Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture
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Colonial Saints: Gender, Race, and
Hagiographyin New France
Allan Greer
Gookin even authored personal profiles of pious Indians that displayed some of the quali-
ties found in Jesuit texts on saintly natives. Yet the hagiographic genre was much more
highly developed in New France, where it dominated the field of biographical literature to
the virtual exclusion of other styles. Hence, there is no period biography of such eminently
worthy secular figures as Samuel de Champlain to set beside Cotton Mather's portrait of
Winthrop.
6 Richard Kieckhefer, "Imitators of Christ: Sainthood in the Christian Tradition," in
Kieckhefer and George D. Bond, eds., Sainthood: Its Manifestations in World Religions
(Berkeley, 1988), 32. See also Hippolyte Delehaye, The Legends of the Saints: An
Introduction to Hagiography, trans. V. M. Crawford (London, i962); Stephen Wilson, ed.,
Saints and Their Cults: Studies in ReligiousSociology,Folkloreand History (Cambridge, 1983);
Andr6 Vauchez, La saintetd en Occident aux dernierssiecles du Moyen Age (Rome, i988); and
Michel de Certeau, "A Variant: Hagio-Graphical Edification," in his The Writing of
History, trans. Tom Conley (New York, i988), 269-83.
7 John Bossy, Christianity in the West, 1400-1700 (Oxford, 1985), 96-97; Jacques
Truchet, BossuetPanegyriste(Paris, i962), 24-27; Jacobus de Voraigne, The Golden Legend:
Readingson the Saints, 2 vols., trans. William Granger Ryan (Princeton, 1993).
8 Latin America was the site of another school of colonial hagiography. See Stephen
Clissold, The Saints of South America (London, 1972); Fernando Iwasaki Cauti, "Vidas de
santos y santas Vidas: hagiografias reales e imaginarias en Lima colonial," Anuario de
EstudiosAmericanos, 51 (Sevilla, 1994), 47-64; Teodoro Hampe Martinez, "Los testigos de
Santa Rosa,"RevistadesArchivoGeneralde la Nacion (Lima), 13 (I996), I1I-7I; Antonio
326 WILLIAM AND MARY QUARTERLY
14 Donald Weinstein and Rudolph Bell, Saints and Society: The Worlds of Western
Christendom, I000-I700 (Chicago, i982); Caroline Walker Bynum, Holy Feast and Holy
Fast: The ReligiousSignificance of Food to Medieval Women (Berkeley, 1987), 24-25.
15 On the history of Catholic missions of New France, see J. H. Kennedy, Jesuit and
Savage in New France (New Haven, 1950); Cornelius J. Jaenen, Friend and Foe: Aspectsof
French-Amerindian Cultural Contact in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Toronto,
1976); Bruce G. Trigger, The Children of Aataentsic:A History of the Huron People to I66o, 2
vols. (Kingston and Montreal, 1976); James P. Ronda, "The Sillery Experiment: A Jesuit-
Indian Village in New France, i637-i663," American Indian Cultureand ResearchJournal, 3:i
(i979), i-i8; Louise Tremblay, "La politique missionaire des Sulpiciens au XVIIe et debut
XVIIIe siecle, i668-1735" (Memoire de maitrise, Histoire, Universite de Montreal, 1981);
John Webster Grant, Moon of Wintertime: Missionaries and the Indians of Canada in
EncounterSince 1534 (Toronto, 1984); Kenneth M. Morrison, "Montagnais Missionization in
Early New France: The Syncretic Imperative," A.I.C.R.J, 10:3 (i986), I-24, and "Baptism
and Alliance: The Symbolic Mediations of Religious Syncretism," Ethnohistory,37 (I990),
4i6-37; Daniel K. Richter, "Iroquois versus Iroquois: Jesuit Mission and Christianity in
Village Politics, i642-i686," ibid., 32 (1985), i-i6; James Axtell, The Invasion Within: The
Contest of Cultures in Colonial North America (New York, 1985); Campeau, La Mission des
Jesuites chez les Hurons I634-I650 (Montreal, 1987); Dominique Deslandres, "Le modele
francais d'int6gration socio-religieuse, i6oo-i650. Missions int6rieures et premieres missions
canadiennes" (Ph.D. diss., Universite de Montr6al, I990); Natalie Zemon Davis, "Iroquois
Women, European Women," in Women, "Race,"and Writing in the Early Modern Period, ed.
