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Parish Priest
Rev. Paul Chu (Pastor)
Parish Address
5771 Granville Avenue
Richmond, BC, Canada
V7C 1E8
Telephone
(604) 272-5563
(604) 272-5564 (fax)
E-mail
cmartyrs@rcav.bc.ca
Parish Assistants
Canossian Sisters
Tel: 274-4218
E-mail:
cansrs@shaw.ca
Parish Rectory
5680 Garrison Road,
Richmond, BC, Canada
V7C 2M2
Parish
Office Hours
Monday to Friday
9:00am to 5:00pm
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Click
on the Martyr to view the biography:
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ST.
JEAN DE BREBEUF, S.J.
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Jean
de Brebeuf, born in Normandy, March 25, 1593. He mastered the
Indian language and worked through all the district of Huronia.
He founded Mission-outposts, converted thousands to the faith.
Massive in body, strong yet gentle in character. He made a vow
signed in his blood, never to refuse the offer of Martyrdom
if asked to die for Christ. His visions of his future Martyrdom
were fulfilled when captured March 16, 1649 and tortured for
hours. He was martyred at the age of 56. Brebeuf is said to
have the heart of a giant. He was known as the apostle of the
Hurons. The Indians called him Echon. (More
Story ...)
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| Isaac
Jogues, born in Orleans, January 10, 1610. He came to Canada in
1636. He set out at once for Huronia where he supplied at Mission
outposts, instructing and baptizing. He was captured by the Iroquois,
brutally tortured, and made a slave. He escaped to France and
returned a year later in Canada. He was sent as an emissary to
discuss a treaty with the Iroquois. They blamed him for the disaster
of a harvest failure. He was seized at Auriesville, N.Y. and cruelly
beaten. A blow from a tomahawk gave him the crown of Martyrdom
on October 18, 1646, at the age of 39. (More
Story ...) |
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ST.
GABRIEL LALEMANT, S.J.
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| Gabriel
Lalemant, born in Paris, October 10, 1610. His ambition was to
labor in the Missions and he asked to be sent to the Canadian
Missions. In 1646, his repeated request to be sent to New France
was granted. In Canada, he arrived in Huronia in September 1648
where in words of Scriptures, he was destined to complete a long
time in a short space. He was sent to assist Brebeuf with whom
he was captured and tortured for seventeen hours at the stake.
Gabriel Lalemant died on March 17, 1649, at the age of 39. |
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Anthony
Daniel, born in Normandy, May 27, 1601. He turned from the lure
of worldly honors and answered a strong call to the Missions
of Canada. He mastered the language and dreamed of forming future
catechists among the Hurons who would instruct their tribe.
He encouraged the converts to meet death as Christian should
when his Mission was attacked by the Iroquois. He hastily baptized
all he could and went out to face the enemy. His body was pierced
with arrows and bullets. The Iroquois set fire to the Chapel
and threw his body into the flames. He was martyred on July
4, 1648, at the age of 48.
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ST.
CHARLES GARNIER, S.J.
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Charles
Garnier, born in Paris, May 25, 1606. He came to Huronia and
labored thirteen years among the Hurons and Petuns. He had a
strong devotion to Our Lady whom he acknowledged looked after
him as a youth. Gentle, innocent, fearless, he succeeded in
winning many souls to God among the Petuns.
He was a victim of a massacre during which he suffered
a blow of an Iroquois tomahawk on December 7, 1649, at the age
of 43.
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Noel
Chabanel, born in Saugues, February 2, 1613. Experiencing a
strong desire to consecrate himself to the Canadian Missions,
he arrived in Huronia in 1643. The enthusiasm of the young missionary
quickly lost its glamour. Unable to learn the Indian language,
feeling useless in ministry, sensitive to the surroundings,
his was to be one unbroken chain of disappointments, an ordeal
that he immediately called himself a bloodless
Martyrdom. For two years he stood in the shadow of dead and
was slain secretly by an apostate Huron on December 8, 1649
at the age of 36.
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Rene
Goupil, born in Anjou, May 15, 1608. He studied medicine and
then offered his services to the Jesuit Missions in Canada.
He arrived in 1640 and served French colonists and native converts
with patience and charity. He was captured with Isaac Jogues
in 1642. On the journey to Mohawk country he begged Isaac Jogues
to receive his vows. A month later he was martyred for making
the sign of the cross on a little Indian child. He was martyred
at Auriesville, N.Y. on September 29, 1642, at the age of 34.
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Jean
de la Lande, born in Dieppe, date unknown. He was a young layman
who offered his services to the Jesuits in New France. He accompanied
Isaac Jogues to the Mohawk Mission in 1646. Knowing what he
might have to suffer, he gladly offered himself as a companion
to Jogues and looking to God to protect him and to be his reward
if the sacrifice of his life was demanded. With Isaac Jogues
he was tortured and threatened with death. He saw the martyrdom
of Jogues on October 18. He himself was martyred at the hands
of the Iroquois on following day at Auriesville, N.Y.
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