The Story of the Icon
Journey through the remarkable history of the Icon of Our Mother of Perpetual Help — from Crete to Rome and eventually to the hearts of millions of devotees around the world.
From Crete to Baclaran
The Icon of Our Mother of Perpetual Help has survived storms, wars, destruction, and centuries of devotion — becoming one of the most beloved Marian images in the Catholic world.

The Merchant Who Stole Our Lady
The Merchant Who Stole Our Lady
There is a tradition from the 16th century that tells us about a merchant from the isle of Crete who stole a miraculous picture from one of its churches. He hid it among his wares and set out westward.
It was only through Divine Providence that he survived a violent tempest and eventually arrived safely in Rome.
Before his death, the merchant revealed the secret of the sacred image and begged that it be returned to a church where the people could venerate it once more.

Three Centuries in St. Matthew
Three Centuries in St. Matthew
The icon was enthroned in the Church of St. Matthew the Apostle where it remained for almost three centuries.
Pilgrims flocked to the humble church to pray before the miraculous image of Our Mother of Perpetual Help.
During the war in 1798, the church was destroyed and the icon was hidden away for many years in another chapel in Rome.

The Old Religious & the Altar Boy
The Old Religious & the Altar Boy
Brother Augustine Orsetti carefully guarded the memory of the hidden icon during its years of obscurity.
He often told a young altar boy named Michael Marchi never to forget the miraculous image hidden upstairs.
Those stories would later help rediscover the icon for the whole Church.

The Rediscovery of the Icon
The Rediscovery of the Icon
In 1855, the Redemptorists acquired the land where St. Matthew’s once stood and built the Church of St. Alphonsus.
Soon after, they learned about the lost image once venerated in that very place.
Father Michael Marchi then revealed that he knew exactly where the icon had been hidden all those years.

Entrusted to the Redemptorists
Entrusted to the Redemptorists
Pope Pius IX ordered that the icon be returned to the Church of St. Alphonsus and entrusted to the Redemptorists.
His famous instruction was: “Make Her known throughout the world.”
On April 26, 1866, the restored icon was solemnly enthroned and devotion rapidly spread worldwide.

The Latest Restoration
The Latest Restoration
In 1990, the Vatican Museum carefully restored the icon after years of environmental damage.
Scientific studies dated the wood to between 1325 and 1480, confirming the image’s ancient origins.
Today, the icon continues to inspire millions of devotees around the world as a symbol of hope, mercy, and perpetual help.
