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                              Saints Isaac Jogues, 
Rene Goupil and 
Jean de la Lande

 

Saint Isaac Jogues

Born               January 10, 1607 at Orleans, France

Died               Martyred October 18, 1646 at Auriesville (Ossernenon), New York

Canonized     June 29, 1930 by Pope Pius XI

Feast Day      October 19

Jesuit priest

Saint Rene Goupil

Born               May 13, 1608 at Anjou, France

Died               Martyred in 1642 at Auriesville (Ossernenon), New York

Canonized      June 29, 1930 by Pope Pius XI

Feast Day       October 19

Jesuit brother

Saint Jean de la Lande

Born                At Dieppe, France

Died                Martyred on October 19, 1646 at Auriesville (Ossernenon), New York

Canonized       June 29, 1930 by Pope Pius XI

Feast Day        October 19

Lay missionary

The United States first and only canonized martyrs

 

Four canoes paddled slowly and cautiously along the marshy shore of the St. Lawrence River on August 3, 1642. The eyes of the paddlers swept the waist-high marsh grass. They were Huron Indians led by their great Chief Eustace together with some Frenchmen including Fr. Isaac Jogues and Rene Goupil. They were on their way to bring missionaries and supplies to nourish the lives and Christian faith of the Huron Mission in New France.

Suddenly, the quiet early morning air was pierced with wild war whoops as Mohawk warriors with grotesquely painted faces and bodies streaked with blood-red paint stood above the grass and fired their muskets. The Hurons had no guns but returned fire with a volley of arrows. Above the din of battle the voice of Eustace rose, “Great God, to you alone do I look for help.”

Father Jogues made the sign of the cross and shouted the words of absolution over his companions. Then his canoe smashed against the shore and he was catapulted into the marsh that concealed him. He watched as his outnumbered companions were killed or captured. He could have escaped but, like Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane, he surrendered himself.

Like the Good Shepherd Fr. Jogues thought, Could I think for a moment of abandoning our French and deserting these good neophytes and catechumens, without giving them the help and consolation that the Church of my God has entrusted to me? Never, never could that be. He resolved to himself, “It is necessary, it must be, that my body suffer the fires of this earth in order to deliver these souls from the flames of hell. It must be that my body die a death that passes in order to obtain for these a life that is eternal.”

Fr. Jogues stood up from the grass that concealed him and walked to the Mohawks with his arms stretched out in surrender. They sprang on him and beat him, stripped off his black robe and began to tie his ankles with leather thongs. He said, “No, no. You don’t need to bind me. These French and Hurons whom you have taken, they are the bonds that will keep me captive. I won’t leave them till death. I will follow them everywhere. You can be assured of my person as long as any one of them remains among you as a prisoner.”

The Mohawks were so impressed with this eloquent statement that they left him untied. Fr. Jogues threw his arms around Rene Goupil and, like Job, whispered, “My dear brother, God has acted strangely toward us. But He is the Lord and Master. What is good in His eyes, that has He done. As it has pleased Him, so be it. Blessed be His Holy Name forever.”

“O my Father,” replied Rene, “God indeed be blessed. He has permitted it. He has willed it. His holy will be done. I love it, I cherish it, I embrace it with all the strength of my heart.”

These strange actions that God permitted probably seemed to the captives to signal the loss of hope for the Huron Mission. Fr. Jogues thought about the loss of the Hurons of their Christian apostles and books, as well as their life supplies of food, clothing and tools. Later he reflected on  the beginning of his march into captivity and lamented, “I was shaken by interior anguish when I saw this funereal procession of our Christians led before my very eyes, this cortege of death in which were the five tried Christians, the sustaining columns of the Church among the Hurons. Indeed, and I confess it honestly, time and time again I could not restrain my tears, grieving over the lot of these poor Hurons and of my French comrades, and worrying terribly about the things that might happen in the future. I had before my eyes continually the sight of the door of the Christian faith among the Hurons and other innumerable nations closed by these Iroquois, unless it might be opened by a most extraordinary dispensation of Divine Providence. This thought made me die every hour, in the depth of my soul. It is a hard thing, more, it is a cruel thing, to bear, that of seeing the triumph of the demons over whole nations redeemed with so much love, and paid for in the money of a Blood so adorable.”      