Margo Hendricks and Patricia Parker (London, 1994), 243-58; and Peter A. Dorsey, "Going
to School with Savages: Authorship and Authority among the Jesuits of New France,"
William and Mary Quarterly,3d Ser., 55 (I998), 399-420.
16 Stephen Greenblatt, RenaissanceSelf-Fashioningfrom More to Shakespeare(Chicago,
1980), 9.
SAINTS IN NEW FRANCE 329
They found only dead bodies heaped together, and the remains
of poor Christians,-some who were almost consumed in the
pitiable remains of the still burning village; others deluged with
their own blood; and a few who yet showed some signs of life,
but were all covered with wounds,-looking only for death, and
blessing God in their wretchedness. At length, in the midst of
that desolated village, they descried the body they had come to
seek. 18
tion to Christians. In the midst of this holy work, he was shot through
the chest and the stomach. One of the attackers stripped the cassock
from the apparently dead man, then moved on in search of further plun-
der. But Garnier had not yet expired. Summoning all his strength, he
raised himself up enough to begin crawling toward a wounded man lying
nearby in order to offer him absolution. He was in this posture-naked,
on his knees, and bleeding profusely-when an enemy hatchet blow
finally dispatched him.
Having identified the scorched and bloody remains they believe to
be Garnier's, the search party solemnly inters them. They mark the grave
so that the martyr's bones can be retrieved at a later date, and then, fear-
ing a return of the Iroquois to the site of their victory, they hurry back to
safety.
The Jesuit Relation for I649 recounts the destruction of
Tionnontate and most of its inhabitants purely as the backdrop to a
more significant event, for this was the occasion on which God marked
a favored individual as one of his own. The biographical framing of the
story is characteristic of the hagiographic genre. So too is the focus on
death as the central event in the subject's life or, to be more exact, death
and denial of death, for the assurance that Garnier went straight to
Heaven is an essential element. The writer naturally emphasizes the mis-
sionary's courage and dedication to his duty, noting that he could have
fled had he wished, but these admirable moral qualities are only one
part of the overall portrait of martyrdom. Just as significant are the out-
ward resemblances with the Passion of Christ. Accordingly, the narrative
dwells on Garnier's nakedness, on the way his blood waters the earth, on
his humble and submissive kneeling position. The signs are plentiful,
their meaning unmistakable.
In most respects, the Garnier narrative is a standard hagiographic
text, yet in its historical context, it is unmistakably an example of colo-
nialist writing. To appreciate this aspect to the full, visualize that Jesuit-
led burial party picking through the smoldering ruins of Tionnontate.
The rescuers have to sift through carnage and debris, passing over dead
Indian bodies and also wounded, but still living, Indian bodies, until
they find what they have been seeking: one lifeless, but immeasurably
precious, European body.
Martyrs are Christians who are killed for their faith, making a con-
scious sacrifice of their lives. Originally, in the time of the primitive
Church, "martyr" and "saint" were synonymous terms; after a long
period during which anti-Christian killers were in short supply and the
definition of sainthood was consequently broadened to embrace other
forms of religious heroism, martyrdom staged a comeback in the early
SAINTS IN NEW FRANCE 331
20 Peter Brown, The Cult of the Saints: Its Rise and Function in Latin Christianity
French Jesuit publications through the middle decades of the I7th century. See the highly
informative study by Francois-Marc Gagnon, "L'iconographie classique des saints martyrs
canadiens," in Lafleche, Les saints martyrs, 1:37-79. A good modern reproduction can be
found in Du Creux, History of Canada, facing 2:481.
22 The most detailed account of Jogues's experiences from his initial capture by the
Mohawks in i642 until his death in i646 is to be found in the Relation of i647 in
Thwaites, ed., Jesuit Relations, 3i:i6-137; Campeau, ed., Monumenta Novae Franciae,
7:96-136. See also the accounts of his first captivity in the Relation of i642-i643 in
Thwaites, ed., JesuitRelations,24:280-85, 294-307, 25:42-73; Campeau,ed., Monumenta
NovaeFranciae,5:592-625.
FEW~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
stronger claim than did the Jesuit martyrs to having died for the sake of
his religion; accordingly, he was eventually canonized, but as a layman,
he appears in the Huret illustration literally overshadowed by Jogues.
