Amiko Bignami did not travel to San Giovanni Rotondo as a pilgrim. On July 26, 1919, he arrived in Foggia with a small suitcase, a black leather medical case, and the trained impatience of a man used to solving puzzles.
He was a professor of pathology at La Sapienza University in Rome, respected across academic circles for one particular gift. When others called something mysterious, Bignami usually found the tissue damage, the chemical cause, the nervous condition, or the human motive.
His confidence had roots older than his career. Born in Bologna in 1862, he came from a family that admired reason with almost devotional intensity. His father was a pharmacist. His grandfather had believed progress would outgrow priests, relics, and miracle stories.

That inheritance shaped him. Bignami’s loyalty was to the lens, the measuring strip, the written observation, and the official report. He trusted evidence because evidence had never asked him to kneel. It asked only that he look closely.
The case waiting for him in the Gargano hills had already attracted too much attention. A Capuchin friar named Padre Pio was said to carry wounds in his hands, feet, and side. The wounds bled, did not close, and reportedly gave off a floral scent.
To Bignami, the likely explanation was not supernatural. He suspected skin necrosis maintained by irritants such as phenol or concentrated iodine, combined with intense autosuggestion. The Vatican’s interest did not soften his view. If anything, it sharpened it.
Rome had chosen him for the same reason many believers feared him. A skeptical physician could produce a report with weight. If he dismissed the wounds, that dismissal would not look like religious convenience. It would look like science speaking plainly.
The road from Foggia to San Giovanni Rotondo was hard and bright. Dust rose around the wheels. Limestone flashed under the sun. By noon, the gray stone convent appeared in the heat, small-windowed and severe, as if built to resist argument.
The porter told Bignami that Padre Pio would be available after confessions at 3:00. Until then, the doctor waited in the courtyard. He opened his case and checked the instruments, a gesture more ritual than necessity.
At 3:15, he was led down a damp corridor into a small room. Padre Pio stood waiting in a brown habit, hands folded inside his sleeves. Bignami noticed his height, his pallor, his dark beard, and the unusual calm with which he remained silent.
That silence mattered. Bignami had examined malingerers before. He knew how impostors filled rooms with explanations before the first question arrived. Padre Pio did not do that. He let the doctor speak and simply made himself available.
The examination took about 40 minutes. Bignami used a magnifying lens, a probe, measuring strips, and a writing board. He inspected the palms, the feet, and the side, recording each observation with the precision that had made his career.
The wounds were real openings, not merely stains or inflamed patches. Around the palms, the skin was darkened, brown to violet, but not actively swollen. When he pressed palm and back of hand together, he felt a passage where resistance should have been.
That was the first problem. Psychosomatic wounds could produce marks, redness, blisters, even dramatic surface symptoms. They did not normally pass through the hand. They did not create a void that could be felt between two examining fingers.
The wound in the side created a second problem. It had clean borders, depth, and no ordinary signs of infection. There was no suppuration, no fevered tissue, and no burn pattern of the kind chemical irritants usually leave behind.
Then there was the scent. Bignami had read about it and assumed testimony had exaggerated it. But in that stone room, with no flowers visible and no garden air drifting through, he detected something delicate and floral. It did not fit.
Silence can be a measurement too. Padre Pio’s silence during the examination gave Bignami no performance to attack, no theatrical suffering, no exaggerated flinch. The friar held still and allowed the facts to become more difficult.
When the doctor finished, he closed the medical case and told Padre Pio that his observations were inconclusive. He would submit his report to the proper authorities. It was polite, controlled, and professionally safe.
Then Padre Pio spoke. He said he knew the professor had arrived with a conclusion already formed. He said the conclusion was understandable. If Bignami still believed it after the examination, the friar had no wish to argue him out of it.
Then he said the professor had a brother. According to the story preserved around the case, Padre Pio continued with details that were not medical at all. The brother had died three winters earlier in Bologna, in a room facing an interior courtyard, while Bignami was in Rome giving a lecture.
The doctor had not arrived in time. That fact, if it had been known publicly, might still have found its way through ordinary channels. But the friar did not stop there. He named the private habit grief had left behind.
Since the death, Padre Pio said, Bignami slept with the window partly open, even in winter, as if cold air could solve something the warmth of bedclothes could not. That detail belonged to no report, no university file, and no convent rumor.
Bignami said nothing. The room that had just held a medical examination now held something he could not classify. He looked for triumph or manipulation in the friar’s face. The story says he found neither.
He gathered the black case, thanked Padre Pio for cooperating, and left the room. In the courtyard, under the same heavy July sun, he stopped with one hand on the stone wall. For an unknown length of time, he did not move.
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The report Bignami later presented on July 26, 1919, remained clinical. It described the wounds with notable care and acknowledged anomalies that did not sit comfortably inside ordinary explanations. Yet his conclusion still leaned toward nervous necrosis and autosuggestion.
That gap became the enduring question. His observations were unusually honest. His conclusion was unusually cautious. Between the two sat everything he had seen, touched, smelled, and heard but could not responsibly place inside a formal medical document.