However, the martyrdoms of Fr. Jogues, Rene Goupil and Jean de la Lande also remind us that this adorable Blood and theirs was also shed to pay for the redemption of their  Mohawk oppressors. Fr. Jogues later wrote in a letter to a friend, “In a word, this people is ‘a bloody spouse’ to me (Exodus iv, 25). May our good Master, who has purchased them in His blood, open to them the door of His Gospel, as well as to the four allied nations near them.”

Formation

Isaac Jogues was born at Orleans, France on January 10, 1607.  He was a member of a good bourgeois family and entered the Jesuit novitiate school at Rouen at the age of 17. Later he studied at the royal college of La Fleche where one of his teachers was Louis Lalemant. He had two brothers and a nephew serving as missionaries in Canada and Isaac probably began to think of joining them. Later, in 1629, he met with the missionary Father Jean de Brebeuf who returned from Canada to France after the English captured Quebec. Isaac continued his education at the College of Clermont, University of Paris, was ordained as a Jesuit (The Society of Jesus) and accepted for missionary service In the summer of 1636, at the age of 29, he embarked for Canada with several other Jesuits, among them Charles Garnier.

Journey to Canada

Sailing on the same ship with the young missionaries was Sieur Huault de Montmagny, the new French governor sent out to replace Champlain, who had died a few months before. After a stormy voyage, they sailed up the St. Lawrence to Quebec City. Upon arrival, Father Jogues wrote to his mother, "I do not know what it is to enter Heaven, but this I know—that it would be difficult to experience in this world a joy more excessive and more overflowing than I felt in setting foot in the New World, and celebrating my first Mass on the day of the Visitation."

The Huron Mission

Father Jogues' companions were at once sent to the west to join Father de Brebeuf at the Huron mission at St. Marie. Father Jogues went with them as far as Three Rivers where he remained. A few weeks later, he saw a flotilla of canoes coming down the St.  Lawrence River from the west. Father Anthony Daniel, one of Father de Brebeuf’s coworkers, led it. He arrived exhausted and emaciated with his cassock in tatters. He was bound for Quebec City to recuperate and Father Jogues was to replace him at St. Marie.

Father Jogues soon began the 1500 mile journey over the waterways and through the forests. When they finally arrived at St. Marie, Father Jogues collapsed in Father de Brebeuf's arms. He and the others came down with a fever and were placed to recover in the wretched lodgings. Their food was poor and scanty. When they had recovered, a similar epidemic broke out among the Indians and they blamed the Jesuits whom they called “Blackrobes” because of the black cassocks that they wore. The Indians, threatened to kill them but Father de Brebeuf brought calm. By the following year, relations had so improved that he was able to write in one of his reports, "We are gladly heard, and there is scarcely a village that has not invited us to go to it.... And at last it is understood from our whole conduct that we have not come to buy skins or to carry on any traffic, but solely to teach them, and to procure for them their souls' health." The glad hearing and invitations began to end however because the Indian medicine men  fomented hostility against them.

The mission later consisted of a  church, living quarters, a cemetery, a hospital, and a fort were eventually built, and a way of life that was half monastic, half patriarchal grew up in this remote spot. The surrounding lands were cleared and cultivated, food was stored against famine, and here the Indians came in times of sickness and trouble, as well as on Sundays and feast days. Here in the lonely north woods the missionaries tried to create order and to be witnesses of the Gospel.

Father Jogues labored for six long years at St. Marie. He learned the language and ways of the Hurons, developed into a skilled woodsman with great physical stamina, and often went on missions. He and Father Garnier went south to the Petun Indians, called the Tobacco Nation, with the Gospel. Later he and Father Raymbault were sent to Indians further north where they traversed uncharted waterways and forests. They may have been the first white men to stand on the shore of Lake Superior. About 2,000 Ojibway Indians were gathered there to celebrate their Feast of the Dead when Father Jogues addressed them. He erected a cross facing west towards the Sioux country where they would later hear the Good News from others.

In 1642, the Hurons suffered from much sickness and a very poor harvest. Father Jogues led an expedition back to Quebec for supplies and reinforcements. The journey was safely made but on their return, they were ambushed and captured by the Mohawks on the St. Lawrence River.

