(October 19)
✠ St. Isaac Jogues ✠
Priest,
Missionary and Martyr:
Born: January 10, 1607
Orléans, Orléanais, Kingdom of
France
Died: October 18, 1646 (Aged 39)
Ossernenon, Canada, New France
Venerated in: Catholic Church
(Canada and the United States)
Beatified: June 21, 1925
Pope Pius XI
Canonized: June 29, 1930
Pope Pius XI
Major shrine:
National Shrine of the North
American Martyrs, Auriesville, New York, United States
Feast: October 19
Saint Isaac Jogues was a missionary
and martyr who traveled and worked among the Iroquois, Huron, and other Native
populations in North America. He was the first European to name Lake George,
calling it Lac du Saint Sacrement (Lake of the Blessed Sacrament). In 1646,
Jogues was martyred by the Mohawk at their village of Ossernenon, south of the
Mohawk River.
The conditions of the land and
people Fr. Isaac Jogues entered into:
Over the centuries the native
peoples of America had developed societies which were based on delicate
balances among the tribes and with their natural setting. Their pace of life,
their boundaries, and their means of livelihood corresponded with nature. Over
the ages various tribes along the water routes, now called the St. Lawrence
Seaway and the Great Lakes, confederated into “nations”: the Algonquin tribes
north of the St. Lawrence, the Huron peoples north of the lake bearing their
name, and the Iroquois confederation south of the Great Lakes. They lived in
longhouses (long wooden dwellings used as communal homes) in the cold winters
and traveled to fishing and hunting grounds in birchbark canoes during the
summer. Their life was demanding, but prudent with the wisdom of long
experience.
When explorers came from Europe many
disdained the native people of America. They brought with them a culture that
disturbed the natural balance. They brought diseases for which the Native
Americans had developed no resistance and weapons which enabled one group of
people to make another captive. They also brought the foreign concept that the
land demanded ownership and that the natural gifts of the earth belonged to a
specific individual.
The French explorers came to Canada
with a little less greed and with a more respectful attitude than did some
other conquerors. Perhaps it was because there was no gold for the greedy or
perhaps because the long winters of New France required companionship. Or they
may have realized that the Hurons and Algonquins were, like themselves, created
by God. Some Frenchmen came to search the waterways for a route to the Pacific
Ocean and the Far East. Some came to trade for the sleek pelts of the beaver,
popular in the manufacture of European top hats. But also during the two
months, the Atlantic journey came the Jesuit priests, dressed in their black
robes, who were trading their French education and homeland for a chance to
share with the native Americans what was most dear to them – their faith, their
belief in God’s love.
They came with full knowledge that
they would likely suffer and die for the truths they held most dear …. And they
were not wrong. These men became the group we now venerate as our North
American martyrs. Their martyrdoms were most severe. Their lives contain the
“stuff ” of legends, and due to the Jesuit insistence on record keeping, we can
read in their own words what they hoped and endured as they landed in a world
absolutely alien to that of their homeland. Traditionally, one of these saints,
St. Isaac Jogues, has been claimed by the Catholic church of the United States
because he was martyred in what was later to become the state of New York.
In 1636 Pere Isaac Jogues, newly
ordained and 29 years old, joined the small band of Jesuits at Three Rivers
(Trois Rivieres), a tiny French trading post on the St. Lawrence River. He
arrived with the small Mass kit that his mother had given him. He also arrived
with the hope that the Hurons, who were completing their summer’s trading,
would allow him to travel hundreds of miles inland with them when they returned
home.
Fr. Isaac Jogues time among the
Huron village:
Isaac Jogues was both a scholar and
an athlete. Once he demonstrated his agility as a runner, many Indians became
attentive to his teachings. The first six years of his apostolate in the New
World resulted in the baptisms of hundreds of Huron Indians. He became the
favorite among those Indians eager to learn of the white man’s Christian
religion. To strengthen French-Huron relationship, the French authorities
convinced the Hurons to exchange children for the year. So it was that
10-year-old French orphan boy Jean Amyot and Fr. Jogues traded places in the
birchbark canoes with three Huron youths for the return trip to the Huron
villages. For weeks the two newcomers squatted shoeless and motionless in the
fragile canoes as they followed the St. Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers westward.
The Jesuits at Three Rivers had told Fr. Jogues to be of as much use as
possible, so he helped gather wood for their evening meal and helped portage
the canoes and supplies when they came to dangerous rapids or to the land they must
cross between waterways. Jean and Isaac began to grow accustomed to the Hurons’
habits and to the sound of their language and learned of necessity to eat the
native food.
