María Justa de Jesús (January 6, 1667 - 1723) was a Spanish Franciscan nun and mystic who was tried as a witch during the Inquisition.
[1] Sr. Maria Justa healed the sick by transferring to her person the evils and diseases that afflicted them.
According to the chronicles of the time, her body showed signs of sanctity, such as flexibility, pleasant fragrances and fluidity of her blood.
[1] After her death, the Franciscan Order in the Canary Islands conducted a process of canonization that was later halted.
[2] Her case was ascribed to the phenomenon of the "Alumbrados" that arose in small Castilian towns two centuries earlier.