The captives included Father Jogues and Rene Goupil. He was a young Frenchman who had failed to be admitted to the Jesuits because of poor health. Nevertheless, he studied medicine and came to Canada to help the missionaries.

The captives were forced into the Mohawk canoe flotilla that paddled south from the St. Lawrence River down the Richelieu River (River of the Iroquois) and Lake Champlain. They were brought to Jogues Island, a small island located in Lake Champlain near Westport, New York, on the western shore of the Lake. There they were forced to “run the gauntlet” and tortured. Father Jogues later wrote,  "We were made to go up from the shore between two lines of Indians who were armed with clubs, sticks, and knives. I was the last and blows were showered on me. I fell on the ground and thought my end had come, but they lifted me up all streaming with blood and carried me more dead than alive to the platform." Worse tortures followed on the platform. The Indians called these tortures “caresses.”

The captives were led from Jogues Island south to the Mohawk Village at Auriesville, New York (Ossernoneon). It was located 40 miles west of Albany (Fort Orange), New York on a bluff overlooking the Mohawk River. It  housed about 600 Indians in multi-family Long Houses. The village was surrounded by “palisades” –  tall double fences made of pointed logs that protected the village from attack. The palisades were 75 yards parallel to the river by 115 yards deep.

First Mohawk Captivity

Father Jogues and Rene Goupil were cruelly tortured and lived in slavery in the village for 13 months. The news of their capture soon reached the Protestant Dutch settlement at Albany. Its Commandant, Van Corlear, tried to ransom them but his offers were rejected.

One day an Indian observed Rene making the sign of the Cross on the head of an Indian girl. The superstitious Indians thought that it would bring them bad medicine so they brutally tomahawked Rene on the head from behind. Father Jogues was nearby. He took the dying man in his arms and gave him the sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick (Extreme Unction) before he died. The Indians snatched the body away from the grieving Fr. Jogues and concealed it in a stream. Guided by a friendly Indian, he went in search of the corpse, and when he found it, he hid it deeper in the stream, hoping to return and give it proper burial before he too was killed. The Indians thwarted his plan by destroying the body. Father Jogues wrote of Rene’s death, "Thus on the 28th of September [1642] this angel of innocence and martyr of Jesus Christ was immolated in his thirty-fifth year, for Him who had given His life for his ransom. He had consecrated his heart and soul to God and his life and labor to the welfare of the poor Indians."

Father Jogues' slavery continued. Francis Parkman wrote, "He would sometimes escape . . . and wander in the forest, telling his beads and repeating passages of Scripture. In a remote and lonely spot, he cut the bark in the form of a cross from the trunk of a great tree; and here he made his prayers. This living martyr, half clad in shaggy furs, kneeling in the snow among the icicled rocks and beneath the gloomy pines, bowing in adoration before the emblem of his faith in which was his only consolation and his only hope, is alike a theme for the pen and a subject for the pencil." Later, Father Jogues reported to his spiritual guide, "The only sin I can remember during my captivity is that I sometimes looked on the approach of death with complacency."

The Indians respected the bravery of their strange captive, naming him "the indomitable one." He had at least one good friend among the Mohawks. She was an old woman whom he called "aunt." She tried to heal his wounds and to warn and protect him when danger threatened. His days were passed in menial work, learning the language, and comforting Huron prisoners who were sometimes brought in. As opportunity offered, he baptized children he found dying. During the year, he baptized some seventy persons, New York State's first Catholic baptismal record. He was taken on fishing and hunting expeditions, when he suffered much from hunger and exposure. On one of their fishing expeditions, the Mohawks took Father Jogues down river to the Dutch settlement at Albany.

Escape

When Father arrived at Albany, the Dutch told him that it would be possible to escape that night to a boat lying offshore on the Hudson River. It was ready to sail for Bordeaux. He and his Indian guards were to sleep in a Dutch farmer's big barn. Before dawn, guided by a farm hand, he picked his way over the sleeping Indians around him, and got to the river. Rowing out to the anchored vessel, he was taken on board and concealed. The enraged Mohawks were soon on his trail, threatening reprisals against the Dutch for their part in his attempted escape. When Father learned of this, he insisted on going back to shore. "If this trouble has been caused by me," he said, "I am ready to appease it at the loss of my life. I have never wished to escape if it meant injury to the least man in the colony." But the Indians were persuaded to relinquish all claim to his person for the sum of 300 livres, which the Dutch paid. However, Father’s life continued in jeopardy. For the next six weeks, he waited for another boat and was kept in close, uncomfortable confinement.

