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  1. Conchita González. Conchita González González was born on February 7th, 1949. She was the youngest child and only daughter of Aniceta González, whose husband passed early on in their marriage. She had three older brothers: Serafín, who worked in the mines in the province of León, Aniceto, nicknamed Cetuco, who died in 1965, and Miguel.

  2. 23 de oct. de 2021 · De las cuatro niñas videntes de Garabandal Conchita González González, nace el 7 de Febrero de 1949, era la más pequeña y la única chica de Aniceta González, que quedó viuda joven.Tenía tres hermanos mayores que ella: Serafín que trabajaba como minero en la provincia de León; Aniceto al que llamaban familiarmente Cetuco y que murió en 1965 y Miguel.

  3. 7 de ago. de 2021 · Comuniones místicas en Garabandal. En Febrero de 1966, Conchita entra como aspirante con las Carmelitas Misioneras de Pamplona, buscando Paz y huyendo de las personas que le atosigaban con interrogatorios. En Septiembre de 1966, Conchita salía del convento de Pamplona, y en Octubre entraba como alumna interna en el colegio que las religiosas ...

  4. 25 de jun. de 2009 · Conchita Gonzalez, one of the four visionaries who had apparitions of the Virgin Mary in the early 1960s in Garabandal, Spain, was interviewed in English is ...

  5. 9 de nov. de 2019 · It was June 3, 1963. The news of Pope John XXIII’s death had just reached Garabandal and Conchita made her way to the church with her mother to pray for the Pontiff’s eternal repose. On their way, Conchita hears the unmistakable voice of Our Blessed Mother in her saying, “After this pope, there are only three left.

  6. Garabandal is an isolated village with a population of about 300 people in the Cantabrian Mountains of North Western Spain. The village is imbued with supernatural serenity and beauty. On June 18th, 1961 four girls: Conchita González, Jacinta González and Mari Loli Mazón who were 12 years old at the time and Mari Cruz González who was 11 ...

  7. 12 de may. de 2020 · In the early 1960s, Garabandal was still a tiny and almost inaccessible hamlet of about seventy houses in the Peña Sagra Mountain range in northern Spain. On June 18th 1961, four girls from the village – Conchita González, Mari Loli Mazón, Mari Cruz González and Jacinta González — stole some apples from the schoolmaster’s garden.