Notre Dame to observe 100th anniversary of the death of Servant of God Brother Columba O’Neill, C.S.C.
The University of Notre Dame is commemorating the 100th anniversary of the death of Servant of God Brother Columba O’Neill, C.S.C., on Nov. 20 (Monday), with a series of events including a novena, a Mass and a spotlight exhibit at the Hesburgh Library.
Brother Columba was a humble cobbler who worked at the University from 1885 until his death in 1923. He also served as a nurse and caregiver for the University’s founder, Rev. Edward Sorin, C.S.C., toward the end of Father Sorin’s life. Brother Columba began the formal process for sainthood on June 24, 2022, when Bishop Kevin Rhoades announced the opening of the cause for canonization.
The novena, co-sponsored by the McGrath Institute for Church Life and the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture, will begin at 6 p.m. Monday (Nov. 13) in the chapel in Keenan-Stanford Halls. Participants will pray the Litany of the Sacred Heart together as they prepare to mark the centenary. The event is open to the public as well as to members of the Notre Dame community, and those interested can register here.
The following Monday (Nov. 20), a Mass will be held at 5:15 p.m. in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart in honor of Brother Columba, with Rev. William Lies, C.S.C., provincial superior of the Congregation of Holy Cross, United States Province of Priests and Brothers, presiding.
“Don’t you sense that there are saints wandering among us? Brother Columba was one of them,” said Father Lies, who served as vice president for mission engagement and Church affairs at Notre Dame prior to his election as provincial superior. “We lift him up as an example of all the holy people on this campus and around the world who in their humble, healing ways continue to build the Kingdom on Earth.”
The Mass, which is open to the public, will also feature a brief reflection by Brother Philip Smith, C.S.C., the U.S. coordinator of the cause for Brother Columba.
While working at Notre Dame, Brother Columba made more than 10,000 images of the Immaculate Heart of Mary and more than 30,000 Sacred Heart badges, which he shared with students who came to pick up their shoes, often with instructions to pray a novena. Cures began to be reported throughout South Bend and beyond, and Brother Columba began receiving letters requesting his help.
Brother Smith has curated more than 10,000 letters to and from Brother Columba thanking him for his prayers, badges and cures.
“Brother Columba was an ordinary man, with a profoundly simple prayer life, utterly focused, like so many others in the early 20th century,” Brother Smith said. “He was intent on using his skills for the better of self and community.”
An exhibit of artifacts, “Path to Sainthood: Brother Columba O’Neill,” including one of the Sacred Heart badges he created, is also on display in the Rare Books and Special Collections room in the Hesburgh Library through November.
In addition, the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism commissioned new research into the life of Brother Columba, which was published in October in the American Catholic Studies Newsletter.
“Brother Columba reflects in his letters, ‘God humbles me, yet he honors me,’ as he prays for others, mends their shoes and ministers to anyone in the community who asks,” said Heather Foucault-Camm, program director for the Science and Religion Initiative at the McGrath Institute and lead organizer of the novena. “Let us lift up this life of humble holiness and turn to Brother Columba’s example as we seek to more fully understand what it means to be a person for others.”
Latest Faith
- de Nicola Center presents 24th annual Fall Conference, ‘Ever Ancient, Ever New: On Catholic Imagination’More than 1,200 scholars, students and guests from around the world will attend the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture’s 24th annual Fall Conference, “Ever Ancient, Ever New: On Catholic Imagination.” The conference features more than 175 papers, panels and performances across three days of conversation on the enduring and inexhaustible nature of the Catholic imagination.
- Sister Draru Mary Cecilia, LSMIG, receives Notre Dame Award for Outstanding Contributions to Catholic EducationThe Notre Dame Award for Outstanding Contributions to Catholic Education, awarded by the Alliance for Catholic Education, honors those who have made generous, lifetime commitments to sustain and strengthen Catholic schools. As executive director of the African Sisters Education Collaborative, Sister Draru oversees the education for Catholic sisters in 10 African countries. She has spent much of her life working to expand women’s education in Uganda and elsewhere on the African continent.
- Notre Dame Forum to present ‘Fr. TED Talks’ on Catholic social tradition, featuring President Rev. Robert A. Dowd, C.S.C., and Dr. Jim O’ConnellHonoring the legacy of legendary University of Notre Dame President Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., the 2024-25 Notre Dame Forum will host “Fr. TED Talks: Ideas from the Catholic Social Tradition That We Find Inspiring,” a two-night festival on Oct. 28 and 29.
- Notre Dame receives Lilly Endowment grant to support development of faith-based frameworks for AI ethicsThe University of Notre Dame has been awarded a $539,000 grant from Lilly Endowment Inc. to support Faith-Based Frameworks for AI Ethics, a one-year planning project that will engage and build a network of leaders in higher education, technology and a diverse array of faith-based communities focused on developing faith-based ethical frameworks and applying them to emerging debates around artificial general intelligence.
- de Nicola Center to award 2025 Evangelium Vitae Medal to Anthony and Phyllis LauingerThe de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture will award the 2025 Notre Dame Evangelium Vitae Medal — awarded to heroes of the pro-life movement — to Anthony J. and Phyllis W. Lauinger of Tulsa, Oklahoma, at a Mass and dinner on May 3, 2025, at the University of Notre Dame.
- Notre Dame theologian to receive 2024 Ratzinger Prize from VaticanCyril O’Regan, the Catherine F. Huisking Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame, has been selected to receive the 2024 Ratzinger Prize in Theology, widely regarded as the most prestigious award in the field. Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s secretary of state, will present the award to O’Regan and to sculptor Etsurō Sotoo during a ceremony at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City on Nov. 22. Both winners will also have an audience with Pope Francis earlier that day.