Finally, Father got passage down the Hudson River to New York City (New Amsterdam). He was the first Catholic priest to visit the settlement.  "No religion is publicly exercised here but the Calvinist," he noted, "and orders are to admit none but Calvinists; but this is not observed. There are in the colony Catholics, Puritans, Lutherans, Anabaptists, etc."

On November 5, 1643, Father sailed. He reached the coast of Cornwall, England towards the end of December. Then he was able to get aboard a boat bound for France and. landed on the coast of Brittany on Christmas morning in a state of absolute destitution.

Home Again

From Brittany, kindly people helped him reach the town of Rennes. At the rector's house, Father sent word by a servant that he was the bearer of news from Canada. Unknown to him, his own fate was a matter of widespread concern in France since the latest volume of the Jesuit Relations had contained the details of his capture. When the rector came to the door, after an exchange of courtesies, he asked the shabbily dressed man if he had known Father Jogues. "Very well indeed," was the answer. "Have they murdered him?" "No, Father, he is alive and free - and I am he!"

The astonishing news spread quickly. Father reported to his superiors. He was so famous that women, courtiers, and even the Queen Regent wanted to meet him and do him honor. Father was received by Anne of Austria and he told her his story. When he was finished, the Queen arose and stooped to kiss the mutilated hands, which he habitually kept covered by the folds of his cassock. However, Father did not seek public acclaim. He even refrained from going to see his mother, wishing to spare her the pain of another parting and the sight of his mutilated hands.

He was honored by the Queen Regent, the mother of King Louis XIV, and received special permission to celebrate Mass with the stumps of his fingers. When Pope Urban VII granted this exceptional privilege, he said, "It would be unjust that a martyr for Christ should not drink the blood of Christ.”

Return to Canada

Father Jogues' only desire was to get back to Canada and, in June 1644, he was again in Quebec. From there he was sent to Montreal to spend his time helping to build up the new outpost there, until the end of warfare would allow him to return to the Hurons. Two years later, an embassy of Iroquois came to Three Rivers to discuss terms of a truce and the ransom of prisoners. Many fine speeches were made and gifts were exchanged. Father participated in these conclaves. After the deliberations were concluded, the French thought it prudent to send a conciliatory deputation to meet with other Iroquois chieftains at Auriesville.  Father Jogues and Sieur Jean Bourdon, an engineer, who represented the government of New France, led this embassy. "Oh, how I should regret to lose so glorious an occasion," Father wrote to his superior before starting, "When it may depend only on me that some souls be saved! I hope that His goodness, which has not abandoned me in the hour of trial, will aid me still."

Ambassador to the Mohawks

Fr. Jogues traveled back to Auriesville.  The party traveled south and arrived at Lake George, New York. Father named it the Lake of the Blessed Sacrament. Next, he stopped at Albany, where he saw his Dutch friends again and reimbursed them for his ransom of the year before. The Dutch were astonished to learn that he was going back to the scene of his painful captivity.

On June 5, 1646, Father arrived at Auriesville after a three weeks journey. The Mohawks were impressed by his courage and disarmed by his gentleness. Father showed them no sign of ill will for their mistreatment of him. He came as an envoy of peace.

His old "aunt" greeted him warmly, "With us you will always have a mat to lie on and a fire to warm yourself." Gifts were exchanged between Frenchmen and Indians and belts of wampum offered for the release of the Hurons held captive. The purpose of the visit was achieved, the pact confirmed and Father went back to Quebec. He started for Quebec on June 16th and arrived there on July 3rd. Immediately, he asked to be sent back to the Iroquois as a missionary. After much hesitation, his superiors agreed to his request. On September 27th, he began his third and last journey to the Mohawks.

