Sophia Institute Press
Michelle Dupong
Michelle Dupong
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Servant of God Michelle Duppong (1984–2015) lived ordinary days with extraordinary love — and God used her short life to set hearts ablaze. After her death, letters poured in describing the many graces obtained through her intercession — most often a deep peace and trust in God’s will. Her growing reputation for holiness led Bishop David Kagan to open her cause for canonization.
Michelle was a missionary to the core. As a Fellowship of Catholic University Students (FOCUS) alumna, she helped plant the movement at the University of Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota, forming friendships, inviting students to weekday Mass, and quietly building a Eucharist-centered culture that stirred hearts. Even in Rome, she sowed seeds of conversion that later blossomed back home. This is evangelization as Michelle lived it: personal, joyful, and relentlessly centered on Jesus Christ.
Then came her final mission. In the words of her spiritual director, Msgr. Thomas Richter, she entered into a “twelve-month Holy Week” — a year in which illness and suffering did not interrupt her evangelization but instead fulfilled it. United to Christ, her cross became a channel of grace for others. Caregivers who did not share her Faith were moved by her peace. Friends who came to console her left consoled. “We could see in her another Christ.”
The impact of Michelle’s short life reverberates still. One student she befriended not only went on to enter the Church but named her daughter Michelle. Reports of favors obtained through her intercession continue to be carefully gathered. Pilgrims visit her grave and family farm in increasing numbers, convinced that her appeals from Heaven change lives. The Church has taken notice, conferring the title Servant of God and initiating the rigorous process toward possible canonization.

