The life of the black religious servant Ursula de Jesus
(1604-1666) has remained one of the best-kept historical secrets of
the New World. This English language translation of the diary she
began in 1650 allows us to hear the voice of the former slave
turned spiritualist.
Born into slavery in Lima, Peru, Ursula entered a convent at the
age of thirteen to serve a nun, and spent the next twenty-eight
years as one of hundreds of slaves whose exhausting daily work
afforded little time to contemplate religious matters. After
surviving a potentially fatal accident, she chose a spiritual path,
though remained a slave until one of the nuns purchased her
freedom. Ursula began to see visions and communicate more
frequently with God. Dead souls eager to diminish their stay in
Purgatory approached her, and it was then that she assumed the role
of intercessor on their behalf.
Ursula's diary conveys the innuendos of convent life, but above
all it offers a direct experience of baroque Catholic spirituality
from the perspective of a woman of color. Nancy E. van Deusen
selected approximately fifty pages from Ursula's diary to appear
here as Ursula wrote them, in Spanish. Van Deusen's introduction
situates Ursula's text within the milieu of medieval and early
modern female spirituality, addresses the complexities of racial
inequality, and explores the power of the written word. "
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