Magdalena Gornik (also Gornikova LenÃÂka, à  metova AlenÃÂica or Alenka; July 19, 1835, Janeà ¾i, Austrian Empire â February 23, 1896, Petrinci, Austria-Hungary) was a Slovenian Roman Catholic mystic and stigmatist.
Gora near Sodraà ¾ica rises above the Ribnica valley at an altitude of 885 meters, right on the border between Lower Carniola and Inner Carniola. The family of Gornik have always been poorer than rich. Despite their poverty, they tried to properly maintain their spiritual shepherd and the church of Church of Our Lady of Snows, which rises on a hill above the village of Petrinci. The church is surrounded by a cemetery where Magdalena Gornik is buried.
Below the village of Petrinci, about a quarter of an hour's walk from the church, lies the village of Janeà ¾i, which had only 13 inhabitants in 2016. There, around 1828, at the "à  met" (family name of Gornik), the young Joà ¾ef Gornik married Ana from nearby Petrinci, who also had the surname Gornik. They had seven children:
Magdalena was born on July 19, 1835 in the family house, at Janeà ¾i 4, today number 11. This house burned down and in 1881 Magdalena's brother Alojz built a new one on the same spot. The year above the doorframe also testifies to this. On the same day, she was taken to the parish church of Mary the Snows to be baptized, with Michael Levshtek and Margareth Koshir from Petrinci serving as her godparents. She was baptized by the curate at Parish of Gora, Matthäus Ravnikar. She was given the name Maria Magdalena. Magdalena was also called Lenka, AlenÃÂka or LenÃÂka, but she always signed herself as Magdalena.
Magdalena's parents were considered honest and good people. They were devout Christians and raised their children in a Christian spirit. Her mother was especially fond of Magdalena because she obeyed her at the first word, was a great help to her in the household, as well as in other farm chores. Magdalena was a lively and bright girl with blue eyes and a weak build, but with a simple and gentle nature. She loved to socialize with her peers in play, work and prayer; she often taught them Christian doctrine, which she liked to attend. She had a calming effect on the girls, was well-behaved and friendly to everyone. Whenever she had time, she devoted it to prayer or listening to spiritual conversations. She often went to church and had confidential conversations with God. But she did not show off her piety.
The Gora chaplain Joà ¾ef à ½agar firmly adhered to the old tradition that children could only receive their first Holy Communion at the age of twelve. It was not until the decree of Saint Pope Pius X on early Holy Communion Quam singulari of August 7, 1910, that it was possible to receive First Holy Communion already in the "years of discernment", around the age of seven.
Every day, Magdalena joined her peers in spiritual preparation, led by Chaplain à ½agar. She carefully memorized every word the priest said, especially about the real presence of Jesus under the appearance of bread and wine in Eucharist. Magdalena quickly grasped the material and acquired the necessary knowledge. Chaplain à ½agar, who was also her confessor, allowed her to approach the Communion table. Twelve-year-old Magdalena therefore approached her First communion in 1847 in the company of her peers. The writer of her youth, Janez Plaper, writes, <blockquote>that upon this first entry into her pure heart, the Most Holy God ûkindled such a burning love in her that her physical strength began to weaken. She could barely walk the few steps to her place in the pew. Here she fell to her knees and stared motionlessly at the image of Our Lady of the Snows above the altar for a quarter of an hour. When she stood up to leave the church after the Holy Mass, she heard a voice:<br /> "Don't tell anyone what you have experienced." Astonished by the voice, she thought that the other girls could also hear it.<br /> "No," she heard the mysterious voice again, "they do not hear this voice, but you alone. I am the one you have just consumed." A short time later, she left the church with the other girls of her age.ë</blockquote>
Gornik's life is connected with unusual mystical phenomena, such as visions, stigmata, the renewal of Christ's suffering, living without physical food for many years, foreseeing events, unusual healings.
According to theologian Martina KraljiÃÂ, author of the book Magdalena Gornik, "In the Ljubljana Archdiocesan Archives, all sources about Magdalena Gornik are accessible to everyone, there are 6,800 pages of them" . She also said that her notes and correspondence were kept by the priest FranÃÂià ¡ek Lampe, who also took the famous photograph of the stigmata during her ecstasy.
