Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha, virgin

Kateri was
born in 1656 near the town of Auriesville, New York, the daughter of a Mohawk
warrior. She was baptized by Jesuit missionary Fr. Jacques de Lambertville on
Easter of 1676 at the age of twenty. She devoted her life to prayer, penitential
practices, and the care of the sick and aged in Caughnawaga near Montreal (where
her relics are now enshrined). She incurred the hostility of her tribe because
of her faith. She was devoted to the Eucharist, and to Jesus Crucified, and was
called the
"Lily of the Mohawks." She died in 1680 and was beatified June 22,
1980 — the first native American to be declared "Blessed." — Magnificat, July
2003
The blood of martyrs is the seed of saints. Nine years after the Jesuits Isaac
Jogues and John de Brebeuf were tortured to death by Huron and Iroquois Native
American nations, a baby girl was born near the place of their martyrdom,
Auriesville, New York. She was to be the first person born in North America to
be beatified. Her mother was a Christian Algonquin, taken captive by the
Iroquois and given as wife to the chief of the Mohawk clan, the boldest and
fiercest of the Five Nations. When she was four, Kateri lost her parents and
little brother in a smallpox epidemic that left her disfigured and half blind.
She was adopted by an uncle, who succeeded her father as chief. He hated the
coming of the Blackrobes (missionaries), but could do nothing to them because a
peace treaty with the French required their presence in villages with Christian
captives. She was moved by the words of three Blackrobes who lodged with her
uncle, but fear of him kept her from seeking instruction. She refused to marry a
Mohawk man and at nineteen finally got the courage to take the step of
converting. She was baptized with
the name Kateri (Catherine) on Easter Sunday.
Now she would be treated as a slave. Because she would not work on Sunday, she received no food that day. Her life in grace grew rapidly. She told a missionary that she often meditated on the great dignity of being baptized. She was powerfully moved by God's love for human beings and saw the dignity of each of her people. She was always in danger, for her conversion and holy life created great opposition. On the advice of a priest, she stole away one night and began a two-hundred-mile walking journey to a Christian Native American village at Sault St. Louis, near Montreal.
For three
years she grew in holiness under the direction of a priest and an older Iroquois
woman, giving herself totally to God in long hours of prayer, in charity and in
strenuous penance. At twenty three she took a vow of virginity, an unprecedented
act for a Native American woman, whose future depended on being married. She
found a place in the woods where she could pray an hour a day and was accused of
meeting a man there! Her dedication to virginity was instinctive: She did not
know about religious life for women until she visited Montreal. Inspired by
this, she and two friends wanted to start a community, but the local priest
dissuaded her. She humbly accepted an "ordinary" life. She practiced extremely
severe fasting as penance for the conversion of her nation. She died the
afternoon before Holy Thursday. Witnesses said that her emaciated face changed
color and became like that of a healthy child. The lines of suffering, even the
pockmarks, disappeared and the touch of a smile came upon her lips. She was
beatified in 1980.
Excerpted from Saint of the Day, Leonard Foley, O.F.M.
Patron: Ecologists; ecology; environment; environmentalism; environmentalists; exiles; loss of parents; people in exile; people ridiculed for their piety; World Youth Day.
Symbols: lily (a symbol of her purity); a cross (a symbol of her love of Jesus Christ); or a turtle (a symbol of her clan).
Things to Do:
This website is dedicated solely to information regarding Blessed Kateri.
A wonderful place to make a pilgrimage is the National Shrine of the North American Martyrs. The Shrine is situated in the heartland of New York State, in the Diocese of Albany. The Shrine is the site of the America's first and only canonized Martyrs: St. Rene Goupil (1642), Jesuit brother; St. Isaac Jogues (1646), Jesuit priest; and St. John Lalande (1646), lay missioner. Here also is the birthplace of the Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha, the Lily of the Mohawks, born at Ossernenon in 1656, just ten years after these Martyrdoms.
Read more about Bl. Kateri in this article, The Lily and the Cross.
For even more information you may order
Kateri Tekakwitha: Mohawk Maid
and/or
Kateri Tekakwitha, Mystic of the Wilderness
from Amazon.com.
Read More......Lily of the Mohawks