His lifelong dream was to be a saint, says mother of Blessed Carlo Acutis

17 Oct 2024

By The Record

Blessed Carlo Acutis is seen in this screen grab of an 18 November, 2020, Catholic Faith Network TV Live interview. Photo: CNS photo/screen grab.

While many Catholics around the world rejoiced upon hearing the news that Pope Francis had approved a second miracle attributed to Blessed Carlo Acutis, none was happier than his mother, Antonia Salzano.

“We were very happy, of course, as you can imagine,” Ms Salzano said in a telephone interview with journalist Junno Esteves.

“It was great news because we were waiting for this declaration – especially for all the devotees he has around the world.”

A relic of the upcoming teen saint arrives at St Mary’s Cathedral this Saturday 19 October and will be on display until Thursday 24 October.

The body of Carlo Acutis, who died in 2006, is pictured at the Church of Santa Maria Maggiore in Assisi, Italy on 3 October 2020. The Italian teen, who had a great love for the Eucharist, is soon to be canonised. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

The program of the relic at St Mary’s Cathedral includes

Saturday 19 October – 6.00pm to 7.00pm
Vigil Mass – Welcome of Relic and Eucharistic Miracles Exhibition

Monday 21 October – 6:30 pm to 7:30pm
Holy Hour and Special Talk
Guest speaker: Fr Conor Steadman

Tuesday 22 October- 6:30pm to 7:30pm
Holy Hour and Special Talk
Guest speaker: Fr Kenneth Acosta

Thursday 24 October – 12:10pm to 1:00pm
Mass – Farewell of Relic

Born in London, England, on 3 May 1991, to Andrea Acutis and Antonia Salzano, Carlo Acutis was an average teen with an above-average knack for computers.

Before his death from leukemia in 2006, he put that knowledge to use by creating an online database of eucharistic miracles around the world.

For Ms Salzano, the approval of the miracle “was a big sign of hope because through (Carlo’s) example, he gave witness to values that are for everybody; not just for (believers), but for nonbelievers, like helping the poor, human respect, the love for nature, love for the environment.”

It’s also the fulfillment of the teen’s lifelong dream of becoming a saint, which he had expressed since he was a boy, she said.

“He always said, ‘I want to please God,'” Ms Salzano said.

“When he did his first holy Communion – when he was seven years old – he wrote, ‘To be united with God: this is my life program.’ And he maintained this promise all his life until the end, until his death.”

Although Ms Salzano vividly remembers her son’s devotion to Jesus and the Virgin Mary and his care for the poor, including using his own money to purchase sleeping bags for the homeless, she also remembers him as an average teenager who enjoyed life.

Pope Francis formally recognized a miracle attributed to the intercession of Blessed Carlo Acutis, a 15-year-old Italian teenager whose birth in 1991 will make him the first “millennial” to become a saint. He is pictured in an undated photo. Photo: OSV News photo/courtesy Sainthood Cause of Carlo Acutis.


“He loved (soccer), he loved basketball, he liked animals, he liked to play. A lot of friends loved him very much because he was always joking, making films,” she recalled.

“But at the centre of his life was Jesus; he had a daily meeting (with Jesus) through the holy Mass, Eucharistic adoration, and the holy rosary. This was characteristic (of Carlo). And when you open the door of your heart to God, your ordinary life becomes extraordinary.”

“This is Carlo’s secret,” she continued. “And this is possible for everybody because Carlo had a simple spirituality. He didn’t have the stigmata, or apparitions, or (experienced) levitation. He had a simple childhood. Everything Carlo did was in Jesus, through Jesus and for Jesus.”

As part of his sainthood cause, the young teen’s body was exhumed and transferred to a place suitable for public veneration, the Shrine of the Renunciation at the Church of St Mary Major in Assisi in 2019.

The first miracle attributed to Carlo’s intercession was approved by Pope Francis in February 2020. It involved a young Brazilian boy who was completely healed from a rare congenital disease of the pancreas. In October of that year, the teen was beatified during a Mass at the Basilica of St Francis in Assisi.

The second miracle, which now paves the way for Carlo’s canonisation, was approved by the Holy Father Pope Francis on 23 May after a meeting with Cardinal Marcello Semeraro, prefect of the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints.

According to the website of the dicastery, Pope Francis recognised the miraculous healing of Valeria Valverde, a young Costa Rican woman living in Florence who suffered a severe head injury.

The same day her mother visited Carlo’s tomb, Valverde “regained the ability to breathe on her own, and the following day, doctors recorded the recovery of upper limb motility and partial speech,” the dicastery said.

Antonia Salzano, the mother of Carlo Acutis, is pictured in front of his tomb after it was opened in the Church of Santa Maria Maggiore in Assisi, Italy in 2020. Photo: CNS/courtesy Diocese of Assisi-Nocera Umbra-Gualdo Tadino.


Pope Francis has praised the young teen as a role model for today’s young people, who are often tempted by the traps of “self-absorption, isolation, and empty pleasure.”

Ms Salzano recalled one of her son’s now most well-known quotes, “All are born originals, but many die as photocopies” and said that everyone is unique and shares “a special call to holiness.”

With all the trials Christians, especially young people, face today, Carlo’s life serves as a reminder that every person has “beautiful things” inside them and to “not be scared” but “be confident.”

“I think that is very important nowadays because young people tend to imitate very much,” Ms Salzano said.

Carlo tells “each one of us that we are special, that we are unique and especially remember that there is an afterlife and that somebody created us, that loves us, that wanted us to be alive,” she told OSV News.

“We are not made to be people in this universe of chaos without a goal. God created us for a goal, and that goal is paradise,” Ms Salzano said.