Hindiyya was born on August 6, 1720, in
Aleppo to Shukrallah Ujaimi and mother Helene Hawwa, both devout Maronite Christians. Similar to other Maronite Christians of the time, the Ujaimis were merchants who were getting increasingly wealthy due to commercial treaties signed between European powers and the
Ottomans' in 1675. Hindiyya had a brother named Nicholas and sisters, although the exact number of siblings is unclear. Hindiyya studied under the
Jesuits, which encouraged her in developing her spirituality and exposed her to the stories of other young women who had chosen a religious life over the secular path. Hindiyya in turn embraced many
Roman Catholic devotions, as the frequent auricular
Confession. The support from the Jesuits lasted until 1748. She moved from Aleppo to
Bkerke,
Lebanon, where on March 25, 1750, she founded her own
religious order called the
Sacred Heart of Jesus, a Western devotion she imported among the Maronites and that made forthwith success. She claimed to have visions of Christ, to make
miracles, to speak with Christ in mystical unions She soon became considered as a living saint and almost an object of veneration. The majority of the Maronite clergy, as well as the Patriarchs
Simon Awad,
Tobias El Khazen, and
Joseph Estephan firmly supported Hindiyya, while on the contrary the Jesuits, as well as some Maronites, became more and more mistrustful of her doctrine and personal cult. In 1752
Pope Benedict XIV ordered the first investigation of her practices. It was carried out by the
Franciscan Desiderio da Casabasciana, who, initially hostile, became himself a supporter of Hindiyya. The case of Hindiyya made a comeback under the patriarchate of Joseph Estephan, also because the Patriarch was so fond of the devotion imported by Hindiyya that he made the
Sacred Heart a
holy day of obligation for the Maronites. New inspections were carried out by Valeriano di Prato,
Custodian of the Holy Land, in 1773 and finally by Pietro Craveri of Moretta, who took a stand against the doctrines of Hindiyya in 1775. The affair of Hindiyya combined with the opposition to Joseph Estephan by the
Khazen Sheikhes and by the bishops Michael El Khazen and
Michael Fadel. Finally in 1779
Pope Pius VI issued a decree stating that Hindiyya was delusional and her revelations and doctrines false. Moreover, the Pope abolished her Order of Sacred Heart and he suspended the Patriarch Joseph Estephan from all functions of office, appointing Michael El Khazen as Vicar. Patriarch Joseph Estephan was restored to power only in 1784, while Hindiyya lived the rest of her life confined to various convents and her works were proscribed. She died on February 13, 1798, in the convent of Our Lady of the Fields. ==Personality==