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Giuseppina De Muro

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Suor
Giuseppina De Muro
FdC
Personal life
Born(1903-11-02)November 2, 1903
Lanusei, Sardinia, Italy
DiedOctober 22, 1965(1965-10-22) (aged 61)
Turin, Italy
Religious life
ReligionRoman Catholic
OrderFiglie della Carità di San Vincenzo de Paoli (Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul)

Giuseppina De Muro (or Demuro) (1903–1965) was an Italian Roman Catholic nun who saved over 500 people from concentration camps during the German occupation of Italy.

She was born Rosina De Muro in 1903 in Lanusei, Sardinia.[1] Sister De Muro was a member of the religious congregation Figlie della Carità di San Vincenzo De' Paoli (Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul).[2] She spent most of her life in Turin, Italy, serving from 1925 until her death.[3]

She is credited with saving the lives of over 500 people by preventing their deportation from Le Nuove prison to Nazi concentration camps.[4] Among those she saved was Italian essayist Massimo Foa, who was nine months old when she smuggled him out of the prison in a load of dirty sheets.[5] He was taken in by Clotilde Roda Boggia ("mamma Tilde") in Turin, who raised him as a son.[6] One way sister De Muro saved people was by inventing a disease and then having them transferred to a local hospital.[7][5]

Sister De Muro wrote a report for Cardinal Archbishop Maurilio Fossati, who had urged Catholics to take Jewish refugees into their homes, describing the horrors and the suffering.[8][9] To support her claim, Father Ruggero Cipolla, OFM (1911-2006), the prison chaplain, wrote to him as well, saying that everything she related was true.[10]

Yad Vashem, Israel's official Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, named her Righteous Among the Nations.[11] The Jewish Community of Turin presented the award at Le Nuove prison, which is now a museum, on December 3, 2024.[7]

In 2018 a trailer was released for a documentary film about her life, "Suor Giuseppina Demuro - La dignità di una donna" (Sister Giuseppina Demura - The dignity of a woman").[3] Its director is Paolo Damosso, who also made films about Italian religious figures Clelia Merloni, saint Giuseppe Benedetto Cottolengo and saint Padre Pio.[12]

References

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  1. ^ Di Trapani, C. M. (March 13, 2018). "Suor Giuseppina, angelo tra le sbarre". Commissione per le comunicazioni della Famiglia Vincenziana (Famvin) (in Italian).
  2. ^ "Suor Giuseppina De Muro FdC". Figlie della Carità di San Vincenzo De Paoli (in Italian).
  3. ^ a b Damosso, Paolo (2019). "Suor Giuseppina De Muro. La dignità di una donna". Film Commission Torino Piemonte.
  4. ^ "Una Lettera del Papa al Cardinale Fossati". Il Piccolo di Trieste. November 29, 1958. p. 3.
  5. ^ a b "Sardinia, Recognition, Sister Giuseppina Demuro from Lanusei is 'Righteous Among the Nations'". L'Unione Sarda. December 3, 2024.
  6. ^ Cortese, Chiara (February 7, 2014). "Addio a Massimo Foa il bimbo di mamma Tilde". La Sentinella del Canavese.
  7. ^ a b Agenzia ANSA, GEE. "Sister Giuseppina Demuro 'Righteous Among the Nations'". MSN.
  8. ^ TIME Magazine. Milestones 9 April 1965
  9. ^ Romaniello, Carmine; Milione, Nicola (January 1, 2014). El Velero Lanse Rogge - Marzo 2014 (in Spanish and Italian). Polo Multimedia. p. 212. ISBN 978-88-911-4158-3.
  10. ^ Tuninetti, Giuseppi (1999). "Strategie pastorali, guerra e Resistenza nella diocesi di Torino: l'opera dell'arcivescovo Maurilio Fossati e dei suoi principali collaboratori". Cattolici, ebrei ed evangelici nella guerra: vita religiosa e società, 1939-1945 (Catholic, Hebrew and evangelical in the war: religious life and society, 1939-1945). Milano: FrancoAngeli. p. 135. ISBN 978-88-464-1194-5.
  11. ^ "Sister Giuseppina Demuro from Lanusei is "Righteous Among the Nations"". L'Unione Sarda English. December 3, 2024. Retrieved December 7, 2024.
  12. ^ "Suor De Muro, "la dignità di una donna"". Figlie della Carità di San Vincenzo De' Paoli (in Italian).