When the missionary returned to the Mohawk country and met his ren-
dezvous with death in i646, he was again accompanied by a lay
Frenchman who perished along with him. The Jesuit chroniclers neglect
to mention that he was also escorted by twenty-four Hurons, many of
them baptized Catholics; according to some reports, they were put to
death only after enduring horrible tortures.23
Featured along with Jogues in the front row of Huret's tableau are
Jean de Brebeuf, the most famous of the New France martyrs, and his
junior colleague, Gabriel Lalemant. When an Iroquois force captured the
Huron village where they were staying in March i649, these two Jesuits
bravely refused to abandon their post. Unlike Charles Garnier'scompara-
tively brief ordeal, however, it was their fate to be taken alive, tied to
stakes, and slowly tortured to death.24 In the engraving, Breuf towers
above the other figures. His chest is scorched by red-hot axe blades slung
round his neck and, while some Indians cut chunks of flesh from his
extremities, others prepare to pour boiling water over his head in mock-
ing imitation of baptism. Lalemant, a human burnt offering, has been
draped by his tormenters in a flaming cloak of bark and pitch.
Of all the Canadian martyrs, Brebeuf had by far the most illustrious
post-mortem career.25Across New France and Old France, the story of
his ordeal, in all its gruesome detail, was told and retold through the
medium of the spoken, the written, and the printed word. Catholics
began praying to him for guidance and help. Sick people were cured by
drinking water in which his relics had been dipped; hospital nuns slipped
pulverized bits of his bone into the beverages served to Huguenot sol-
diers under their care and reported that his assistance helped them to res-
cue these patients from heresy.26
23 See several letters written by Marie de l'Incarnation in the summer of i647 in
Oury,ed., Mariede l'Incarnation,
307, 312, 323, 325.
24 Father Paul Ragueneau provides the most complete account of events surrounding
the deaths of Brebeuf and Lalemant in the Relation of i648-i649 in Thwaites, ed., Jesuit
Relations,34:122-95; Campeau, ed., MonumentaNovae Franciae,7:59i-609. See also
Christophe Regnault, "Recit veritable de martyre et de la bienheureuse mort du Pere Jean
de Breboeuf [sic] et du Pere Gabriel L'Alemant en la Nouvelle-France, dans le pays des
Hurons, par les Iroquois, ennemis de la foy" (i678) in Thwaites, ed., Jesuit Relations,
34:24-37; Campeau,ed., MonumentaNovaeFranciae,7:488-92.
25 For period documents by and about Brebeuf, see Rene Latourelle, Etude sur les
ecrits de Saint Jean de Brebeuf, 2 vols. (Montreal, 1952-1953), and "Quelques remarques sur
les vertus de Pere de Brebeuf, par le Pere Joseph-Marie Chaumonot," Campeau, ed.,
Monumenta Novae Franciae, 7:471-72. A modern biography, from a Catholic point of
view, is JosephP. Donnelly,Jean de Brebeuf, I593-I649 (Chicago,1975).
26 Relationof I67I-I672 in Thwaites,ed., JesuitRelations,56:102-05.
334 WILLIAM AND MARY QUARTERLY
All this glory did not come as a reward for exceptional results in
spreading the Gospel, for Brebeuf can hardly be considered a great suc-
cess in his chosen profession. A missionary raised on tales of Francis-
Xavier baptizing Asians by the thousands and of Jose de Anchieta
gathering the nations of Brazil under the Christian standard, he must
have found his twenty-five years in the Canadian field extremely discour-
aging. Most of those years he spent among the Hurons, who tended, on
the whole, to fear and loathe him as an exceptionally malevolent sorcerer.
So unpopular was Brebeuf that, for a time, he had to be removed from
the Huron country altogether.27 His spiritual diary is filled with dark
visions of crosses and of bleeding Jesuits. "O my God," he wrote, stop-
ping just short of despair, "why are you not known? why is this
Barbarous country not all converted to you? Why is not sin abolished
from it?"28 His comfort came in premonitions of his own agony and
death, a gesture that would confer certain meaning on all that had gone
before. What might otherwise have looked like a career of futility and
failure could, after a martyr'sdeath, be seen as a program devised by God
to temper the faith and test the resolve of his chosen one.
Brebeuf emerged as the favorite Jesuit saint partly because his death
seemed to fit the profile of a perfect martyr's end. Depictions of his
ordeal in both words and visual images concentrate not only on his forti-
tude but also on a chain of signs attesting to its religious significance.