She is said to have experienced her first ecstasy at the age of thirteen, on August 11, 1848. From August 24, 1848 until her death on February 23, 1896, she is said to have az ecstasy every evening, as well as on Fridays during Holy Week and at every mass. The transfigurations were based on the church year. During the transfiguration, her body was insensitive to external stimuli.
Gornik was later able to tell everything that happened during the ecstasy, which were associated with visions and suffering; at that time, the stigmata were also said to have opened to her.
Gornik is said to have experiences visions throughout her life, the content of which varied greatly. They corresponded to the course of the Liturgical year. She had her first vision in the spring of 1847, and her last one the day before her death.
In her visions, Magdalena supposedly saw and spoke with angels, saints, Virgin Mary, and the Holy Trinity. According to her, the angels taught her about the worship of Mary and God and wept over the unbelief of people. The Virgin Mary supposedly spoke to her about chastity and prayer, encouraged her to patiently endure suffering, and invited her to contemplate the suffering and death of Jesus; Mary also appeared as an advocate for people with her Son.
On Fridays and during Lent, she witnessed Jesus' suffering. On Maundy Thursday, she also participated in the Last Supper, and on Good Friday, she witnessed Jesus' Stations of the Cross and death. On Easter, she witnessed Jesus' resurrection and then on Ascension, his ascension. Sometimes, through visions, she would follow the Holy Mass in her parish church from home.
Magdalene is said to have received both sacramental (the kind that every believer can receive) and mystical Holy Communion (some saints). Both of these occurred most often in trance. She received Mystical Communion only in extasy. At that time, Jesus himself, a priest-saint, or an angel administered it to her. Many people, including priests, are said to have seen the host suddenly appearing in her mouth, and soon after they saw a special chalice. After such an event, Magdalena always gave thanks, and sometimes even admonished those present to do penance.
Magdalene is said to have received the marks of the wounds of Jesus or stigmata in November 1848 as a thirteen-year-old girl on her hands, feet and side, about which she herself wrote: <blockquote> That week before Advent 1848 I received the wounds. I had known it for three weeks beforehand. All three: Jesus, Mary and St. Francis told me that I would receive them. On Wednesday at eleven o'clock I received the wounds. From the sky very thin streams of blood flowed into my hands and feet; and a thick stream flowed into my right side. It hurt me terribly. Since then my wounds have bled every Friday; and in 1849 they also bled every Wednesday. Every day they hurt me from three to four in the afternoon. </blockquote> She hid her wounds so much that for a long time even her family did not know about them; until 1855 she bore visible wounds on her body. When she saw the Savior crowned with thorns or suffering in some other way in a vision, the wounds of the crown of thorns would open on her forehead. During Holy Week, the wounds of the flagellation would also open on her body. The stigmata caused her severe pain, but Magdalena did not complain. The wounds were examined by doctors, priests and visitors, but no one found any fraud.
Up until the age of thirteen, Magdalena ate like everyone else; from September 25, 1848 until her death, she is said to have no longer needed any earthly food and she lived in inedia; she is said to have lived without any food for 47 years. She could not even bear the smell of ordinary food. Her food was said to have been the Holy Eucharist and a kind of "heavenly food", which she received only in a daze. Her attendants told the priest Lesjak that accordingly she had no bodily secretions. Despite her inedia, she â when she was healthy â easily performed her daily duties.
Gornik is said to have received several objects in a state of extasy or materialization, which were visible not only to herself, but also to other people. One of these was an unusual or heavenly food that Gornik received almost every day at the end of the extasy. Most often, she received it in a vision from the Virgin Mary or from an angel. Eyewitnesses reported that this dish was in the form of a small piece or grain, often of different colors.
Another peculiarity was the cross that Gornik supposedly received in the extasy and that remained on her chest even after that. This cross was said to have hung on her body without any string and never fell to the ground. Several priests held this cross in their hands; they described its dimensions and color in detail.
Levitation is a mystical phenomenon in which a human body is lifted into the air, floats in the air, or moves without any natural aid. The opposite of this phenomenon is weightless, when even an otherwise weak body becomes so heavy that others cannot move it or can do so only with great difficulty. There are reports of both phenomena in the case of Magdalene.
