has bestowed blessings on thousands of people in misery,
the destitute and the sick for centuries. History has shown that the
Madhu Shrine could widen the ethnic harmony and amity in Sri Lanka with
certainty. The shrine has been a symbol of unity not just between the
Sinhalese and Tamils but also between people of different religions.
The Blessed Virgin Mary’s entire life was indeed a surprise. She
talked to an Angel; she remained a Virgin Mother; she became the Mother
of the Messiah; she gave birth to Jesus Christ in a forgotten stable;
and she became the world’s First Love.
It can never be forgotten that the Blessed Virgin Mary’s days were
intertwined, interwoven and enmeshed with Jesus. She, it was who saw His
first step, heard His first word and did with Him the thousand chores
that make up childhood and home; she it was who mended His clothes and
dressed His wounds; she it was who shared with Him both laughter and
tears.
The Most Rev. Dr. Malcolm Ranjith, the Archbishop of Colombo who
preached at the Annual Feast in 1995 stated, “The unfortunate war, we
experience in Sri Lanka is a result of sin.
The Blessed Virgin Mother at the Wedding Feast of Cana pleaded with
her son Jesus to bring happiness to humanity and began the public
ministry and the final victory of Jesus over the same sin. We should
unite with each other, purify our hearts from sin and plead with the
Blessed Virgin Mother to pray to her son Jesus for Peace on our
Motherland”.
Our Lady of Madhu has played a pivotal role in the lives of many Sri
Lankans, who flock around her Miraculous Statue seeking solace and
respite. In 2001, the Miraculous Statue of the Our Lady of Madhu was
taken on a penitential tour to the parishes in Sri Lanka in a spiritual
effort to encourage Catholics to pray for peace and end to the war.
Finally, the much awaited peace has dawned in our Motherland.
Background
Each religion has its places of worship and its shrines which draw
pilgrims from far and near. It was in the Portuguese period of Sri
Lanka’s history that Catholicism was introduced into the country by
missionaries from the West. They built churches and schools and
established parishes for the Catholics. In the course of time three of
the churches turned into shrines which brought pilgrims even from
distant parts of the country.
It was about this time that some Catholics of the Western coast had
moved into the interior to escape being harassed by the Dutch. They had
brought with them an image of the Virgin Mary for which they had great
reverence. They had come into the Wanni jungles and settled down in a
village called Sinena Maruda Madhu, where they built some huts for
themselves and one in which they placed the image of the Virgin and
continued their veneration of it. This may have happened during the
period 1658 to 1687.
When Fr. Joseph Vaz of Goa heard of the sad plight of Sri Lanka’s
Catholics, he decided to come to their help. In secret and in disguise
he came to the island in 1687, worked alone for about six years, and was
later assisted, and after him his work continued by other Indian priests
of an institute he had founded at Goa before coming to Sri Lanka. These
priests worked in Sri Lanka for over a century and a half until the
British restored religious freedom to Catholics in 1806 which enabled
the European missionaries to come to the country again.
In 1696, when Fr. Vaz was still the only priest in the country, three
other Indian priests came to help him. One of them, Fr. Pedro Ferrao,
arrived at Mantota in November that year. When Fr. Vaz, who was then in
Kandy, heard of his arrival, he sent him instructions to remain and work
in that part of the country.
We are told that when Fr. Ferrao began to experience the problems and
hardships of missionary work in the country - persecution by the Dutch,
hostility of some of non-Christians, the indifference of the Christians
and their incorrigible attachment to superstitious beliefs and
practices, he felt greatly discouraged and was depressed.
In this situation, he had left Mantota and withdrawn into the
solitude of the Wanni jungles. Probably he had gone to the Christian
village of Madhu.
Fr. Vaz, learning of the depressed state in which Fr. Ferrao was, had
paid him a visit in the Wanni jungles, probably at Madhu, and put him
right by his spiritual counsel. Thereafter Fr. Ferrao served the Church
in the North-Western parts of the country (Mantota, Mannar, Jaffna and
the Wanni) with great zeal and dedication for the next 25 years, until
his death in 1721. And Fr. Vaz would have visited Madhu again when he
went on his missionary journeys to visit the Catholics and their pastors
throughout the country.
First Church
A report of 1701 reveals that Fr. Ferrao built a church at Madhu to
replace the original hut that had been used as a chapel. It is also
mentioned that Madhu was outside the jurisdiction of the Dutch but not
too distant for the Catholics of Mantota and Jaffna to come there on the
occasion of greater solemnities, which implies that the Madhu church
already held a more prominent position among the chapels and churches of
the region. Madhu continued to be looked after by other Indian priests
who worked in Sri Lanka. It is reported that the church built by Fr.
Ferrao at Madhu was rebuilt by an Indian missionary, Fr. Antonio de
Tavor.
