The HOLY NORTH AMERICAN MARTYRS
(†1642-1649)
(†1642-1649)
The Holy North American Martyrs are eight in number; five died in
what is now Canada, three in what is now the United States. All are Jesuits, all
are French in origin. They came in the 1640's to New France, to add their
strength to that of the Franciscan Recollets, who had preceded them by a few
years. There was not yet any bishop to assist them; the first bishop of Quebec,
Blessed Monsignor Francis Montmorency de
Laval, arrived only in 1658.
Words strive in vain to convey to a comfortable world the virtue
of the first missionaries, and to describe the difficulties confronted by these
heros desiring to implant Christianity amid the savage nations of the north.
Building materials, chapel accessories, everything in effect had to be imported
from France; the Indian languages were varied and difficult; customs were at
best non-Christian; insects infested the woods where they dwelt; the tribes were
migrant and had to be followed from place to place. There were less belligerent
ones who responded rapidly to the pacifying and sanctifying influences of the
Faith, but the Iroquois of the northeast were dreaded, and it was to them that
the eight martyrs all fell victims, over a period of seven years.
The Martyrs of Canada:
Father Antoine Daniel was the first to die in Canada, after ten
years among the Hurons. The chapel of the village where his mission stood was
filled with his faithful Christians, and he had just finished saying Mass, when
the Iroquois attacked in July of 1648. The men ran to the palisades; the priest,
when the invaders broke through, went to the chapel door and faced the Iroquois,
warning them of God’s anger. They slew him at once and threw him into the chapel
they had already set on fire, still occupied by the women and children.
Saint John de Brebeuf, “the giant of the Huron missions” was a
native of Normandy, noted for his physical height and strength and still
stronger love of God. Arriving in 1625, at the age of 32 years, he spent three
years with the Hurons of Ontario, winning their love and respect to such a
degree that they wept when he was recalled to Quebec City for a time in 1628.
“We still do not know how to adore the Master of life as you do!” Political
questions obliged him to return to Europe in that year, but he was back in
Canada in 1633, and among his Hurons the following year. He labored until 1649,
in which year the luminous Cross he had seen in the sky the year before, presage
of his martyrdom, became a reality for this glorious father of the Faith in
America. The Iroquois took him prisoner in the village of Saint Louis near the
Georgian bay of Lake Huron. He was tortured, scalped; pieces of his flesh were
removed and eaten before his eyes; boiling water was poured over him, hatchets
heated red-hot were placed on his chest, back and shoulders. He did not utter a
single cry. His death occurred in March of 1649.
His young companion in the mission, Father Gabriel Lallemant, 39
years old in that year and of a delicate constitution, was martyred the next
day; he had been forced to witness the death of his beloved Father Brebeuf. He
cried out: “Father, we are given up as a spectacle to the world, the Angels and
men!” And he went up to him and kissed his bleeding wounds. Facing the same fate
afterwards, he knelt down and embraced the stake to which he was to be tied, to
make his final offering to God. He himself survived for longer still, seventeen
hours. The Iroquois set fire to the bark they had attached to him; he was
“baptized” in mockery of the faith, in boiling water, not once but many times.
The savages cut the flesh of his thighs to the bone and held red-hot axes in the
wounds. They finally tired of their task and finished him with a blow from an
axe.
Nine months after the martyrdom of these two, Saint Charles
Garnier, also missioned with the Hurons, fell victim in his turn. He was a
valiant priest who had said: “The source of all gentleness, the sustenance of
our hearts, is Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament.” He was of a wealthy family, and
as a student in the Jesuit college of Clermont, would deposit his weekly
allowance in the church’s collection box for the poor. In the mission he slept
without a mattress, and when traveling with the Indians, would carry the sick on
his shoulders for an hour or two to relieve them. He died the day before the
feast of the Immaculate Conception, on December 7, 1649, while aiding the
wounded and the dying; an Iroquois fired two bullets directly into his chest and
abdomen. Seeing a dying man near him, twice he tried to stand and go to him, and
twice he fell heavily. Another Iroquois then ended his life with an axe.
Saint Noel Chabanel had been a professor in France; he suffered
the temptation to return to Europe when he saw clearly the state of the souls of
the natives. He overcame it and made a vow in writing of perpetual stability in
the Huron mission. He died alone when, pursued by the Iroquois in the company of
a few of his Huron neophytes, he had to stop, exhausted, in the woods. He told
the others to flee. It was later that an apostate Huron avowed he had killed him
in hatred of the Christian religion and cast his body into a river. He died on
the feast of Our Lady which he particularly loved, that of the Immaculate
Conception, one day after the martyrdom of Father Garnier, on December 8,
1649.
The Martyrs of New York State:
The great missionary Isaac Jogues was martyred, as it were,
twice; after being surprised by the Iroquois while traveling, he might have
escaped from the midst of his Hurons who were being seized at the same time, but
did not want to abandon them. He was tortured in ways like those we have
described for the others, but he survived and was held prisoner under the most
painful conditions for long months, by the Iroquois of what is now New York
State. He finally escaped and returned to Europe, aided by the Dutch. He was not
recognized when he knocked on the door of the Jesuit house in Paris. When the
Holy Father Urban VIII was asked for a dispensation for him to say Mass, since
his fingers had been badly mutilated, he replied: “Can one deny the right to say
Mass to a martyr of Christ?” The Saint returned to Quebec and offered himself
for an Iroquois mission, saying he would not return. He was killed in 1646 by a
sudden blow of an axe from behind, by a savage of the mission where he
stayed.
During the original captivity of Father Jogues, his assistant,
Brother René Goupil, was with him, a prisoner like himself. He was the first of
the Jesuit martyrs to die. He was a donné, a coadjutor Brother who
desired to come to the American missions to assist the priests, having been
found to have too unstable a health to be ordained. He was said never to have
lost the smile which characterized his gentle disposition. He died in 1642, when
least expecting it, from the blow of an axe, while he was helping a little child
to make the sign of the cross. Father Jogues succeeded in burying his young
assistant, at once calling him a martyr, because slain in hatred of God and
the Church, and of their sign which is the Cross, and while exercising ardent
charity towards his neighbor.
And finally, Saint Jean de la Lande, who had “the heart of an
apostle,” engaged himself to work as an auxiliary of the missionaries, for love
of Jesus Christ and souls. On the day of his departure, he was expecting to meet
with death in the new world. Unafraid of the sufferings he knew awaited him, he
accompanied Father Jogues and was slain in the same mission as the priest, on
the following day, October 19, 1646.
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