On July 8, 2022, Liliana prayed at Blessed Carlo’s tomb in Assisi, leaving a letter describing her plea. Six days earlier, on July 2, her daughter Valeria had fallen from her bicycle in Florence, where she was attending university. She had suffered severe head trauma, and required craniotomy surgery and the removal of the right occipital bone to reduce pressure on her brain, with what her doctors said was a very low chance of survival.
Liliana’s secretary began praying immediately to Blessed Carlo Acutis, and on July 8, Liliana made her pilgrimage to his tomb in Assisi. That same day, the hospital informed her that Valeria had begun to breath spontaneously. The next day, she began to move and partially regain her speech. On July 18, a CAT scan proved that her hemorrhage had disappeared, and on August 11, Valeria was moved to rehabilitation therapy. She made quick progress, and on September 2, Valeria and Liliana made another pilgrimage to Assisi to thank Blessed Carlo for his intercession.
I actually found another religious website source which makes me even more convinced it's a desperate attempt to assign a miracle to a kid so they can use him as a PR prop for the "youth crowd" market. She actually took longer to recover than I had originally thought. 40 days minimum spent on recovery + 1 week in rehabilitation therapy so 47 days in total.
So I ask again, why is this obviously not instantly complete, nor impossible healing, counted as a miracle? And not just...Someone recovering from an injury which they specifically had surgery for to recover from said injury and in a timeframe which is in line with medical history and is very much possible. What am I going to find out next? She had memory problems for months after?
Was the prayer too low level and instead of healing her instantly was only capable of waking her up? Lol.