Magdalene's levitation is said to have occurred most often when she strongly desired to receive Holy Communion; at that time her body rose into the air. She is also said to have levitated when the priest blessed the Most Holy, during the mystical death on Good Friday and the mystical resurrection on Easter morning. The heaviness is said to have occurred when Magdalena was in a extasy.
In a state of extasy, Magdalena had gift of xenoglossy (speaking of foreign languages or glossolalia); she had understood and spoken languages that she had never learned or heard spoken. She spoke Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Babylonian and other, even non-European, languages. Some of the languages she spoke in trance were not recognized even by the greatest language experts.
Clairvoyance (cardiognomy) is a mystical phenomenon by which a person recognizes and, so to speak, sees the state of the human soul. Magdalena is also said to have the gift of insight into the inner state of the soul: whether someone is in Sanctifying grace or in Mortal sin; whoever asked her, she also revealed his state of soul to him: not only to believers, but also to many priests. Magdalena also revealed his shortcomings to her spiritual leader, the chaplain à ½agar.
Prophecy means predicting future events. Magdalena predicted future events many times. On August 2, 1848, she have predicted the flight of Pope Pius IX from Rome. Magdalena mentioned this event to Jernej Krà ¾e from Vinica at the beginning of November 1848 too. That same month, on November 24, 1848, the Pope actually had to flee from Rome to Gaeta due to the tense political situation.
She also allegedly predicted various plagues, disasters and evils.
There are many written documents about Gornik. Among them are her own handwritten letters, as well as handwritten reports from people who observed her and wrote reports to the diocese or to newspapers. How she was affected by the opposition and with what spirit she accepted it is shown by this handwritten letter she wrote to the fifty-year-old Franciscan brother Tobija Vernik (1801-1886)on June 14, 1851. Because of ancient language written in bohoriÃÂica may make it difficult today for some Slovenes to read too, so we are bringing it here, as it is written in original, then in modern Slovene and finally in English translation:
Magdalena Gornik died on February 23, 1896. Her relatives, all of whom were poor, worried about providing food for the funeral guests. Before dying, Gornik reassured them, saying God would see to it that everything would be alright. Due to snow and cold, only eight mourners gathered at the open grave for the funeral. Today, numerous pilgrims gather at her grave, pleading for her intercession with God.
Although Gornik opposed both secular and church authorities, whose main concern was to limit pilgrims, church authorities softened towards her after her death.
Archbishop of Maribor Marjan Turnà ¡ek: <blockquote>It is surprising how Magdalene, even as a young girl, was able to accept so much suffering. The authenticity of the events can also be inferred from her maturation and growth in a virtuous life. Although unusual mystical phenomena did not yet guarantee holiness, it seems that in the life of Magdalene Gornik, virtues gradually developed towards a heroic level.</blockquote>
<blockquote> Given the extraordinary occurrence of mystical experiences and the saintly life of Magdalena Gornik, it is natural to think of the process for beatification and canonization. Other nations would have done this long ago. (Rome, September 3, 2008)</blockquote>
Archbishop of Ljubljana Stanislav Zore:
He said on the "Sunday of the Saint Candidates of the Ljubljana Metropolis", which was held on September 17, 2023 in the Sodraà ¾ica parish church, in relation to Magdalena Gornik:
"We gathered in Sodraà ¾ica because a church investigation was held in this parochial house from March 2 to April 11, 1852, by order of the bishop Anton Wolf. The Sodraà ¾ica parish priest Lesjak and other close priests were shocked to be convinced of the authenticity of the mystical phenomena and that Magdalena Gornik is not an impostor, as the liberal media of the time and also the secular authorities declared her to be." According to the archbishop, he has a message also for today and teaches us:
In 2000, Magdalena Gornik was depicted by the academic painter Lojze ÃÂemaà ¾ar, together with some other Slovenian saints, in a fresco of the outer chapel of the Church of the Queen of Peace in Kureà ¡ÃÂek. According to his own testimony, he saw in a dream the place where he should paint her, as well as her size, appearance and attributes (cross, crown of thorns, mystical communion).
