Wednesday, January 15, 2025 - A self-declared former "wild child" and actress from Northern Ireland is on her way to becoming a saint almost nine years after her death.
The actress and presenter-turned-nun was killed in an
earthquake in Ecuador on April 16, 2016, at age 33.
On Sunday, Jan. 12, a special ceremony marking the opening
of the case of beatification for Sister Clare Crockett was held in the
Cathedral of Alcala de Henares in Madrid, Spain.
Sister Clare became a nun after making the decision to swap
her brief career as an actress — starring in the 2002 TV movie Sunday, per
her IMDb page — and turning down a chance to present on Nickelodeon,
according to the Press Association.
Crockett, born in Londonderry, revealed she was going to
become a nun while holding a “beer in one hand and a cigarette in the other,”
the news agency stated.
Sunday's service, which was live-streamed on the Home
of the Mother YouTube account and screened at the Brunswick Moviebowl
cinema in Derry, saw more than 100 people travel to the Spanish capital for the
event, which recognized Crockett "as a candidate for sainthood,"
the BBC reported.
Her sister, Shauna Gill, told BBC News Northern Ireland (NI)
before the ceremony that the family would be "beaming with pride."
"Never in a million years did we think she was going to
be a nun, never mind make her way to sainthood," Gill told the outlet of
Sister Clare, who has previously been linked to fertility miracles.
"A lot of people have asked us about grieving for
Clare, but I don't think we have ever grieved for Clare because she is talked
about every day," she added.
Crockett died in the 2016 Ecuador earthquake after the
building where she'd been teaching music in Playa Prieta collapsed.
While remembering her late sister, Gill told BBC News NI,
"Everything in Clare's life growing up was dramatic, nothing was plain
sailing," adding that she was "always destined for a life in the
spotlight."
"Our Clare would have loved all of this attention and
the drama about her," Gill told the publication. "But Sr Clare would
have liked to be in the background – I don't think she would like all the
limelight."
According to her biography on the Sister Clare and
companions website, Crockett "entered the Servant Sisters of the Home of
the Mother on August 11, 2001, at the age of 18."
"She took her first vows on February 18, 2006, taking
the religious name of Sr. Clare Maria of the Trinity and the Heart of
Mary," the bio continued, adding that Crockett "took her perpetual
vows on September 8, 2010."
"From the moment of her first vows, she served in the Servant Sisters’ communities in Belmonte, Cuenca (Spain), Jacksonville, Florida (USA), Valencia (Spain), Guayaquil (Ecuador), and Playa Prieta, Manabí (Ecuador)," the site stated.
Sunday's ceremony came after Crockett was declared a Servant
of God by the Catholic Church, which is the first step towards sainthood, in
November 2024, the BBC reported.
The next stages in the sainthood journey could see Sister
Clare be declared “venerable” and later beatified, according to the outlet.
Gill said the ceremony, which was attended by around 1,000
people, marked her sister being declared a “Servant of God,” the PA reported.
“There are four steps to becoming a saint, so this is the
first one," she added to the news agency. “Clare’s life will be
investigated before we can move on."
“No one knows how long it can take, 10 years, 20 years, two
years, it depends on how fast things move," Gill shared. “Nobody has been
through this in our lifetime, so nobody knows what to expect or what’s going to
happen.”
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