Like Jesus, he prophesied his own death, even intimating to colleagues
some foreknowledge of the exact time and circumstances. Like dozens of
martyrs in the ancient times of Roman persecution, he continued to
preach and to praise God throughout his torture; he was silenced only
when his tormenters cut off his tongue and mutilated his lips, proving in
the process that they, as much as he, were driven by religious motives.
Further proof that his suffering stemmed from hatred for Christianity
was found in a cruel parody of baptism: aided by "pagan"Hurons famil-
iar with the rituals of the French religion, the jeering Iroquois poured
boiling water over the Jesuit's head. Where modern readers-not to men-
tion many Catholic writers of the time-might see Brebeuf's death and
those of the other Canadian martyrs as commonplace tragedies in a
bloody seventeenth-century war, the Jesuits insisted that both victims
and aggressorswere acting on metaphysical principles.29
27Relation of i642, ibid., 23:35-37.
28Relation of i648-i649, ibid., 35-37, 34:189.
29 When Recollet missionaries were killed in the line of duty, their colleagues
mourned them as admirable workers who had accepted the risks of life among savages.
Recollets such as Louis Hennepin and Chrestien Le Clercq were scathing in their treat-
ment of the Jesuits' martyrdom complex; Hennepin, A New Discovery of a Vast Country in
America [London, i6981, 2 vols., ed. Thwaites (Chicago, 1903), 346; Christian Le Clercq,
SAINTS IN NEW FRANCE 335
In general, hagiography takes the form of a discourse of emblems,
and Brebeuf's case lent itself particularly well to such treatment. Death
seen in advance and embraced by the victim, fortitude through pain and
humiliation, a naked body attacked by hate-filled unbelievers, the shed-
ding of blood: these artfully arranged correspondences with the Passion
of Christ made the Brebeuf story irresistible to a large Counter-
Reformation audience.
The Huret engraving of the martyrs of New France might well be
seen as a colonialist image, for natives form an essential part of the com-
position. The tableau is heavily populated with Indians, all of them male
and all of them actively engaged in the grim business of slaughter. There
is one exception to this pattern. Far to the rear, behind the second rank
of Jesuits, stands an obscure figure, hardly more than a blot on the page;
the legend identifies him as "Joseph Onohare, a young Algonquin, tor-
tured for three days and nights in the spring of i650, for refusing to give
up the worship of Christ"30The artist's ambivalent attitude toward this
suffering Christian convert is striking. On the one hand, he relegates him
to a distant position; on the other hand, he draws attention to him by
placing his body at the convergence of several lines in the composition.
In a narrative image organized around the confrontation of two cate-
gories of men, martyrs and Indians, Onohare constitutes a troubling
anomaly.
Captured in the course of an abortive raid into the Mohawk country,
Onohare was subjected to the usual tortures inflicted by Iroquoian peo-
ples on prisoners of war; his ordeal greatly exceeded anything faced by
Brebeuf and the other Jesuit martyrs. Moreover, according to the rather
implausible interpretation offered in the Relation of i65o, the Mohawks
were "enraged" by Onohare's incessant prayer: "But this Young man,
despising their fury, thanked God for the grace he had given him to suf-
fer as a Christian, and not as a common Savage."31 If the religious signifi-
cance of the death of this savage who was also a Christian could be
evaluated on the same ground as that of Brebeuf and Jogues, what about
the dozens of baptized Huron and Algonquin converts who met similar
fates in the terrible Iroquois wars and who, according to the Relations,
suffered with admirable piety? To exclude Onohare from recognition as a
First Establishment of the Faith in New France, 2 vols., trans. John Gilmary Shea (New
York,I88I), I:245.
30 Translated from the Latin legend to the illustration in Du Creux, History of
Canada. For the story of Joseph Onohare, see ibid., 57I-74, and Thwaites, ed., Jesuit
Relations, 35:222-33.
31 "Mais ce Ieune homme, meprisant leur fureur, remercioit Dieu de la grace qu'il luy
faisoit d'endurercomme un Chrestien, d' non comme un simple Sauvage."Thwaites, ed., Jesuit
Relations, 35:224-25.