The religious freedom given to Catholics by the British and the
arrival of missionaries of the Order of Oblates of Mary Immaculate to
work in Jaffna vicariate were two important factors that contributed to
the further development of Madhu as a shrine. Religious freedom enabled
Catholics from far and near to come on pilgrimage to the shrine. The
Oblate Bishops of Jaffna who came after the first Bishop (Bettacchini),
namely Stephen Semera (1857 - 1868) and Christopher Bonjean (1868 -
1883) took special interests towards growth of the shirne.
Present Church
When pilgrims began to come in larger numbers, the need for a larger
church was felt. Bishop Bonjean planned the present church and laid the
foundation stone for it on August 8, 1872. Building work progressed
under his successor, Bishop Andrew Melizan (1883 - 1893), and was
completed by the next bishop, Henry Joulain (1893 - 1919).
They built a facade, the spacious presbytery, the restful chapel of
the Blessed Sacrament and the grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes. With the
revival of Catholic faith by missionaries such as Blessed Joseph Vaz,
Oratorian priests expanded the small shrine in late 17th century. With
the arrival of British to the island, the persecution ceased, but the
number of Catholics remained small, with just 50,000 members in 1796.
With such a small community the Shrine at Madhu started to attract
pilgrims from all over the country. The stifling of Jesuit authority
which had started in 1773 in the subcontinent built-up as a problem and
culminated in the eventual suppression of the Congregation in Madhu by
1834.
Origin of the Shrine
The growth of the Madhu church is uniquely interesting. History
reveals that an old woman had a dream, where the Virgin Mary appeared
and instructed her about her statue hidden near Marutha Madhu. There had
been a stream surrounded by Marutha tree near the Palu tree where the
statue was. Madhu means stream and so the area in thick jungle became
known as Marutha Madhu. Soon, it became simply known as Madhu and a
spate of miracles associated with the Madhu church began occurring.
Its fame spread and Catholics from the South too started attending
it. Vows taken here were fulfilled according to belief. The belief was
that the church had healing powers. Also, childless couples found their
desires fulfilled. It was widely believed that no wild animal would
attack pilgrims on their way to Madhu despite the abundance of
elephants, leopards and bears. Another belief was that Madhu pilgrims
were immune to snakebite or stings by scorpions and tarantulas. All this
added to the Madhu mystique making it the Sri Lankan equivalent of
Lourdes, Fatima or Vailankanni.
In spite of Madhu becoming a magnet for Catholics it continued to
retain its simplicity which again contributed to its mystique. Though
pilgrim rests and lodging facilities were established around the church,
it was certainly not enough to accommodate the large numbers that throng
during Madhu seasons. So, devotees would camp in tents or makeshift huts
demarcating their “territory” with branches of trees.
In the earlier days water was available in the Madhu stream and a few
wells. Pilgrims would sleep on mats or cook using primitive contraptions
like stone stoves.
In spite of the difficulties a warm spirit of cheer and goodwill
prevailed. Linguistic identities of Sinhala and Tamils were overwhelmed
by the over arching feeling of being Catholic and Madhu was one place
where the ethnic divide was virtually non- existent.
Coronation of Our Lady
In 1920, Bishop Brault who had a very special devotion to Our Lady of
Madhu, obtained the Pope’s sanction for the historic solemn coronation
of the Statue of Our Lady of Madhu. Bishop Brault with the clergy and
the laity had petitioned the Vatican Chapter through the Apostolic
Delegate Cardinal Van Rossam, Prefect of the S.C. of Propaganda and he
personally presented the request to the Holy Father who in his audience
of April 7, 1921, granted this favour of Coronation of Our Lady.
July 2, 1924 was a great day in the history of the shrine.
That day after a solemn religious service held by the then Bishop of
Jaffna, Alfred Guyomar, the Madhu image of the Virgin Mary was solemnly
crowned before a vast gathering of pilgrims by Archbishop Anthony
Coudert of Colombo, officiating as Papal Legate appointed for the
occasion by Pope Pius XI.
The Church was consecrated in 1944 during World War II. In
preparation for the consecration ceremony, a marble altar replaced the
old wooden structure and the whole sanctuary was covered with white and
blue marble.
In spite of travel restrictions and difficulties finding conveyance,
more than 30,000 people came to the jungle shrine.
By this symbolic act, the Lady of the Wanni jungles was crowned queen
of the hearts of Sri Lanka’s Catholics who had shown their devotion by
repeatedly coming to Madhu on pilgrimage even from distant parts of the
country, no matter the hardships they had to endure in doing so.
The crowning became the official Church recognition of a Shrine that
had in a way grown from humble beginnings in the wild Wanni wilderness,
at a spot which nobody at the time would have thought was a likely place
for a Shrine that would attract pilgrims from all over Sri Lanka. |