Friday, December 13, 2013

A Reflection: Blessed Frederic Ozanam and Christmas Holidays

By Fr. Ron Ramson, CM  Dallas 2013
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Father Ron Ramson is a Spiritual Director at Holy Trinity Seminary.  His most recent book, "Hosanna!: Blessed Frederic Ozanam: Family and Friends" can be found on Amazon.com
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At Christmas, on home visits to the poor, Frederic would give a small gift: a book, a picture, or something he thought that they would like.[1]

On New Year’s, Frederic would visit the poor and give little presents to their children.[2]

Frederic wrote a letter to Francois Lallier, his close friend and his daughter Marie’s godfather:
“Christmas Day we took the dear child (Marie) to church where she stayed for one and a half hours, delighted in the lights, the music, and sang at the top of her voice ‘Jesus I give you my heart.’ We also took her to homes of the poor small children where she had the joy of giving some of her older toys.” [3]

One New Year’s Eve (1852?), he told his wife Amelie about a poor family who had known better days. They had made dramatic changes in their lifestyle. They were forced in pawning their prize possession, a chest of drawers. Frederic said that he was tempted to go and redeem it and give it to them as a gift for New Year’s. Amelie didn’t encourage him to do it.

The Ozanams spent the day greeting visitors. In the evening, after all the visitors had left, Frederic won’t touch the bon-bons that his daughter Marie offered him; he sat there watching her play with the large number of toys that she had received that day from family and friends.  Frederic became overly quiet and introspected. Amelie pressed him: what was he thinking? He confessed: his concern for the family without their prized possession and sight of all the money spent on Marie’s toys. Amelie told him to go and do what he had to do for peace of his heart. Frederic hurried out the door and returned with a big smile on his face; he had redeemed the chest of drawers and gave it back to the family![4]

In early December (1852), the Ozanams travelled to Toulouse by mail-coach. Here they visited the tomb of Saint Thomas Aquinas. The conferences of the Society didn’t want him to go and insisted that Frederic spend more time with them. Frederic was delighted to see how busy the conferences were and the same at Montpellier.[5]  
The Christmas holidays of 1852 found the Ozanams in the south of France; here near the Mediterranean Sea weather would be in the low to mid 50’s, more favorable than up north in colder Paris.  Frederic’s mother-in-law joined them at Marseilles where his wife Amelie had been born and where there were a number of Magagnos family members (her mother’s relatives) lived. Amelie was delighted to have her mother with them and she enjoyed her cousins.[6]

There was a great gathering of the family at Christmas.  Frederic mentions receiving Holy Communion that morning at Mass:
“We spent the Feast Day together. I remembered you in my prayers at the altar, and ask you to do the same for me; you will find that, with the help of your prayers, we shall have a good journey. We are starting tomorrow for Toulouse which we should reach in five hours. We shall place ourselves under the protection of Notre Dame de la Garde, whom we visited a short time back.”[7]

Frederic was excited about seeing the French naval base at Toulon and the vast fleet. In Toulon there was another band of Magagnos to visit! [8]  He spoke of swollen feet, frequent spasms of pain, and dilation about the heart, which he had had before and for which he took digitalis.
“I hope that this little check will not last, and that God may have sent it to me as a New Year gift, so that I may say: ‘I will what you will, when you will, in whatever way you will, because you will.’” [9]
“A special carriage took us to Cannes … passing on the way, Frejus, the Esterel mountains, Antibes, a delightful route fringed with olive trees and orange trees, all laden with their golden fruit, and palm trees waving over a Roman ruin in the distance, at a chapel gate, or by the side of some modern villa.”
There
“We found Mr. Coste, an old cousin, almost blind, a dear relative of our fond mother, with whom we celebrated the arrival of the New Year. Indeed, my dear friends, I part company with the year of grace 1852, which had separated us, without regrets, and I welcome 1853, which will bring us together again.”
“We are to set out tomorrow morning at four o’clock from Nice for Genoa by the splendid Corniche route.” [10]

From Genoa the Ozanams crossed by the ship “Marie-Antoinette” to Livorno, Italy; it was a rough sea. A downpour drenched them on their arrival. It was January 10, 1853 when they settled at Pisa; Frederic was suffering from rheumatic pains and weakness, but still full of hope; he saluted Italy.[11] This would be Frederic Ozanam’s last Christmas and New Year’s on earth.

For Frederic Ozanam service of the poor held a top priority in his life. It was essentially a service of love. (Ozanam in His Correspondence, Louis Baunard, p. 343)
As brilliant as he was, as refined and spiritual as he was, he treated the poor and illiterate as equals. It was his custom to remove his hat when he entered their home however dilapidated it might be. His greeting was always the same: “I am your servant.” (Ibid.)  He never preached to them. After meeting their needs as best as he could, he would sit and chat with them and strove to cheer them up. (Ibid.)
  


[1] Frederic Ozanam, Professor at the Sorbonne, Kathleen O’Meara, pp. 173-174
[2] Ozanam in His Correspondence, Louis Baunard, p. 344
[3] Letter #775, Paris, December 31, 1847
[4] O’Meara, p.176
[5] Baunard, p. 370
[6] Ibid.
[7] Letter #1217, Alphonse Ozanam, Marseille, December 26, 1852
[8] Letter #1219, Charles Ozanam, Nice, January 2, 1853
[9] Ibid.
[10] Ibid.
[11] Letter #1221, Alphonse and Charles Ozanam, Pisa, January 11, 1853