336 WILLIAM AND MARY QUARTERLY
32 Lafleche,Lessaintsmartyrs,1:299-301.
33 "0 qu'il est doux de mourir pour Jdsus-Christ!"Marie de lIncarnation to her son,
summeri647, in Ouryed., Correspondance,
324.
34 Elizabeth Rapley, The De'votes:Women and Church in Seventeenth-CenturyFrance
(Montreal, i990); Leslie Choquette, "'Ces Amazones du Grand Dieu': Women and
Missionin Seventeenth-Century
Canada,"FrenchHistoricalStudies,I7 (1992), 627-55. On
one of these women, Marie de l'Incarnation, see the remarkable biography by Davis,
Womenon theMargins:ThreeSeventeenth-Century
Lives(Cambridge,Mass.,1995), 63-139.
Bynum, Holy Feast and Holy Fast, 24-25.
35 See also Bynum, "Women's Stories,
Women's Symbols: A Critique of Victor Turner's Theory of Liminality," in Frank E.
Reynolds and Robert L. Moore, eds., Anthropology and the Study of Religion (Chicago,
I984), I05-25.
FIGURE II. Etienne David, Mort heroiquede que/quesparesde la CompagniedeJeisusdans la
i868. Photo courtesyUniversityof Toronto.
338 WILLIAM AND MARY QUARTERLY
36 On Marie de l'Incarnation, see Davis, Women on the Margins, and the references
cited therein, esp. 26o-6i note 4. Marguerite Bourgeoys is memorialized in Belmont,
"Eloges de quelques personnes," i67-87.
37 Thus, Saint Catherine of Siena, one of the central figures in Bynum's study, was
remembered less for her bold ventures as a mature woman advising popes and settling
schisms than for her "mystic marriage"and the extraordinary fasting of her youth.
38 On Marie de St-Joseph, see Marie de I'Lncarnation to the Ursulines of Tours,
spring i652, in Oury, ed., Correspondance, 436-73; Thwaites, ed., Jesuit Relations,
38:69-i65; and Du Creux, History of Canada, 2:601-13. On Catherine de St-Augustin, see
Jodi Bilinkoff, "Navigating the Waves (of Devotion): Toward a Gendered Analysis of the
Counter-Reformation," plenary address given at "Attending to Women in Early Modern
Europe: Crossing Boundaries," University of Maryland, November 1997. The primary
sources on Catherine are Thwaites, ed., Jesuit Relations, 32:133-35, 52:56-97, and Paul
Ragueneau, La Vie de la Mere Catherine de Saint Augustin, religieusehospitaliere de la mis-
ericordede Qu6becen la Nouvelle-France (Paris, i671).
39 Bynum, Holy Feast and Holy Fast, 25.
40 Ragueneau, Vie de la Mere Catherinede Saint Augustin, 72-74.
SAINTS IN NEW FRANCE 339
nial lives are not without turning points, however, at least not where
European-born women are concerned. For Marie de St-Joseph and
Catherine de St-Augustin, the Atlantic crossing itself formed a central
crisis, each young woman tearing herself with the greatest difficulty from
family, convent, and homeland to undertake a perilous journey into a
forbidding land. Marie de St-Joseph came in i639, at age twenty-three, as
one of a small party from Tours to found the Ursuline house at Quebec.
Her Life, as written by Marie de l'Incarnation and subsequently para-
phrased for publication by the Jesuits, revolves around painful dramas of
separation. At age fourteen, she had to find the strength to enter the
novitiate in spite of emotional pleas from her mother and father. Nine
years later, she was chosen to be part of the first convent in New France,
and her frantic parents almost succeeded in convincing Marie to remain
behind, but after a period of hesitation she plunged forth on her mission.
The influential father of Catherine de St-Augustin undertook legal action
to prevent his daughter from leaving France, taking his case as far as the
parlement of Rouen and then, in a sudden change of heart-precipitated,
according to the hagiographer, by the fervent prayers of Catherine and
her sisters-he dropped the suit and offered up his daughter as a volun-
tary sacrifice to God.41
The stories of the two young nuns continue along parallel tracks.
Both experienced harrowing ocean crossings: Marie's storm-tossed ship
narrowly avoided collision with an iceberg, while Catherine's was struck
by disease, so that she arrived in Canada half dead. Even for the healthy,
life was not easy in the infant colonial town of Quebec, and both nuns
suffered from chronic illnesses that kept them bedridden for long periods
and finally took their lives. After the douceur de vie of France, pain and
deprivation in Canada. And these physical afflictions seldom brought
spiritual comfort: rather just the opposite. Marie endured long periods of
"inner desolation," while Catherine's soul and body formed the battle-
ground for agonizing conflicts as demons tormented her and mysterious
inner forces paralyzed her arm when she reached for the communion
host.42 Glorification came only at the very point of death.
