Pope Leo XIV Declares Miracle: Baby Saved by Prayer at Rhode Island Hospital

Vatican Declares Miracle in Baby’s Recovery, Linking it to Prayer

The Vatican declared the miraculous recovery of a premature baby in 2007 as a divine intervention, attributing it to a physician’s prayer. The infant, Tyquan Hall, was born via emergency cesarean section and suffered severe oxygen deprivation. At birth, he was pale, cyanotic, and had an almost undetectable pulse, leading doctors to believe he would not survive.

A few minutes after the attending doctor, Dr. Juan Sanchez, of Huercal-Overa, Spain, prayed for aid from the region’s patron saint, Father Valera Parra, the child’s heart resumed normal rhythm without medical help. Remarkably, Tyquan went on to develop normally, hitting all developmental milestones, including speaking at 18 months and walking by age two.

Pope Leo XIV waving.
Pope Leo XIV. POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Despite the initial prognosis, Tyquan’s recovery was viewed as a miracle. The declaration suggests that Father Valera Parra, who lived in Spain during the 19th century, may be on the path to sainthood. Reactions from church authorities, including Reverend Timothy Reilly, expressed enthusiasm about progressing toward beatification and canonization for the presumed intercessor.

Interestingly, Father Valera Parra never visited the United States or Rhode Island. His involvement was believed to be prompted solely by the doctor’s invocation of his name during the critical moment.

Close-up of a baby's feet.
Despite having hardly a pulse and being deprived of oxygen for the first hours of his life, Tyquan Hall grew into a healthy child. Seventyfour – stock.adobe.com

Father Reilly reflected on the unlikely aid, noting that although Father Valera Parra never physically came to America, his spiritual intercession was believed to have intervened. The event underscores the enduring faith in divine miracle-working and the potential for sainthood for humble figures from history.