Person
ISNI: 
0000 0001 1630 4138
https://isni.org/isni/0000000116304138
Name: 
Bachita ((kanosjanka))
Bakhita
Bakhita, Giuseppina
Bakhita, Giuseppina (sancta)
Bakhita, Josefina
Bakhita, Josefina Margareta
Bakhita, Josefina Margareta (Sr)
Bakhita, Josefina (svatá)
Bakhita, Josefina (sveta)
Bakhita, Josefine (svatá)
Bakhita, Joséphine-Marguerite-Fortunée
Bakhita, Josephine (sancta)
Bakhita ((kanosjanka))
Bakhita (Mère)
Bakhita (redovnica)
Bakhita Szent Jozefina
Bakitová, Josefina (svatá)
Džozefina Bachita
Giuseppina Bakhita
Giuseppina Bakhita (religiosa e santa sudanese)
Ġużeppina Bakhita
Iosephina Bakhita
Josefina Bakhita
Josefina Bakhita (sainte)
Joséphine Bakhita
Josephine Bakhita (barnflicka)
Josephine Bakhita (nanny)
Josephine Bakhita (sudanesische Heilige)
Joséphine-Marguerite-Fortunée-Bakhita
Józefina Bakhita ((św. ;)
Józefina Bakhita (zakonnica pochodzenia sudańskiego, święta Kościoła katolickiego)
Józefina Małgorzata Fortunata Bakhita
Jozefino Baĥita
Jozephina Bakhita
Yosefina Bakhita
Джузеппина Бахита
جوزفين بخيتة
ジュゼッピーナ・バキタ
Dates: 
1869-1947
Creation class: 
Language material
Creation role: 
author
Related names: 
Catholic Church (isAffiliatedWith)
Matošević, Benedikta
Zanini, Roberto Italo (co-author)
Titles: 
Bakhita
cuore ci martellava nel petto il diario di una schiava divenuta santa, Il
Dnevnik
historia de Bakhita, La
Journal de la servitude à la sainteté
Pamiętnik niewolnicy i świętej
Santa Giuseppina Bahita : il Diario
Vicentin. canonizationis venerabilis Servae Dei Iosephinae Bakhita sororis professae Instituti Filiarum a Caritate v. d. Suore Canossiane
Notes: 
Associated Group: Catholic Church Daughters of Charity of Canossa naf
Bakhita, 1961 p. facing t.p. (Giuseppina Bakhita; Figlia della Carità Canossiana)
Bakhita, 1983 t.p. (Bakhita) p. 5 (mère Bakhita) p. 37 (baptized 1-9-1890, Joséphine-Marguerite-Fortunée-Bakhita) p. 49 (d. 2-8-47)
Dictionary of African Biography, accessed December 11, 2014, via Oxford African American Studies Center database (Bakhita, Josephine; Giuseppina Margherita Fortunata; La Nostra Madre Moretta; freed slave, Roman Catholic saint, household employee; born 1869 in Darfur, Sudan; was taken by slave traders (1876 and sold to an Ottoman army officer (1879), who treated her brutally; she had several subsequent owners; eventually she was acquired by a Catholic merchant (1885) and accompanied his wife to Venice (1888); in 1889 she was freed because slavery was outlawed both in Sudan and in Italy; she was baptized as Giuseppina Margherita Fortunata (1890) and accepted as a novice of the Daughters of Charity of Canossa at the Institute of St. Magdalene in Venice (1893); became a nun (1896); was transferred to Schio to serve as a cook (1902); she told her story to Sister Teresa Fabris, in 1910 and it was published (1919, 1929, 1931); she was widely known as La Nostra Madre Moretta; Pope John Paul II proclaimed the Decree of the Heroic Practice of All Virtues (1978) and beatified her (1992); she was canonized as "Our Universal Sister" and adopted as patron saint of Sudan (2000); Pope Benedict XVI mentioned her in the encyclical Spe Salvi, and her life has been reproduced in books, movies, and a musical; died 08 February 1947 in Schio, Italy)
Household employees Nuns Saints
Sources: 
VIAF DNB NKC NLP NSK NUKAT SUDOC WKD
NTA