In framing these stories in terms of movement between a place of
comfort and security and a place of desolation and danger, the biogra-
phers of the two nuns draw on ancient hagiographic themes. Saints travel
from "the City" to "the wilderness," where, like Christ in the desert, they
41 Thwaites, ed., Jesuit Relations, 32:133-35.
42 Strange as it seems, diabolical possession was frequently regarded by 17th-century
mystics as a sign of God's favor. The deity made use of the devil, just as he used illness,
adversity, and other trials, to try the soul and to annihilate the self-love of the chosen one.
See Fernando Cervantes, The Devil in the New World: The Impact of Diabolism in New
Spain (New Haven, i994), IOI.
340 WILLIAM AND MARY QUARTERLY
must rely on their inner resources as they face evil.43 In the mystical lan-
guage favored by the French missionaries, the hardships of the wilderness
become so many "crosses"to be embraced, eagerly and lovingly, in the
knowledge that God wishes it. Paradox abounds, for every misfortune
can be understood as further evidence of divine favor. For Marie de
l'Incarnation, Canada was "an earthly paradise where crosses and thorns
grow so lovingly," attractive precisely because it was so repellent with its
forbidding climate and its rocky landscape.44But what made New France
"bad," and therefore "good," was something at once more human and
more metaphysical than the cold weather. This was a place associated
with sin and inhabited by people who did not recognize God or follow
his law.
Before she ever left France, Marie de St-Joseph once had a memo-
rable dream. It begins in a beautiful urban square filled with opulent
shops where the worldly were seduced by luxury and vanity. Fearing to
be trapped there herself, Marie turns to find herself in the presence of a
phalanx of strong young men, "dressed in the costume of savages" and
drawn up in military order. "It is through us that you will be saved,"
they announce, as they lead her away.45Rescuing her from the pitfalls of
civilized frivolity, these semi-nude men seem to suggest much more seri-
ous dangers-sexuality and violence most obviously-that Marie will
have to face before salvation is hers. As was so often the case, the figure
of the savage served as a repository for that which early modern Europe
wished to repress: simultaneously attractive and menacing, its presence
made New France the ideal proving ground for heroes of Catholicism.46
in the Lives of the mystic nuns, but a vaguer, more abstract, but nonethe-
less ominous, aboriginal presence lurks in the narratives dedicated to
Marie de St-Joseph and Catherine de St-Augustin. For Catherine, Canada
was a place "of great suffering and great fear," and that fearsome aspect
was surely related to the native presence.47In both its male and its female
variants, colonial hagiography enlists the native as an essential instru-
ment of God's arduous plan for his saints.
Natives appear also in benign roles in the Lives of the colonial saints
and in the other missionary writings. Stories abound in the Jesuit
Relations of exemplary converts: pious women going to courageous
lengths to protect their chastity, men who boldly proclaim the gospel to
unbelievers, children starving rather than eat meat during Lent.48 But
whose success is being celebrated in these success stories? The pious
natives themselves, so recently redeemed from a God-less and sin-
drenched American environment, tend to be evaluated on a special,
diminished scale of spiritual achievement; whereas Europeans could
aspire to sanctification in this forbidding land, the highest hope for
natives was that they should become tamed savages. Even the highly sym-
pathetic Marie de l'Incarnation dismissed out of hand any suggestion
that Indians might aspire to the Catholic priesthood: "The nature of the
American Indians is such that even the most intelligent and saintly
among them are completely unsuited to ecclesiastical duties; instead they
must be taught and gently led along the path of Heaven."49 A quasi-
anonymous quality in so many of these anecdotes of admirable converts
suggests that they are told mainly to illustrate the power of God and the
efficacy of the missionary.
