Needful souls ask prayers from Padre Pio
On the May of 1922, Padre Pio told this anectdote to the Bishop of Melfi, His Excellency Alberto Costa, and also the superior of the friary, Padre Lorenzo of San Marco along with five other friars. One of the five friars, Fra Alberto D' Apolito of San Giovanni Rotondo wrote down this account:
While in the friary on a winter afternoon after a heavy snowfall, he was sitting by the fireplace one evening in the guest room, absorbed in prayer, when an old man, wearing an old-fashioned cloak still worn by southern Italian peasants at the time, sat down beside him. Padre Pio could not imagine how he could have entered the friary at this time of night since all the doors are locked. So I asked him, “Who are you? What do you want?”
The old man told him, “Padre Pio, I am Pietro Di Mauro, son of Nicola, nicknamed Precoco. I died in this friary on the 18th of September, 1908, in cell number 4, when it was still a poorhouse. One night, while in bed, I fell asleep with a lighted cigar, which ignited the mattress and I died, suffocated and burned. I am still in Purgatory. I need a holy Mass in order to be freed. God permitted that I come and ask you for help.”
After listening to him, Padre Pio said, “Rest assured that tomorrow I will celebrate Mass for your liberation.” Padre Pio arose and accompanied him to the door of the friary, so that he could leave but only realized at that moment that the door was closed and locked. He opened it and bade him farewell. The square was lit by moonlight and when the priest no longer saw the man, Padre Pio was taken by a sense of fear, and closed the door, reentered the guest room, and felt faint.
A few days later, Padre Pio told the story to Padre Paolino, and the two decided to go to the town hall where they looked at the records for 1908 and found that on September 18 of that year, one Pietro Di Mauro had in fact died of burns and asphyxiation in Room Number 4 at the friary, then used as a home for the homeless.
Around the same time, but on anther occasion, Padre Pio told Fra Alberto of another apparition of a soul from Purgatory as follows:
One evening, when he was absorbed in prayer in the choir of the little church, he was shaken and disturbed by the sound of footsteps, and candles and flower vases being moved on the main altar. Thinking that someone must be there, he called out, “Who is it?”
No one answered. Returning to prayer, he was again disturbed by the same noises. In fact, this time he had the impression that one of the candles, which was in front of the statue of Our Lady of Grace, had fallen. Wanting to see what was happening on the altar, he stood up, went close to the grate and saw, in the shadow of the light of the Tabernacle lamp, a young confrere doing some cleaning. I yelled out, “What are you doing in the dark?” The little friar answered, “I am cleaning.”
“You clean in the dark?” Padre Pio asked. “Who are you?”
The little friar said, “I am a Capuchin novice, who spends his time of Purgatory here. I am in need of prayers.” And then he disappeared.
Padre Pio said that he immediately began praying for him as requested. The priest had no other succeeding accounts of particular soul. However, in regards to souls in Purgatory it is very interesting to note that later in life Padre Pio once said, “As many souls of the dead come up this road [to the monastery] as that of the souls of the living.” This means, many souls from Purgatory visited Padre Pio asking for his prayers, sacrifices and sufferings to obtain their release from purgatory.