Century-old blessing from Pope to Wakefield Catholic society found in a loft

It is not every day you find a blessing from a saint gathering dust in your loft. But that is exactly what has happened to former Mayor of Wakefield Norman Hazell.
Date: 17th May 2017.
Picture James Hardisty.
A handwritten blessing for a Yorkshire church sent by Pope Pius X in 1908 has been uncovered in an attic after being lost for 60 years and has been presented back to the parish priest at St Austin's Church, Wentworth Terrace, Wakefield. Pictured (left to right) Norman Hazell, President of the Catholic Young Mens Society, and Michael Timlin, Secretary of the Catholic Young Mens Society with Monsignor David Smith, holding the discovered letter.Date: 17th May 2017.
Picture James Hardisty.
A handwritten blessing for a Yorkshire church sent by Pope Pius X in 1908 has been uncovered in an attic after being lost for 60 years and has been presented back to the parish priest at St Austin's Church, Wentworth Terrace, Wakefield. Pictured (left to right) Norman Hazell, President of the Catholic Young Mens Society, and Michael Timlin, Secretary of the Catholic Young Mens Society with Monsignor David Smith, holding the discovered letter.
Date: 17th May 2017. Picture James Hardisty. A handwritten blessing for a Yorkshire church sent by Pope Pius X in 1908 has been uncovered in an attic after being lost for 60 years and has been presented back to the parish priest at St Austin's Church, Wentworth Terrace, Wakefield. Pictured (left to right) Norman Hazell, President of the Catholic Young Mens Society, and Michael Timlin, Secretary of the Catholic Young Mens Society with Monsignor David Smith, holding the discovered letter.

Mr Hazell made the extraordinary discovery while going through his belongings in his loft and has now presented the document to his local church.

The handwritten note came from Pope Pius X in 1908 after he had been written to by a Father Timothy Courtney, who was director of the Catholic Young Men’s Society which was established at St Austin’s Church in Wakefield in 1858.

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Pius, who was a staunch defender of traditional Catholic values died in 1914 and was canonised as a saint in 1954. His achievements as Pope included collecting the laws of the church into a single volume for the first time and encouraging Catholics across the world to live daily lives in a way in which reflected the most important Christian values.

Pope Pius had written back to Father Courtney to offer a blessing both to him as society director and all of its members. The letters to and from Rome were written in Latin but a translation has been made alongside them.

Mr Hazell, who has been president of the Catholic Young Men’s Society since 1962, says he unsure when the blessing came into his possession but says it must have been at some stage after the society held a centenary dinner at which it was shown in 1958.

The 85-year-old came across the blessing a couple of years ago and was keeping in a bedroom at home. But then he decided to present it to St Austin’s and a special presentation was arranged on May 9 - exactly 109 years after Pope Pius had written his blessing to the society.

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“I found it in the loft, it had been up there probably for 40 to 50 years. It was produced for the society’s centenary which was in 1958. We had a formal dinner than a special service. I don’t know where it had come from, probably the church. It was produced and taken around at dinner. I didn’t steal it, I was looking after it!

“If somebody had asked me, I wouldn’t have had a clue what had happened to it. I had a lot of junk in my loft, in my political life I was a mayor and fought parliamentary elections so had things like that up there and old cricket photographs, things like that. I came across it and thought this shouldn’t be here.

“It was just dusty. I have all sorts of things in my loft. I brought down the blessing and put it in a bedroom. I made the decision it had got to go back to the church. It is going to be mounted in the church so everyone can see it, not just my family.”

On May 5, 1908, Father Courtney wrote to the Vatican, saying: “Timothy Courtney, priest of the Society of Jesus, director of the Catholic Young Men’s Society, established in St Austin’s Church at Wakefield, England, a society which is most devoted to the Apostolic See of Blessed Peter and produce signal fruits of edification prostrate at the feet of your Holiness, humbly begs the Apostolic Benediction for the said society and its director, on this occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of its canonical erection in this mission.”

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A response from Pope Pius X was written by hand four days later before being sent back to England. It read: “As petitioned for, we most lovingly impart the apostolic benediction upon our beloved son, the director, and to all the likewise beloved young men enrolled in the society.”

Mr Hazell says there would have great excitement at the time when the Pope’s response was received. “The Catholic Young Men’s Society had a chaplain at the time called Father Courtney who wrote to the Vatican asking for a papal blessing. It was quite uncommon in those days to receive one. Nowadays everyone gets a blessing, when a young Catholic couple get married, they are provided with a nice picture of the pope signed by a cardinal.

“But Father Courtney took it upon himself to write to the Vatican City asking the Pope if he would give a blessing. He must have been amazed when the Pope wrote back in his own hand. It was Pope Pius X, who has since been canonised. He was a wonderful Pope, such a good Pope.

“For him to write from Vatican City to a church in Wakefield, Yorkshire, is just amazing. I was delighted when I refound it.”

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Earlier this month, Norman presented the blessing to Monsignor Canon David Smith, parish priest at St Austin’s during Mass. Norman then addressed the congregation about the history of the blessing and the society - finding out afterwards that two worshippers among had been former society members.

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