Pere Jean de Brebeuf, who had been
the first “Black robe” to reach the Hurons a few years before and who would
later be martyred and canonized, greeted Isaac when he reached the Huron
village near the present location of Midland, Ontario. Fr. Jogues’ arrival
brought the Black robes’ total to five, three recently arrived. Fr. Brebeuf began
sharing his several years of experience with the newer missionaries. “We can
only progress slowly and count on God’s ways,” he cautioned the newcomers. He
had baptized few Hurons in the years he had been there, most as they lay dying.
He recognized that even the little trust he had painstakingly cultivated was
due to the Hurons’ distress in times of famine and illness. But he felt the
priests must continue to be constantly attentive to the ways and needs of the
Hurons. Only God would know if they made progress.
The Hurons were traditionally
friendly to all strangers. The Black robes felt free to move in and out of the
longhouses of the villages and knew the Indians would share what they had with
them. The Hurons felt equally free to sit near the fire in the Black robes’
lodge, to partake of their meals, and to talk to them of their belief.
Sometimes they would wait for hours to hear the clock chime over and over,
mystified, and convinced that a spirit within it was speaking to the priests.
Some Hurons guessed, and rightly so,
that the arrival of the Black robes was a mixed blessing. It seemed that
illness and death, though by the Hurons to be caused by angry spirits, came
with the Frenchmen. Fr. Jogues was sick with influenza his first winter with the
Hurons and it spread to several other Frenchmen. They recuperated slowly, to
the dismay of the Huron, who had no resistance to this white man’s disease and
who often died. The epidemic spread from village to village. Fr. Jogues was
blamed and some Hurons wanted him to leave. Only by sincere service could the
missionaries counteract these judgments. As summer arrived, the epidemic
lessened, and fishing, hunting, and the annual trading trip were more in mind.
As Fr. Jogues learned the ways and language of the Hurons he became more
acceptable.
Life, missionary work and eventual
death of Fr Isaac Jogues at the hands of the Iroquois:
The Iroquois confederation of tribes
south of the Great Lakes was the traditional enemy of the Huron people. Dutch
traders had provided these Indians with muskets, while at that time the French
did not provide Algonquins or Hurons with guns. With weapons, the Iroquois
became invincible and daring, finally able to destroy their long-time enemies
north of the lakes. As a result, the Hurons were vengeful toward any Iroquois
whom luck delivered to them. They killed their prisoners painfully, as they
knew the Iroquois did the same to the Huron captives. It was soon after his
arrival that Isaac witnessed these gruesome proceedings in which the Indians
did not distinguish between killing an enemy in defense and taking vengeance
after the battle. Centuries of tribal customs dictated against Christian
insights and the time of true Christian conversion seemed far distant to the
missionaries. When the yearly reports traveled east by canoe and ship reached
France, the missionaries admitted to no conversions among the Hurons – until a
surprising thing happened.
At a council fire, Isiouendaentaha,
a respected older brave, spoke up and related the concern and wisdom he had
seen the Black robes freely share. He asked Brebeuf to baptize him. Later Fr.
Brebeuf questioned the Huron closely to make sure he realized the radical
difference baptism should make in his way of life. The brave was committed to that
change and so was baptized, aptly given Peter as his patron and Christian name.
This man of stature gave credence to the Black robes’ views so that other
families joined “Peter” and the new Christian way of life. They lived together
in villages for mutual support. They prayed in the way of the Black robes.
Their way of life made a marked, contrast to that of their tribesmen. Becoming
a Christian was a radical decision but, once they took the step, they were as
unflinching in their faith as their Huron training had required in every other
aspect of their lives. Eventually, many Hurons would be Christian martyrs.
In the summer of 1642, the Hurons
decided to forego their annual trading trip to Three Rivers since Iroquois war
parties were infiltrating the area. The missionaries, knowing that a lack of
medicine and supplies would cause much suffering, decided to make the trip
alone. Fr. Jogues offered to go and some Christian Hurons and French laymen
offered to accompany him. The four canoes made it safely to Three Rivers where
a young French doctor joined them for the return trip with the year’s supplies.
On their return, the group was attacked and captured by Mohawks, members of the
Iroquois nation. They were paraded through many villages and constantly tortured
as their captors traveled south to Osserienon, their village in upstate New
York near present-day Auriesville. not far from Albany. They finally arrived at
Ossernenon with open wounds and broken bones.
