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Patron Saint of Cop Killers?
Does anybody know anything about this? When I googled Fesch nothing from the Vatican or the French church came up about his cause – if it is officially a cause.
According to this blog, Jacques Fesch, a 27-years-old playboy, who was beheaded in 1954 in France for the murder of a police officer following a bungled robbery, is being considered for Catholic sainthood. Apparently, "many Catholics in France now believe that the killer died a saint. Thirty years after his execution, the archbishop of Paris, Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger, signed a decree that may one day see him beatified."He admitted to shooting a police officer in an attempt to flee a robbery. After his conviction and death sentence, he underwent a profound conversion. Not profound enough, however, to convince him of the justice of his sentence, which he believed to be excessive since he did not premeditate the murder.
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More information about Fesch here (scroll down).But to propose him as a model of sanctity? He was a spoiled man who killed another human being while trying to escape robbing a bank. Although he repented, he resisted the eminently just judgment of death handed down in his case. Not a shining example of humble acceptance of responsibility, punishment, and atonement. A truly heroic saint would acknowledge that what he had done deserved this punishment, and been at peace with it.
Does anybody know anything about this? When I googled Fesch nothing from the Vatican or the French church came up about his cause – if it is officially a cause.