In the meanwhile, after Father had left Auriesville, an epidemic broke out, caterpillars ate the crops and famine threatened. As usual, the Mohawks blamed all their troubles on the Blackrobes, even though, on his latest trip, Father had not worn his priestly clothing. However, he had left with them a mysterious box. He had showed them its contents, which consisted of personal necessaries, but he had locked it up and asked them to keep it. The Mohawks thought that a demon was concealed in the box, to bring upon them all manner of evils. They threw the box into the river

Missionary to the Mohawks

In a letter to a friend written shortly before his last mission to the Mohawks, Father wrote,

The Iroquois have come to make some presents to our governor, ransom some prisoners he held, and treat of peace with him in the name of the whole country. It has been concluded, to the great joy of France. It will last as long as pleases the Almighty.

To maintain, and see what can be done for the instruction of these tribes, it is here deemed expedient to send them some father. I have reason to think I shall be sent, since I have some knowledge of the language and country. You see what need I have of the powerful aid of prayers while amidst these savages. I will have to remain among them, almost without liberty to pray, without Mass, without Sacraments, and be responsible for every accident among the Iroquois, French, Algonquins, and others. But what shall I say? My hope is in God, who needs not us to accomplish his designs. We must endeavor to be faithful to Him and not spoil His work by our shortcomings....

My heart tells me that if I have the happiness of being employed in this mission, Ibo et non redibo (I shall go and shall not return); but I shall be happy if our Lord will complete the sacrifice where He has begun it, and make the little blood I have shed in that land the earnest of what I would give from every vein of my body and my heart.

In a word, this people is "a bloody spouse" to me (Exodus iv, 25). May our good Master, who has purchased them in His blood, open to them the door of His Gospel, as well as to the four allied nations near them.

Adieu, dear Father. Pray Him to unite me inseparably to Him.

Father was completely unaware of the mounting tension and antagonism in the Mohawk village. He and Jean de la Lande, a lay missionary, once more started south for Auriesville. On the trail, near Lake George, a party of Mohawks met them. The three or four Hurons serving Father as guides turned back to escape capture but Father and Jean were captured. They stripped Father naked, slashed him with their knives, beat him and then led him and Jean on to their village.

At Auriesville, Father' arguments seemed to affect his hearers. "I am a man like yourselves," he replied to their charges. "I do not fear death or torture. I do not know why you wish to kill me. I come here to confirm the peace and show you the way to Heaven, and you treat me like a dog." In the councils, the majority were ready to give him his freedom, but the minority, members of the Bear clan, took matters into their own hands. 

Martyrdom

They invited Father to pay them a visit. As he unsuspectingly entered the cabin of the Bear chief, he was brutally tomahawked on October 18, 1646.The next day, Jean met the same fate. Both bodies were thrown into a nearby ravine. Their heads were cut off and placed on poles facing the trail by which they had come, as if in warning to other Blackrobes. When the news of the martyrdom was carried to Albany, the Dutch pastor hastened to Auriesville to denounce the Mohawks for their crime. Later on some of the Indians went to Albany with Father’s breviary, missal, and cassock, hoping to make a profitable trade, and the pastor again censured them

Mohawks on the Warpath

Once more, the Mohawks began to attack and plunder the Huron villages in Canada. They spared on one. Fathers Garnier, Daniel, Gabriel, Lalemant, and de Brebeuf were martyred. But in the Mohawk Valley, the example of Father Jogues' heroism was not forgotten. The gentle priest had possessed in a high degree the virtue the Indians admired most, bravery. Some years later, when there was peace, the three Jesuit priests sent from Canada to establish the Mission of the Martyrs were well received. Before long, Mohawk converts were traveling to the seminary in Quebec to be trained as Christian leaders.

Father Isaac Jogues was declared a martyr and canonized as a saint by Pope Pius XI on June 29, 1930 together with the seven other North American martyrs –Rene Goupil, Jean de la Lande and Fathers Jean de Brebeuf, Gabriel Lalemant, Charles Garnier, Antoine Daniel and Noel Chabanel. Their collective feast day is October 19.

 

Opening Prayer for the Mass in Commemoration of Saints Isaac Jogues, Jean de Brebeuf and Companions

 Father, you consecrated the first beginnings of the faith in North America
          by the preaching and martyrdom of Saints Jean and Isaac and their companions.
          By the help of their prayers may the Christian faith continue to grow throughout
          the world.
          We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns
          with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.

 

Shrine:

Shrine of Our Lady of Martyrs
         136 Shrine Road
         Auriesville, N.Y. 12016
         Phone: (518) 853-3033

         http://www.martyrshrine.org

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