EWTN: Sainthood cause opens for Adele Brice. In a decree by a Wisconsin bishop on Friday, the Catholic Church officially opened the cause for sainthood of a Belgian immigrant who had visions of the Blessed Mother.
Adele Brice (1831–1896) couldn’t read or write, but she traveled the countryside of Wisconsin on foot teaching children and families about God. Brice is most well known for three apparitions she had, which are the only approved Marian apparitions to have happened in the United States.
Last year, more than 200,000 pilgrims visited the shrine to Our Lady of Champion in Wisconsin, Father Anthony Stephens, the Father of Mercy who serves as a rector of the shrine, told EWTN News.
From the time Brice first received holy Communion as a young girl in Belgium, she felt a calling to religious life. But when her family decided to immigrate to the United States, she went with them, trusting her parish priest who encouraged her to go.
“What moves me particularly about her is perseverance,” added Father John Girotti, the vicar general and moderator of the curia for the Diocese of Green Bay. “She moved to this country with her parents when she was in her 20s. She didn’t necessarily want to come, but she came out of respect for her mom and her dad.”
Brice was also blind in one eye because of a childhood injury.
“She had her faith. She loved God. And she persevered,” Girotti continued. “Her faith allowed her to move mountains, as Jesus says. And she did. She did great things. She was open to God’s will in her life.”


