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María Teresa Ferragut Roig

Blessed María Teresa Ferragut Roig was a Spanish Roman Catholic laywoman and martyr, killed near Alzira, Valencia during the anti-clerical persecutions in Republican-controlled Spain at the beginning of the Spanish Civil War. She was beatified in 2001 by Pope John Paul II as part of the group known as the 233 Spanish martyrs, recognized as having been killed in odium fidei.

Early life and family
María Teresa Ferragut Roig, also spelled Ferragud Roig, was born on 14 January 1853 in Algemesí (Valencia), Spain. On 23 November 1872, she married Vicente Silverio Masià. Her only son entered the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin under the name Serafín of Algemesí, while five of her six daughters entered enclosed religious life. María de Jesús, María Verónica, and María Felicidad joined the Capuchin Poor Clares at Agullent (Valencia). Another daughter, whose name is not recorded, entered the convent of San Julián in Valencia and María Josefa joined the Discalced Augustinians at Benigánim. Only one daughter, Purificación, remained a laywoman. and charitable initiatives such as the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul. Her spirituality was centered on daily Mass and devotion to the Eucharist, the Virgin Mary, and the Sacred Heart of Jesus. == Spanish Civil War and martyrdom ==
Spanish Civil War and martyrdom
Following the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936, anti-clerical violence intensified in Republican-controlled areas. Ferragut sheltered her daughters, who were members of religious orders, in her home. On 19 October 1936, militia members raided Ferragut’s home and arrested her along with her four daughters. Ferragut refused to abandon her daughters and they were detained together in the Cistercian convent of Fons Salutis in Algemesí, which had been converted into a prison. During their imprisonment, their captors reportedly attempted to pressure them to renounce their religious vocations, but they refused. On the night of 25 October 1936, they were transported by truck to the nearby town of Alzira, approximately 8 kilometres away. The vehicle stopped at the entrance to the town, at a site known as Cruz Cubierta, where a wayside cross porch marks, according to local tradition, the site where King James I of Aragon died. According to testimony preserved in the beatification process, she chose to be executed last and encouraged her daughters with the words: She was executed by a firing squad with her four daughters, three of whom were beatified with her: and on 2 July 1939 were transferred to Algemesí and interred in the crypt of the convent of Fons Salutis. On 16 April 1961, their remains were translated to the parish church of Saint Pius X in Algemesí. == Beatification ==
Beatification
Ferragut’s death was recognized by the Catholic Church as martyrdom in odium fidei ("in hatred of the faith"), which indicates that she was killed specifically because of her religious identity. In December 1958, the diocesan inquiry into their martyrdom was incorporated, at the request of the postulator of the Augustinian Recollects, into the cause of the Capuchin Aurelio de Vinalesa and his companions. The Archdiocese of Valencia concluded the first phase of the process on 13 April 1959. Her specific cause belonged to the juridical group of José Aparicio Sanz and 73 companions, which was incorporated into the broader beatification of 233 martyrs. and on 22 September (collective commemoration of Spanish Civil War martyrs). In 2011, relics of Ferragut, together with those of two other contemporary martyrs, Carlos López Vidal and Pascual Penadés Jornet, were placed in a reliquary at the foot of the altar of the Church of Santa Marina Virgen in Torrebaja (Valencia). == References ==
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