Vincenzina Cusmano (6 January 1826 - 2 February 1894) was an Italian Roman Catholic professed religious from the Sisters Servants of the Poor.
[1][2] Her timid and reserved nature contributed to her intense desire for deeper contemplation and turned one of the rooms in her home into a small chapel that she could often be found in; she dreamt of becoming a cloistered Carmelite nun despite her extensive domestic duties that wound up preventing her from entering a convent.
[1][2][3] Cusmano was a prominent figure in her order since she helped to direct their charitable initiatives and their wider apostolate; she was noted for having been like a mother or sister to some of her peers.
[2] The beatification process launched on 19 November 1996 after the Congregation for the Causes of Saints provided its assent (issuing a "nihil obstat" decree) to the cause and named her as a Servant of God.
The diocesan investigation was conducted in the Palermo archdiocese with Cardinal Salvatore De Giorgi inaugurating it on 27 January 1997 and later closing it on 12 December 2001; the C.C.S.