Fr. Jogues encouraged the captives
to forgive their captors and offer their sufferings to God on their behalf. An
Algonquin captive was forced to cut off Fr. Jogues’ thumb to assure the Mohawks
that the missionary would never use weapons against them. Several of the
captives were killed. The young French doctor asked Fr. Jogues if he might vow
his life to God as a Jesuit since only his health had deterred him from joining
the Society earlier. He did so and was soon killed, thus becoming the first
North American Jesuit martyr.
For some reason, the Mohawks were
saving Fr. Jogues, perhaps as protection against reprisal from the French. He
ended up in the service of a respected old Mohawk woman who preserved his life
more than once and even called him “nephew.” Once, while he acted as his
“aunt’s” porter to a Dutch town, the men of the town offered to help Fr. Jogues
escape. At first, he refused since he was learning the ways and languages of
the Mohawk people and felt he might even be able to share his beliefs with
them. But eventually, when he had managed to send a warning note to Quebec
about a Mohawk attack, he knew he must escape the wrath of his captors. His
first escape attempt was thwarted by some barking dogs but he managed to get
free with a daring second attempt.
A kindly Dutch ship’s captain returned
Fr. Jogues to France on Christmas Day, 1643, and he was able that day to
receive communion for the first time in seventeen months. When Fr. Jogues
reached the Jesuits, his appearance was so changed that at first he wasn’t
recognized; but he soon found that all of France had been following his ordeal
through reports sent back by way of French and Dutch ships. Even the queen
requested his presence. During this age of specific liturgical requirements,
the Pope gave Fr. Jogues permission to use his remaining fingers to hold the
consecrated host at Mass. Fr. Jogues spoke with love of his former persecutors,
telling how his Mohawk aunt had protected him. Since he now knew their language
and customs, he felt God had suited him well too, return to the native Americans.
In time, Fr. Jogues’ superiors agreed.
The Jesuits of Three Rivers were
astonished to see Isaac Jogues reappear on a ship from Europe! Fr. Jogues was
equally surprised to hear that the Hurons and Iroquois had cautiously begun to
trade prisoners rather than kill them. Fr. Jogues went back to Ossernenon, the
place of his captivity, as an envoy of the French to help with this peace
effort. Then he decided to return there a second time, not as a diplomat but as
a priest. Before leaving he wrote these words to a fellow priest:
"My heart tells me that if I am
the one to be sent on this mission I shall go but I shall not return’ But I
would be glad if our Lord wished to complete the sacrifice where He began it.
Farewell, dear Father. Pray that God unites me to Himself inseparably."
Fr. Jogues returned to his aunt’s
longhouse but could tell she was concerned for him once again. A long summer’s
drought was believed to have been caused by evil spirits in his Mass kit. Also,
the younger braves were irritated by their elders’ moves towards peace and knew
that Fr. Jogues had encouraged the exchange of prisoners. While the elders were
in council, a young Mohawk asked Fr. Jogues and a Jesuit volunteer who had come
with him to come speak to the young braves in his lodge. Both “Auntie” and Fr.
Jogues knew that he would have no security outside her longhouse, yet, to
refuse the invitation would be unthinkable. Fr. Jogues went, and, as he entered
the lodge of the young man, he was killed by beheading. He died in October of
1646, ten years after first arriving in the New World. During his captivity, he
converted sixty Indians. The Jesuit lay helper Jean Lalande, was beheaded the
next day.
The conversion of Fr Isaac Jogues’
murderer:
During the autumn of the year following
Fr. Jogues’ death, the orphan boy who had accompanied him eleven years
previously was with some Frenchmen who were attacked by a dozen Mohawks. The
French killed eleven attackers and captured one who was then taken to Three
Rivers. Eventually, the captive Mohawk bragged that he had been the one to kill
Fr. Jogues. The Algonquins and Hurons were furious and planned revenge on the
man, but the Jesuits protected Fr. Jogues’ murderer.
After some weeks in their care, the
Mohawk asked the Jesuits for baptism, relating the knowledge he had gained from
Fr. Jogues at Auntie’s fireside in Ossernenon. He asked to take Isaac Jogues’
name and so was baptized. A week later, Algonquins dragged the Mohawk from the
Blackrobe’s care and killed him. One of the priests later reported, “God
willing, there are now two Isaac Jogueses in heaven.”
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