Brooklyn pols have joined Mother Cabrini’s army of disciples, spreading the word of her good works to Chirlane McCray in a bid to get a statue in the saint’s honor.

Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, Councilman Justin Brannan and Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio demanded the first lady reconsider her picks for monuments of female luminaries to include Cabrini (pictured), in a letter to McCray Oct. 1

“The initiative’s first round of honorees — a group curated directly from a process that the city initiated to generate nominees and build public interest — has omitted the woman who received twice as many votes as the second-highest-ranked nominee,” they wrote. And that was before more than 1,000 Cabrini supporters packed the streets of Carroll Gardens on Oct. 6, raising $8,000 for the Brooklyn Catholic Diocese to build the statue as part of the “She Built NYC” program.

Brooklyn leaders hope they can convert McCray into a believer.

“Let’s reflect the will of New Yorkers and a special chapter in our city’s history with a statue of Mother Cabrini through She Built NYC,” the letter reads.

Cabrini’s flock began to raise hell in August after “She Built,” which is headed by McCray’s office, did not select Cabrini or three of the seven other women who received the most public nominations. Cabrini, the patron saint of immigrants, netted 219 nominations, the highest figure.

Urban-planning advocate Jane Jacobs received the second-most, with 93, according to “She Built” documents obtained by The Post, but she too was denied.

Instead, McCray and former Deputy Mayor Alicia Glen selected jazz legend Billie Holiday, desegregation activist Elizabeth Jennings Graham, Latina doctor Helen Rodriguez Trias, and LGBTQ advocate Sylvia Rivera.

Their other three selections were America’s first black Congresswoman, Shirley Chisholm; former Robbins Reef Lighthouse keeper Katherine Walker; and transgender activist Marsha P. Johnson.

The Brooklyn pols commended the honorees and the intent of the program but noted “if we are to use taxpayer funds for these monuments, let our choices truly reflect taxpayers’ voices,” the letter says.

Adams, who is eyeing a run for Gracie Mansion in 2021, told The Post of a Cabrini statue, “I can assure you, in 2021, if I’m lucky enough to be there [serving as mayor], I’m sure it will be built.”