 |
Marguerite
Bourgeoys (1620-1700) foundress of the Sisters of the Congregation
of Notre-Dame
photo
MARGUERITE BOURGEOYS was born in Troyes, in the province of Champagne (France),
on Good Friday, April 17, 1620. She was baptized on the same day in the church
of Saint-Jean, a church that was located near her home. Marguerite was the sixth
child in a family of twelve. Her parents were Abraham Bourgeoys and Guillemette
Gamier, and she was privileged to grow up in a milieu that was middle class and
thoroughly Christian.
Marguerite was nineteen years of age when she lost her mother. In the following
year, 1640, in the course of a procession held on October 7 in honor of Our Lady
of the Rosary, she had an unforgettable experience. Her eyes rested on a statue
of the Blessed Virgin, and at that moment she felt inspired to withdraw from the
world and to consecrate herself to the service of God. With that unchanging
fidelity to what she believed to be God's will for her, a fidelity that
characterized her life thenceforth, she set about to discern her specific
vocation.
She registered, at once, as a member of the extern Congregation of Troyes, an
association of young girls devoted to the charitable work of teaching children
in the poor districts of the
town. While engaged in this apostolate she learned about the foundation of Ville
Marie (Montreal) in Canada. The year was 1642, and at that time she sensed a
first call to missionary life. This call was rendered concrete in 1652 when she
met Monsieur de Maisonneuve, founder and governor of the settlement begun in New
France, who was in search of someone who would volunteer her services for the
gratuitous instruction of the French and Indian children. Our Lady confirmed the
call addressed to her: "Go, I will not forsake you", she said. Thus
assured, Marguerite left Troyes in February, 1653, in a spirit of complete
detachment. She arrived in Montreal on the following 16th of November, and
without delay she set to work to promote the best interests of the colony. She
is rightly considered co-foundress of Montreal, with the nurse, Jeanne Mance,
and the master designer, Monsieur de Maisonneuve.
In order to encourage the colonists in their faith expression,
she arranged for the restoration of the Cross on Mount Royal after it has been
destroyed by hostile Indians, and she undertook the construction of a chapel
dedicated to Notre-Dame de Bon Secours. Convinced of the importance of the
family in the building of this new country, and perceiving the significance of
the role to be exercised by women, she devoted herself to the task of
preparing those whose vocation it would be to preside in a home. In 1658, in a
stable which had been given to her by the governor for her use, she opened the
first school in Montreal. She also organized an extern Congregation, patterned
after the one which she had known in Troyes but adapted to the actual needs.
In this way, she could respond to the needs of the women and young girls on
whom much depended as far as the instruction of children was concerned. In
1659, she began receiving girls who were recommended by "les cures"
in France, or endowed by the King, to come to establish homes in Montreal, and
she became a real mother to them. Thus were initiated a school system and a
network of social services which gradually extended through the whole country,
and which led people to refer to Marguerite as "Mother of the Colony".
On three occasions, Marguerite Bourgeoys made a trip to France
to obtain help. As of
1658, the group of teachers who associated themselves with her in her life of
prayer, of heroic poverty, and of untiring devotedness to the service of
others, presented the image of a religious institute. The group was inspired
by the "vie voyagere" of Our Lady, and desired to remain
uncloistered, the concept of an uncloistered community being an innovation at
that time. Such a foundation occasioned much suffering and the one who took
the initiative was not spared. But the work progressed. The Congregation de
Notre-Dame received its civil charter from Louis XIV in 1671, and canonical
approbation by decree of the Bishop of Quebec in 1676. The Constitutions of
the Community were approved in 1698.
The foundation having been assured, Sister Bourgeoys could
leave the work to others. She died in Montreal on January 12, 1700,
acknowledged for her holiness of life. Her last generous act was to offer
herself as a sacrifice of prayer for the return to health of a young Sister.
Forty memberg of the Congregation de Notre-Dame were there to continue her
work.
The educative and apostolic efforts of Marguerite Bourgeoys continue through
the commitment of the members of the community that she founded. More than
2,600 Sisters of the Congregation de Notre-Dame work in fields of action
according to the needs of time and place - from school to college or university,
in the promotion of family, parish and diocesan endeavours. They are on
mission in Canada, in the United States, in Japan, in Latin America, in
Cameroon, and most recently they have established a house in France.
On November 12, 1950 Pope Pius XII beatified Marguerite
Bourgeoys. Canonizing her this October 31, 1982, Pope John Paul II gives the
Canadian Church its first woman saint.
|