Alfie Lambe

Irish Roman Catholic missionary
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroIrish Roman Catholic missionary
PlacesIreland
wasMissionary
Gender
Male
Religion:Catholic church
Birth24 June 1932, Tullamore, Ireland
Death21 January 1959Buenos Aires, Argentina (aged 26 years)
Star signCancer
The details

Biography

Alphonsus "Alfie" Lambe (24 June 1932 – 21 January 1959) was an Irish-born Roman Catholic lay-missionary and Envoy of the Legion of Mary to South America.

Born at Tullamore, County Offaly to a farming family, as a youth he considered a vocation with the Irish Christian Brothers but withdrew due to chronic poor health. As the Legion's Envoy beginning he left Ireland on 16 July 1953 accompanied by Seamus Grace, on their way to Bogota. He went to serve in Colombia, Ecuador, Uruguay, Brazil, as well as Argentina, where he died in Buenos Aires at age 26 from stomach cancer. He is interred in the vault of the Irish Christian Brothers, in Buenos Aires's Recoleta Cemetery. It is said that his missionary work for the Legion of Mary was greatly helped by his ability to learn languages as he quickly became fluent in both Spanish and Portuguese. He was kidnapped, briefly, but his captors granted him a phone call to prove who he was so he called that Irish Ambassador to vouch for him and this resulted in his release. While in Argentina he also learned Russian with the intention of visiting the Soviet Union but he died before that intention could be realised. On each anniversary of his death there are celebrations throughout South America in his honour by the members of the Legion of Mary.

A Cause for Canonization for Lambe was introduced by the Archdiocese of Buenos Aires in 1978 and concluded on 26 March 2015. On 17 January 2020 the Ordinary Congress of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints appointed Monsignor Brosel Gavila José Jaime as Relator for the Cause to take forward the process of the potential canonisation of Alfie Lambe.

Links

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 27 Jun 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.