Giacomo Cusmano

Blessed Don Giacomo (James) Cusmano (Palermo, March 15, 1834 - Palermo, March 14, 1888) was an Italian priest, venerated as a potential saint by the Catholic Church. He was founder of the "Congregatio Missionariorum Servorum Pauperum" (Congregation Missionary Servants of the Poor, 1887), more commonly known as the "Boccone del Povero" (Morsel of the Poor). Cusmano was beatified October 30, 1983 by Pope John Paul II in St. Peter's Square.

Cusmano was educated as a physician and a priest. As a youth he attended the Jesuit "Collegio Massimo" in Palermo, in the midst of anti-clerical civil strife in the 1848 Sicilian revolution. He undertook medical studies at the Collegio, and in 1851 transferred to the school of medicine at the Royal University of Palermo. In 1852, his father died and he had familial responsibilities at the family farms and estates in San Giuseppe Jato. During this time, he became aware of the plight of the poor peasants who worked under him during the days of the harvest. Many of them were amazed that he "showed us courtesy, kindness, and even gratitude." They would remark that "Rather than commanding he would softly ask." Often, when coming from the countryside to the town, he would surrender his horse to some poor farmer suffering the long trek on foot. Despite these commitments Giacomo graduated in Medicine and Surgery with honors on June 11, 1855, at age twenty-one.

After graduating, Cusmano spent most of his time in the continuous care of the poor, not in Palermo, but in San Giuseppe Jato, where commitments multiplied. In 1859, at the outbreak of the second war of independence, the Resorgimento, the revolutionary Enrico Albanese, a friend of Garibaldi and his family doctor, approached Cusmano, with whom he had woven an excellent relationship throughout the years of study, and asked him to join them to fight in the revolution. Saddened by the plight of the poor of his town, whose misery was not diminished but rather increased dramatically after the riots of 1848, he declined and continued to minister to the poor of San Giuseppe Jato.

His affection and concern for the poor led him to seek holy orders, and on December 22, 1860, after only one year of study at the theological school of Don Pietro Boccone, canon of the cathedral of Palemo, Giacomo Cusmano was ordained a priest in the private chapel of the auxiliary bishop of Palermo by Monsignor Domenico Ciluffo: this while the church and its clerics were increasingly disenfranchised by the new Italian government. With Sicily annexed to the new unified Italy, the church lost its property and good will, and many employees of the Bourbon regime lost their jobs, thus increasing the number of poor struggling with hunger. Cusmano then began to think of a new undertaking for the assistance of the hungry.

Over several years, starting with a small effort to provide a "Morsel of the Poor", in the parish house of Palermo's church of the Holy Martyrs, Cusmano proceeded to establish similar but larger institutions in Terre Rosse, Valguarnera, Monreale and Santa Caterina.

Then, on 21 November 1887 in Palermo's Church of San Marco, the Congregation Missionary Servants of the Poor was established in the presence of Archbishop Celesia. The order was composed of priests required to live in a religious community having the aim of keeping alive the spirit of the Morsel of the Poor and evangelizing the rural poor. The first among them was Cusmano, who received the congratulations of the archbishop, who called him the "Don Bosco of the South".