He did not include Padre Pio’s words about his brother. A rigorous man could not put an unclassifiable private revelation into an official report without evidence he could reproduce. The omission did not prove it was unimportant. It proved the opposite.
Years later, people who knew Bignami noticed a change in his language. Before the visit, he reportedly called the San Giovanni Rotondo phenomenon autosuggestion combined with exploitation of popular credulity. Afterward, his phrasing became quieter and more guarded.
He began saying it was a case lacking information. For a man whose reputation rested on complete explanations, that sentence carried more weight than a confession. It did not make him a believer. It made certainty more expensive.
The story did not end with Bignami. In 1922, a secular journalist from Milan, Filipo Esquiabone, traveled to San Giovanni Rotondo with another kind of skepticism. His paper wanted perspective, which in that climate usually meant a clean public debunking.
Esquiabone arrived with a notebook, a pencil, and the confidence of a man who believed miracle stories usually had ordinary machinery underneath. He found villagers, but also professionals: an engineer from Milan, a Roman woman with a disabled child, and a lawyer from Bari.
On the third day, he gained a brief meeting with Padre Pio by presenting himself as an interested visitor. He did not mention the newspaper. In the sacristy, he noticed a scent he finally identified as violets, though no flowers were present.
Before Esquiabone could ask his first prepared question, Padre Pio said he knew why the visitor had come. Then he named the newspaper, the editor who had sent him, and the provisional title written on the first page of the notebook.
The journalist opened the notebook and saw the title in his own handwriting. The interview continued, but its purpose had changed. He still asked questions, and Padre Pio still answered. Yet the article he later published was not the article he had traveled to write.
A private letter reportedly explained why. Esquiabone said he had left unable to write the planned attack, not because he lacked arguments, but because the man he meant to disprove knew the title before he opened his mouth.
The Vatican’s more formal investigation came through Monsignor Carlos Rafael Rossi in 1921. Rossi was not chosen for sentiment. He had legal training, a cold method, and a habit of weighing testimony by documents rather than impressions.
His investigation lasted 8 days. He examined the wounds, questioned the friars, interviewed witnesses, and collected sworn statements. His report described visible wounds, clean borders, the persistent perfume, and the absence of evidence pointing to fraud or ordinary self-suggestion.
Rossi’s final conclusion was careful. He did not reduce the phenomenon to demonic action, fraud, deceit, external suggestion, or internal suggestion. Instead, he wrote in effect that the case lay beyond the tools human science then possessed.
His private notes contained another unsettling line. During a conversation, Padre Pio reportedly referred to Rossi’s own deceased brother, touching a grief the bishop had not brought with him as evidence. Rossi wrote only that Padre Pio had no way to know it.
Other physicians saw what Bignami saw in different ways. Dr. Luigi Romanelli, who examined the wounds in May 1919, was already a believer, but he spoke of the certainty produced by touching the facts themselves. Dr. Giorgio Festa reached a similar boundary.
Festa examined Padre Pio in October 1919 and again in 1920. His notes would later be cited repeatedly: the origin of the stigmata was beyond what the scientific knowledge of the time could explain. That was not a sermon. It was a limit statement.
Bignami remained different from those men because he never became the story’s easy convert. He did not publicly renounce his scientific worldview. He did not begin preaching. He did, however, stop speaking as if the matter had been closed.
In the last years of his life, he was reportedly seen sitting quietly in Santa Maria sopra Minerva in Rome, not necessarily attending Mass, but remaining on a side bench for long stretches. When asked what he was doing, he said he was considering an unsolved problem.
Padre Pio died on September 23, 1968, in the same San Giovanni Rotondo convent that had drawn doctors, journalists, bishops, pilgrims, and skeptics for decades. Witnesses reported that the wounds, present for about 50 years, had begun to close before death.
When the body was examined afterward, the skin where the wounds had been was said to be intact, without the expected scars. From a medical point of view, that final detail sharpened the mystery rather than softened it.
A chronic deep wound should leave a trace. Scar tissue is the body’s record. If the story is followed as the witnesses gave it, Padre Pio’s body seemed to close a chapter without leaving the usual signature.
On June 16, 2002, Pope John Paul II canonized Padre Pio before an enormous crowd in St. Peter’s Square. By then, the friar’s reputation had long outgrown the stone rooms where the first examinations took place.
Today, pilgrims still go to San Giovanni Rotondo. Some arrive believing. Some arrive because someone they love asked them to. Some arrive with the same guarded skepticism that once traveled with Bignami in a black leather medical case.
What makes Bignami’s story endure is not that an atheist went to provoke Padre Pio—and left unable to speak as a simple slogan. It is that a trained mind encountered facts he could describe, yet could not finish explaining.
There are things official forms cannot hold because the columns are wrong. A wound can be measured. A scent can be noted. A date can be filed. But a private grief named by a stranger leaves a different kind of evidence.
The most honest ending may be the one Bignami’s later silence suggests. There is a difference between what science denies and what science has not yet named. The difference is not weakness. Sometimes, it is time.
And when the man most prepared not to believe stands in a courtyard with his hand on a stone wall, unable to move, that silence is not empty. It is information.