Our Lady of Betharam
Our Lady of Betharam
https://www.roman-catholic-saints.com/our-lady-of-betharam.html
April 22: Our Lady of Betharam,
France (1503)
The Abbot Orsini wrote: “Our Lady of Betharam, in the diocese of Lescar, in
the province of Bearn. This image was found, in the year 1503, by some
shepherds, who, seeing an extraordinary light on the spot where the high altar
of the chapel now stands, came up to it, and found there an image of Our Lady,
for which they had a chapel built immediately.”
More commonly known as the Shrine of Betharram, it is located only 15
kilometers from the more famous Marian shrine at Lourdes. It used to be a very
popular pilgrimage destination, as according to Saint Vincent de Paul,
Betharram was once the second most popular place of pilgrimage in France. The
river Gave, beside which the shrine is located, is the same river whose waters
flow past Lourdes.
The shrine of Our Lady of Betharam is famous for no less than three
miracles attributed to the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Our Lady of Betharam
According to tradition, one day in 1503 there were some shepherds leading
their flocks along the bank of the river Gave when they suddenly observed an
extremely bright light coming from the rocks. When they drew nearer, they found
a beautiful statue of the Blessed Virgin. Learning of the incident, the people
in the nearby village of Lestelle decided to construct a chapel to house the
statue. Due to space limitations, the chapel was initially planned for the
opposite bank from where the statue had been found. Once the statue was placed
there, however, they found that it would always return on its own to the other
side of the river where it had originally been found. The faithful then
understood that the Blessed Virgin desired that the chapel should be built
where the statue had been found, and so it happened.
The next miracles occurred in the year 1616 when some peasants from the
village of Montaut were returning home from the fields at the end of the day. A
rushing storm suddenly appeared, with fierce winds that threatened Betharram.
In fact, the laborers saw that there was a cyclone in the storm that beat
against the great wooden cross that had been erected at the summit. The cross
fell, but then was encircled by a radiant aura of dazzling light before
standing again of its own to its former position.
The third miracle is the one after which the shrine is named. Apparently a
young girl fell headfirst into the Gave when trying to pluck a flower along the
bank. The water runs fast and deep in this area, and the girl was on the verge
of drowning when she cried aloud to Our Lady of Betharam of the nearby shrine. The
Blessed Virgin appeared standing on the bank holding the Divine Infant, who
held a branch which he extended to rescue the girl. She offered a golden branch
to the shrine as an ex-voto offering. A beautiful branch is ‘Betharram’ in the
local dialect, and thus became the name of the shrine.
There were many other miracles, as at one point between the years 1620 and
1642 there were 82 documented miracles involving the blind who received their
sight, the paralyzed who regained the use of the limbs, and those instantly
cured of cancer, among other miracles.
Saint Bernadette Soubirous
frequently visited the shrine of Betharram. In fact, the rosary beads that
Bernadette used when praying with the Blessed Virgin during the first
apparition at Lourdes had come from the Betharram shrine, and the priest that
she was sent to after the apparitions was Saint Michel Garicois, the priest of
Betharram. He it was who alone believed Bernadette’s accounts of the
apparitions at Lordes. He was canonized in 1947.
The cross on the summit that the winds could not destroy was finally destroyed
by the folly of man during the French Revolution. The property was unlawfully confiscated
and the chaplains expelled.
Saint
Pope Pius X was known to be devoted to Our Lady of Betharam. He offered
her two magnificent golden crowns made up of branches woven together.
This prayer accompanying the inscription stated: “May
the Son and His Mother accept our gifts and by appeasing our hopes and
desires
may they keep for us one day the crown of glory which none can tarnish.”
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