Jean de Brébeuf

Saint among the Hurons

The Hurons stared at the giant young Norman, as tall and broad as they, a Jesuit priest robed in black and with a full black beard on his gentle face. He was to live among them for nineteen years, patiently and with enormous difficulty learning their ways and language, and with infinite pains leading a small band of them into the Christian faith and away from the blood lusts of their violent life.

He would eat their raw bear and moose meat, paddle many months and many miles in their canoes, build his rough chapel surrounded by their long houses, and win their respect and love. At length, joined by other "Blackrobes", Father Jean de Brébeuf erected a bit of Old France, with church and stockade, in the Canadian wilderness.

Never disturbed by fears for his own safety, Father de Brébeuf saw his village chapels burned, his converts shunned and tortured, and his fellow priests murdered by the Iroquois, the enemy of the Hurons. Finally, his own death came at their hands after incredible tortures.

This swift-paced book, more than a biography of a great saint whose story has never before been completely told in English, is a vital chapter in the tragic history of New France in North America three centuries ago, a story of the failure of colonization partially redeemed by the blood of the martyrs of the Church.

Francis X. Talbot

Francis X. Talbot, S.J., earned a Ph.D. from the Gregorian University, Rome, and was the Editor of four different Catholic publications from 1923 to 1947, including America, the Catholic Mind, and Thought and Theological Studies. He served as the President of Loyola College, Baltimore, in the late 1940s. Among the organizations he helped to found were the Catholic Book Club, the Catholic Poetry Society of America, the Catholic Theater Conference, and the Catholic Library Association.

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