ûEppur si muove!ë one could almost exclaim, when the cases related to or Magdalena Gornik or à  metova LenÃÂka finally started to move from a dead end after a good century of neglect and oblivion. The initiative for the procedure was received by the Archdiocese of Ljubljana in 2003 and the then Archbishop Franc Rode was in favor of the matter, but he was called the following year to a new position in the central leadership of the Church and the matter temporarily stalled again.
On September 24, 2018, all Slovenian bishops at the 108th regular session of the Slovenian Bishops' Conference unanimously supported the initiation of the procedure. The Code of Canon Law and other Church regulations require in this regard that the competent bishop appoint a special postulator or facilitator of the canonical process:
On February 19, 2019, the Archbishop of Ljubljana and Metropolitan Stanislav Zore appointed Postulator the long-time editor of Druà ¾ina Franci PetriÃÂ, who said in this regard: "My tasks are two:
After thorough investigations by the Holy See regarding her "hearing of sainthood", on November 23, 2021, the Congregation for the Causes of Saints issued permission for the Archdiocese of Ljubljana to start the procedure for Magdalena's canonization. Everything seems to indicate that her prediction that miracles would begin to occur through her intercession in six generations is now beginning to come true. The perceptible veneration among the faithful and the hearings of her intercession are the conditions for initiating the process for her beatification. If a miracle occurs, which is recognized as such by the supreme church authority after extremely thorough investigations, there will be no more obstacles to her beatification; similarly later for the canonisation.
On the feast of the Feast of the Exaltation of Holy Cross, September 14, 2022, the process began and is progressing well under the postulator's guidance. She now holds the honorable title of Servant of God.
In general, newspapers of the time were not in favor of mystical phenomena: significantly less so than today, when such writing or reporting does not bother anyone. The events on Gora were first informed by Bleiweis's Novice. An unsigned author from Ljubljana stumbled upon Magdalena in the Newspaper section on June 6, 1849; Although he did not see her himself, he declared her â according to rumors â to be sick, and he writes as follows: <blockquote> We must take this opportunity to say that these days we have heard about the so-called disappearance of a girl on Gora in the Ribnica district, such that she is either really sick or a fraud, who was set up by some hidden imposter or fraudster, if everything that people spread about this girl around the world is true... So let's not make miracles out of things that are either really sick or a fraud.</blockquote>
In the Vienna newspaper ûDer Lloydë (1848-1854), an unsigned reporter also from Ljubljana wrote in German on July 29, 1849: <blockquote> In a certain village in the Ribnica district, a young girl in a magnetized state is said to be causing great excitement, because large crowds flock to her and have her prophesy, believing that she is a saint. This delusion is said to be promoted, as I hear, by the local clergy. Therefore, the bishop's council would strongly support the measures (to be carried out by the political authorities) with the transfer, if unforeseen obstacles were encountered among the superstitious people. </blockquote> When this newspaper mentions that the girl was "magnetized", it means that she was hypnotized; this term was understood by the common people at that time; today we understand magnetism in its narrower, i.e. physical sense. When doctor from KoÃÂevje ÃÂesnik during his professional observation of her phenomena commissioned by the authorities, he did indeed try to hypnotize her, he never succeeded and concluded that she was not susceptible to such experiments at all.
The bishop of Ljubljana Anton Wolf initially acted on newspaper reports, saying that it was a fraud. At the same time, the civil authorities began to pressure him to take action. However, he was aware that action by the civil authorities was not necessary. However, he adhered to the least demanding principle, that it was necessary to wait and investigate the matter. He ordered the responsible priests to report to him regularly on the matter, while at the same time trying to stop the influx of pilgrims. In order not to encourage people to make pilgrimages, neither Wolf nor his successors ever personally visited Gornik's Magdalene; at the same time, he did not send any authorized representative from the diocese in this regard.
The leadership of the Slovenian Church was probably overly cautious for many decades â also due to bad experiences with the impostor Vodià ¡ka Johanca, although it did not express any doubt about the miraculous events in connection with Magdalena's life. For several reasons, the process for declaring her blessed was not initiated for an extremely long time, although these unusual witnessed events recommended such a procedure from the church's point of view.