"Good Indians" and "Bad Indians" have in common, then, that they
appear primarily as enabling figures. Whether kneeling to accept bap-
tism, thrusting firebrands at the suffering body of a martyr, or accepting
the healing ministrations of the hospital nun, the native is a crucial actor
in every drama of colonial saintliness. Less concretely but no less essen-
tially, the Indian presence provides definition to the missionary's
Christian and European values. Imagined as "pagan savages," the natives
represent the negation of order and civility; alternatively, they represent a
naturalness and innocence that stands as a reproach to Europe's artificial-
ity and inspires the missionary to adhere to a purified version of his or
her ideals.50 What the figure of the native lacks in the early missionary
writings is a fully developed self, that quality of wholeness that invites
reader identification and that the hagiographic portraits of exemplary
missionaries exude so strongly.
Given the well-documented tendencies of colonialist writing, not to
mention the fundamental religious presumptuousness of the missionary
enterprise, it is hardly surprising to find these texts objectifying natives.
More remarkable is the contrary tendency. Hesitantly at first, the
Catholic chroniclers of New France began to recognize some native
Christians as complete spiritual subjects and even to contemplate the
prospect of genuine cross-cultural holiness. Mystical currents swirling
through seventeenth-century France may have played a predisposing role.
If during a famous encounter on the coach to Paris the Jesuit Jean-
Jacques Surin could find his pretensions to religious knowledge deflated
by the radiant spirituality of an illiterate peasant, perhaps illumination
might also be discovered among the "ignorant" natives of North
America.51Though they seldom transcended the dichotomous mindset of
civilized-versus-savage, the French mystics tended to idealize that which
seemed to stand outside the established European order, and what better
antidote could there be to regulation, formality, and cold rationality than
the (stereotyped European image of the) North American Indian? Hence
the strain of "mystic exoticism" running through French Catholicism of
the period frequently focused on figures of the sauvage.52
One early example of a Good Indian tale shading off into a story of
saintliness is the Jesuit portrait of Joseph Chihwatenha, the leading
Huron Christian of the late i630s. Cut down suddenly in an enemy
ambush with no apparent religious motive, he could not be considered a
martyr; instead, published accounts portrayed him as an exemplary
leader, "the special glory of the infant church among the Hurons."53
50 These European conceptions of "natural man" as projected onto the natives of the
Americas are discussed in Anthony Pagden, The Fall of Natural Man (Cambridge, i982).
See also Olive Patricia Dickason, The Myth of the Savage and the Beginnings of French
Colonialism in the Americas (Edmonton, I984); Peter Hulme, Colonial Encounters:Europe
and the Native Caribbean (London, i986); Tzvetan Todorov, The ConquestofAmerica: The
Question of the Other, trans. Richard Howard (New York, I987); and Greenblatt,
Marvelous Possessions: The Wonders of the New World (Chicago, i99i), and New World
Encounters(Berkeley,I993).
51 de Certeau, "L'illettre eclaire dans l'histoire de la lettre de Surin sur le Jeune
Homme du coche (i630)," Revue dAscetique et de Mystique, 44 (i968), 369-4I.
52 On the mystical movement in French Catholicism in the i7th century, see de
Certeau, The Mystic Fable, vol. I: The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, trans. Michael
Smith (Chicago, i992), and Mino Bergamo, La science des saints: Le discours mystique au
XVIIe sie'cleen France (Grenoble, i992). Bergamo stresses the theme of the exotic in mystical
writing of the time and is the source of the phrase "I'exotismemystique"quoted in the text.
53 Du Creux,History of Canada, I:305.
SAINTS IN NEW FRANCE 343
54 Trigger, Children ofAataentsic, 6oo. See also Denis Lafreniere, "L'eloge de l'Indien
dansles Relationsdes Jesuites,"Canadian Literature, no. I3I (i99i),26-35.
55 Thwaites, ed., Jesuit Relations,I9:I36-65, 244-6i, 20:54-65, 2i:i62-65, 250-65.
Linguistically, these are fascinating documents. Long speeches in the Huron language are
recorded here in Roman letters, with French translations supplied by the Jesuits (together
with English versions in the Thwaites edition).
56 Brebeufs spiritual journal in Campeau, ed., Monumenta Novae Franciae, 7:480-8I.
In the semiotic code of Baroque mysticism, the image of the "pavilion or dome," like that
of the palace or similar grand edifice, was rich in meaning. It tended to be associated with
Heaven, God, and the saints.
57 Thwaites, ed., Jesuit Relations, 35:223; Marie de l'Incarnation to her son, Aug. 30,
i650, in Marshall, ed., Wordfrom New France, I87, and Oury, ed., Correspondance,399.
