John Gabriel Perboyre (1802-1840) priest,
martyr of the Congregation of the Mission
photo
The formation years
Nothing happens by chance. Neither life, nor death, nor vocation. JOHN
GABRIEL PERBOYRE was born in Montgesty, near Cahors, in southern France, on 6
January 1802 into a family which gave three missionaries of St. Vincent and
two Daughters of Charity to the Church. Such an environment exuded faith,
simple and healthy values, and the sense of life as gift.
The one who "calls by name" seemed to ignore him as a teenager.
The call came to his younger brother Louis for entrance into the seminary.
John Gabriel was asked to accompany his younger brother for a time, while
waiting for him to get adjusted to the surroundings. John Gabriel's presence
at the seminary, then, happened by chance and he should have left quickly. But
chance revealed to the astonished eyes of the young man unexpected horizons:
that in the seminary he had found his path.
The Church of France had at that time just emerged from the throes of the
French Revolution with the red-colored garments of martyrdom for some, and
with the pain of the apostasy of many. The panorama at the beginning of the
1800's was desolate: buildings destroyed, convents sacked, people without
pastors. Thus, it was no accident that the ideal of the priesthood appeared to
the young man not as a feeble arrangement for life, but as the destiny of
heroes.
His parents, surprised, accepted the choice of their son and accompanied
him with their encouragement. Not by chance, his paternal uncle Jacques was a
missionary of St. Vincent. This explains why in 1818 the missionary ideal
matured in the young John Gabriel. At that time, the missions meant
principally China. But China was a faraway mirage. To leave meant never to
find again the home milieu, taste its flavors, enjoy its affections. It was
natural for him to choose the Congregation of the Mission founded by St.
Vincent de Paul in 1625 for the evangelization of the poor, the formation of
the clergy, but above all to push those very missionaries toward holiness. The
mission is not propaganda. The Church has always demanded that the proclaimers
of the Word be spiritual persons, mortified, full of God and charity. In order
to illuminate the darkness in people, a lamp is not sufficient if there is no
oil.
John Gabriel did not think in half-measures. If he was a martyr it is
because he was a saint.
From 1818 to 1835 he was a missionary in his own country. First, in his
formation period, he was a model novice and student. After his priestly
ordination (1826), he was charged with the formation of seminarians.
The missionary attraction
A new factor, certainly not haphazard, modified John Gabriel's life. The
protagonist was once again his brother Louis. He also had entered the
Congregation of the Mission and had asked to be sent to China where the sons
of St. