Irene Stefani
Irene Stefani, IMC was an Italian religious sister of the Consolata Missionaries. She assumed the religious name Irene upon her investiture and was sent to the mission in Kenya, where she died in 1930 of bubonic plague. She was beatified in 2015 by Cardinal Polycarp Pengo on behalf of Pope Francis.
Biography
Stefani was born in 1891 in the small village of Anfo as one of twelve children and was baptized as Aurelia Jacoba Mercede on the following day, 23 August. She received Confirmation on 6 November 1898 and later received her First Communion a few years following this. Her mother died on 12 May 1907 and this left Stefani in the delicate position of the management of her siblings and assisting her father, especially in the Christian formation of her younger sisters Marietta and Antonietta, and her brother Ugo who died not long after this.Stefani joined the Consolata Missionaries in Turin in June 1911 and made her first vows on 29 January 1914, prior to the beginning of World War I. That same year, she was sent to go to Kenya, leaving on 28 December 1914, where she arrived in January 1915 in Mombasa. She served as a nurse in Kenya and became well known and well regarded among the people that she served. This earned her the nickname "Nyaatha" . With the onslaught of World War I, Stefani served in hospitals to tend to the wounded soldiers and those others wounded in the conflict. On 20 August 1916, she was appointed to assist the carriers who were forced to march exhaustingly in the African terrain. During this time, she worked as a Red Cross nurse in military hospitals in places such as Lindi and Dar es Salaam in Tanzania and Kenya. She had zeal for the salvation of souls and baptised 3000 in articulo mortis.
At the conclusion of the war in 1918, Stefani returned to Nyeri where she first served as an assistant formator of the first aspirants of the incipient local congregation known as the Mary Immaculate Sisters. Two years later, she was appointed to Our Lady of Divine Providence mission at Gikondi, remaining there until her death. There, she taught in schools and instructed parishioners in catechism while visiting the villages. At Gikondi, she was the Superior of the Consolata Missionary Sisters for eight years.
In October 1930, Stefani offered to God her life for the mission. She contracted a disease from one of the patients she was treating and grew physically weak in the summer, losing a considerable amount of weight. On 20 October, she felt sick yet opted to visit a plague-stricken person, remaining at his bedside for several hours. She succumbed eleven days later, on 31 October 1930.