Early life Estephan El Douaihy was born on 2 August 1630 in
Ehden to the noble
Douaihy family. At the age of sixteen, recognized as a brilliant young talent, he was sent to the
Maronite College (Seminary) in Rome. He studied there for fourteen years, from 1641 to 1655, being cured of a serious condition that almost led to blindness. Douaihy believed that the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary was responsible for his cure. While in Italy, he traveled as widely as possible seeking manuscripts dealing with Maronite history and liturgy. When he returned to Lebanon at the age of 25, he continued his research. On 25 March 1656 he was ordained
priest by Patriarch
Safrawy. In 1658, he was sent to serve the Maronite parish in
Aleppo. He was appointed
apostolic visitor in countryside Lebanon, and later he served in the parish of
Ardeh. In 1662, he was again sent to Aleppo, where he remained until 21 May 1668. On his return, he went on a pilgrimage to the
Holy Land. On 8 July 1668 he was appointed and consecrated bishop of the
Maronite Diocese of Cyprus by Patriarch
George Beseb'ely. He travelled to Cyprus for a pastoral visit in 1669.
Election to Patriarchate As bishop, and later as Patriarch, he undertook reforms of the Maronite Church and its monks. Douaihy was elected Patriarch on 20 May 1670, when he was only 40 years old, but was confirmed by Rome only on 8 August 1672. This is universally seen as an acknowledgment of his personal moral qualities, his extraordinary learning, and his keen appreciation of the issues the Maronites faced. He paid particular attention to the traditions of the Maronite Church, and favoured a de-Latinisation of rites and ceremonies. He was hounded by Ottoman authorities, who resented his principled appeals for justice for the Maronites. In particular, they were frustrated by his resistance to their oppressive taxation policies: policies which saw the abandonment of many villages by peasants unable to pay their taxes. It was also a period when Maronites and, in particular, their clergy, were liable to sudden arrest, assault and murder. The Patriarch was not exempt, being assaulted himself. He was accordingly obliged to move from place to place, however he maintained his writing. Douaihy traveled throughout the Maronite world, including Cyprus and Aleppo. This is partly because Aleppo was at that time a focus for the international overland trade, the only trade where the Ottoman Empire had any opening, given the European domination of the sea routes.
Death and afterward Almost immediately after his death, on 3 May 1704 in Qannubine,
Kadisha Valley, he was considered by many Maronites of Lebanon, but particularly in North Lebanon and in
Zgharta,
Ehden to have been a saint. The Congregation of the Causes of Saints issued the decree of nulla osta for his beatification cause on 5 December 1996. The Patriarchate of Antioch of the Maronites proceeded with the diocesan investigation and, at its culmination, submitted the results to congregation, which validated the proceedings with a decree dated 8 November 2002. The Positio for the beatification cause was published in 2005 and it received the approval of the Historical Commission of the Congregation of the Causes of Saints on 24 January 2006. On 3 July 2008
Pope Benedict XVI authorised the Congregation for the Causes of Saints to draw up a decree on the heroic virtues of Patriarch Douaihy who will be referred to as Venerable from the moment of publication of the decree. Some of the miracles attributed to him have been collected by M.S. El Douaihy. A miracle attributed to his intercession was investigated and was subject to a diocesan investigation; the miracle received formal ratification from the Congregation for the Causes of Saints on 30 January 2014. Pope Francis approved the miracle required for his beatification on 17 March 2024, and he was beatified on August 2, 2024 in Bkerke, Lebanon. ==Religious, philosophical and/or political views==