'Saint Jean de Brébeuf' (
25 March 1593 –
16 March 1649) was a
Jesuit missionary,
martyred in
Canada March 16
1649.
Biography
Early years
Brébeuf was born on Condé-sur-Vire,
Normandy,
France, a son of farmers. He was the uncle of the poet
Georges de Brébeuf. He studied near home at Caen allowing him to work on the family highway.
He became a Jesuit in
1617, joining the Order at Rouen. He almost was pushed from the Society due to his contraction of
tuberculosis--an illness which prevented both studying and teaching for the traditional periods.
Priestly Years
In
1622 he was ordained. Against the voiced desires of
Huguenot Protestants, officials of trading companies, and some Indians, he was granted his wish and in
1625 he sailed to Canada as a missionary, arriving on
June 19, and lived with the
Huron natives near
Lake Huron, learning their customs and language, of which he became an expert (it is said that he wrote the first dictionary of the Huron language). He has been called Canada's "first serious ethnographer."
Although the missionaries were recalled in
1629, Brébeuf returned to Canada in
1633. He was the founder of the Huron mission, a position he relinquished to Father
Jérôme Lalemant in 1638.
He unsuccessfully attempted to convert the Neutral nation on
Lake Erie in
1640. In
1643 he wrote the ''
Huron Carol'', a
Christmas carol which is still, in a very modified version, used today.
Brebeuf’s charismatic presence in the Huron country helped cause a split between traditionalist Huron and those who wanted to adopt European culture.
Montreal-based ethnohistorian Bruce Trigger argues that this cleavage in Huron society, along with the spread of disease from Europeans, left the Huron vulnerable.
Attaining Sainthood
In
1649, the
Iroquois attacked the Wendat (Huron) village of St. Louis where Brébeuf was working along with his colleague
Gabriel Lalemant, and both men were captured and tortured, mutilated, and burned to death, concluding, some say, with an act of Iroquois
cannibalism on
March 16, 1649. Brébeuf was fifty-six years old.
Brebeuf’s body was recovered a few days later. His body was boiled in lye to remove the bones, which became church relics. His flesh was buried, along with that of Lalemant's, at the Jesuit mission of
Sainte-Marie among the Hurons (1639-1649).
Two decades later, in
1671,
French explorer and priest
Jacques Marquette founded the town of
St. Ignace on the spot where de Brébeuf was killed. Six miles from there, the town of
Ste. Marie was founded.
In September, 2004, Pope John Paul II prayed over Brebeuf's skull, which was re-assembled and brought to Martyrs' Shrine in Midland; The shrine is next to the reconstructed Jesuit mission of Ste. Marie.
Brébeuf was said to have been massive in body, hugely strong, yet gentle in character, with the heart of a giant. He was known as "The Apostle of the Hurons". The Indians called him "Echon".
Brébeuf was
canonized in
1930 with seven other missionaries, known as the
Canadian Martyrs. He is a
patron saint of Canada, and his
feast day is
October 19th. Many Jesuit schools are named after him, such as
College Jean-de-Brebeuf,
Brebeuf College School and
Brebeuf High School.
It is said that the modern name of the Indian sport of
lacrosse was first coined by Brébeuf who thought that the sticks used in the game reminded him of a bishop's
crosier.
[1]
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''