French seminarian, inspired by Frassati, publishes book about the soon-to-be saint

 

Timothée Croux, a young seminarian from the French Diocese of Meaux, has written a book about Pier Giorgio Frassati. / Credit: Victoria Cardiel/EWTN News

ACI Prensa Staff, Sep 6, 2025 / 12:00 pm (CNA).

Timothée Croux, a young seminarian from the French Diocese of Meaux in the Île-de-France region of the country, says the example of Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati played a decisive role in his vocational discernment.

Croux said he discovered Frassati, who was from Turin, Italy, and who died in 1925, through scouting and shares many personal affinities with the soon-to-be saint.

“I delved deeper into Frassati’s personality during my preparatory year, before entering the seminary,” he said. “I discovered that there were many things in his biography that resembled mine. For example, we both have a passion for the mountains.”

“We both sought an authentic vocation, although in the end he decided not to become a priest in order to serve the poor in the mines, studying engineering to better help the miners,” Croux told ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner.

An adventurer with a true appetite for life

Croux noted that this young man from Turin, set to be canonized Sept. 7 alongside Blessed Carlo Acutis, is highly regarded among French scouts “because he was an adventurer with a true appetite for life.”

Croux, 23, is preparing for the priesthood through his ecclesiastical studies at the Pontifical French Seminary in Rome. In collaboration with Belgian priest Emmanuel de Ruyver, he has published in France and Italy the book “An Adventurer in Paradise,” a spiritual biography of Pier Giorgio Frassati designed especially for young people and students.

“It has a biographical section with many stories about Frassati. At the end of each chapter, there is a meditation on a beatitude, reflection questions, a Gospel excerpt, and a short prayer,” Croux explained.

“By knowing him better, we can give young people the desire for holiness. Being a saint was a daily pursuit for him. Frassati was not a priest and did not die a martyr. But from his most tender years as a child, he strove to live the Gospel consistently and with a disconcerting freedom,” the seminarian emphasized.

Croux also maintains close contact with Frassati’s family, particularly with Wanda Gawronska, the blessed’s niece, who wrote the book’s preface and is scheduled to be present during Sunday’s canonization.

The young seminarian with Wanda Gawronska, Pier Giorgio Frassati's niece. Credit: Courtesy of Timothée Croux
The young seminarian with Wanda Gawronska, Pier Giorgio Frassati’s niece. Credit: Courtesy of Timothée Croux

He died young like Acutis

The young man from Turin died at age 24, one week after contracting fulminant poliomyelitis while visiting the poor in their homes. His premature death is a characteristic he shares with Acutis, who died of leukemia at the age of 15.

“Young people may think that you have to die young to be a saint, but that’s not true. The important thing is to live faithfulness, charity, and hope throughout your life,” the French seminarian emphasized.

The poor and most vulnerable always held a special place in Frassati’s heart. When he was just a child, after a poor mother and her barefoot son knocked at his family’s door, he gave them his shoes, asking them to leave quickly before his family found out. Until shortly before his death, he worked to get money or medicine to those in need.

“He said he saw through them a light that we don’t have: the light of Christ. And he understood it deeply, as in Matthew 25: ‘If you visit the poor, the prisoners, the naked, it is I you visit.’ He had understood it. That’s why he calls us not to be afraid to go to the peripheries and visit the poorest,” Croux said.

The Frassati family was very wealthy. His father, Alfredo Frassati, was a senator, ambassador, and director of the Italian newspaper La Stampa. The future saint grew up in the Catholic upper-class environment of Turin. But “it was perfunctory Catholicism, and it wasn’t his parents who encouraged him to serve the poor. They only discovered the scope of his action after his death, when thousands of people wanted to pay tribute to him,” Croux explained.

Love for the poor, rooted in the Gospel

His passion for the poor was rooted above all in his love for the Eucharist, another characteristic he shares with Acutis. At the age of 13, he obtained permission from his mother to go to Mass every day.

“He used to say: ‘Jesus visits me every day in Communion, and I humbly return that visit by going to see the poor.’ He had understood that the Eucharist was the sacrament of charity,” Croux explained.

Frassati’s daily life, marked by faith, service, and evangelical consistency, made him — as St. John Paul II said, when he was still a cardinal in Krakow in 1977 — “the man of the eight beatitudes.”

“He saw in him a model of complete holiness, living every beatitude in his short life,” Croux noted.

Frassati received a strict education. He was not a great student, and his father was very severe with him, expecting him to take over as director of La Stampa. However, the young Frassati directed his life toward the study of engineering so he could be closer to the people working in terrible conditions underground in the mines.

Peace and social commitment

Another essential feature of Frassati’s life was his moral firmness in the face of the totalitarian threat.

Frassati was associated with the Italian Popular Party, inspired by a priest and based on principles of Christian democracy. But he left it when the movement made a pact with the Fascists in 1922. He also resigned from a Catholic student group, Cesare Balbo, after discovering that it had honored Mussolini during his visit to Turin.

“For Pier Giorgio, politics was a service, especially to the poorest, and he could not accept a movement that exalted force,” Croux explained.

His brief but intense life explains why today, 100 years later, Frassati continues to speak to thousands of young people. According to Croux, Frassati’s message to the youth of the 21st century can be summed up in three points: prayer and charity, friendship, and the pursuit of peace.

“He made a connection between the daily Eucharist and charity toward the poorest. Every morning he went to Mass and then visited needy families, offering food, clothing, and a smile,” the young seminarian noted.

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.


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