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Nino Fidencio Discovered Healing Abilities at Age of 8
Now legends and songs honor him and thousands flock to his hometown

by Icess Fernandez Caller-Times


October 23, 2004

He's known for performing successful surgery with pieces of broken glass and healing the masses
by throwing candy and fruit into the air.

Jose Fidencio Sintora Constantino, a folk and spiritual healer from the early 20th century, is some-
what of a saint to people in South Texas and Northern Mexico. Stories of his healings are legends,
folk songs or corridos idolize him and candles stamped with images of his face are sold next to
candles of Catholic saints.

 
 
Contributed photo

Jose Fidencio Sintora Constantino
blesses a crowd on top of the hill
called La Campana in the mid-
1930s in his hometown.

Thousands of people flock annually to Fidencio's hometown Espinazo, México, to pay their spiritual respects and to hopefully
cure what ails them.

Niño Fidencio, as his followers call him, started curing people at 8 years old when he reportedly set his mother's broken arm.
The fact about his early childhood are unclear, said Tony Zavaleta, an anthropologist and author of El Niño Fidencio and the
Fidencistas, an academic paper about the spiritual healer. Zavaleta has been studying the movement for more than 20 years.

What is known is that Fidencio was born in 1898 near the village of Yuriria, Guanajuato, Mexico. He was one of 24 children and
became an orphan during his childhood. At 23, Fidencio and his brother settled in Espinazo. It was in Espinazo that he started
honing his life as a medicine and religious man, said Leo Carrillo, a former professor at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi who is writing a book on the followers of Fidencio, also known as the Fidencio movement. Carrillo has studied the move-
ment for about 27 years.

According to Zavaleta's research, Fidencio had supernatural experiences including revelations, visions, and visits from Jesus
Christ. In one vision, a bearded man instilled within Fidencio the gift of healing and knowledge of using plants and herbs for
medicinal purposes. In another vision, he was told that his mission in life was to heal the sick. For much of his adult life,
Fidencio healed people throughout Northern México and surrounding areas. He conducted his healing one-on-one, and once
his popularity grew , en mass.

At the time of his death 66 years ago, Fidencio was teaching a small group of people to be materias, or mediums, to channel his
spirit and possess his healing skills. Only two of the original materias are still living; however, some of their descendents also
have become materias.

"Nino Fidencio predicted that he would die and return in spirit," Zavaleta said. "And even before his death people believed he
would transport, for lack of a better word, himself in spirit to a materia in another part of the state."

Fidencio is buried in a tomb in Espinazo.

Contact Icess Fernandez at 886-3748 or fernandezi@caller.com

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