344 WILLIAM AND MARY QUARTERLY
Her virtue had shown itself during her life in a greater measure
than could have been expected in a girl of her age; but it seems
to have been more strikingly manifested after her death, by the
incorruption of her body. This can be regarded as a recompense
for the great aversion she had to impurity, and a certain horror
that she felt in the presence of immodest persons.
both native and French, seeking to cure illness, disability, or moral dis-
tress.
The key to this colonial cult was Chauchetiere. Like Brebeuf before
him, this Jesuit mystic was inspired with the belief that he had witnessed
the death of an Indian saint, and like Brebeuf, Chauchetiere hesitated to
proclaim this improbable conjunction of savagery and Christian holiness.
But whereas Brebeuf confined his veneration to a discrete paragraph in
his secret diary, Chauchetiere devoted thirty years of his life to the task
of verifying his belief that Tekakwitha was no ordinary pious Indian. He
interviewed anyone who had known Tekakwitha during her lifetime and
kept records of the miracles that followed her death (in a cult that he
himself assiduously promoted). His faith in the native saint ebbed and
flowed over the years, his Jesuit superiors persistently discouraging his
enthusiasm. Chauchetiere states quite clearly that it was because
Tekakwitha was sauvage that the colonial Church would not accept evi-
dence indicating she had been singled out by God.60
Finally, as is so often the case in the history of European saints, the
strength of the popular cult overcame the scepticism of the clerics, and in
1715 the Society of Jesus published the Life of Catherine Tekakwitha.61
The story of the "Iroquois Virgin" was a great success in France, and
before long foreign translations were published in Mexico, Germany, and
Holland. This positive reception encouraged the Jesuits to give wider
publicity to the cases of Etienne Tegananokoa, Francoise Gonanatenha,
and Marguerite Garangoa, Christian Iroquois from Kahnawake who, in a
rare instance of open conflict with non-Catholics of the original Five
Nations, were captured and burned to death. Proclaimed as martyrs, they
joined Tekakwitha as objects of colonial veneration, making Kahnawake
a powerful magnet for pilgrims.62 A soldier passing the village in 1750
observed that "the lame and the crippled have been healed by travelling
to Sault Saint-Louis to invoke these new saints at their tomb.... In the
Montreal area," he continued, "four festivals are celebrated in honor of
the four [sic] Indian martyrs of the town of Saint-Louis and some
parishes in the vicinity come there in procession every year to celebrate a
high mass."63 By the early eighteenth century, then, a native ascetic-
60 Chauchetiere, "La vie de la B. Catherine Tegakouita, dite 'a present la Saincte
Sauvagesse," Archives de la Societe de Jesus, province du Canada francais (St-Jerome,
Quebec), no. 343, p. 2; "Notes autobiographiques du P. Claude Chauchetiere [I694],"
ibid., no. 390.
61 "Lettre du Pere Cholenec . . . au Pere Augustin LeBlanc . . . le 27 aout I7I5,"
Lettrese'diflianteset curieusesecritesdes missions e'trangeres,30 vols. (Paris, I708-I77I), vol. I2
(I7I7), II9-zII.
62 Ibid., vol. I3 (I7I8); P.F.X. De Charlevoix, History and General Description of New
France (I744), trans. Shea, 6 vols. (New York, I900), 4:296-303.
63 J.-C. B., Voyageau Canada ... fait depuis P'anI75i a 176I (Paris, [I978]), 45-46.
346 WILLIAM AND MARY QUARTERLY
visionary was being treated as a saint and three Christian Indians killed
in war were venerated as martyrs.
The Tekakwitha story resonated most powerfully. Not only did hers
become by far the most widely read of all the saints' Lives of New
France, it conformed more closely than the others to the classic format.
Colonial hagiography, a genre seemingly designed to glorify the white
missionary, which habitually enlisted Indians either as figures of menace
or as tokens of successful evangelizing, found its culminating expression
in a work dedicated to a native. Though modern scholarship tends to
ascribe cynical political motives to the Jesuits who published this holy
Life, the Tekakwitha story is by no means an unprecedented departure.
Instead, it should be seen as the consummation of a long-term trend in
New France hagiography: vignettes of a liminal Other, the "exemplary
Indian," expand, acquire more and more of the signs of saintliness, and
shade off into genuinely hagiographic texts with a Christian Indian at
the center.64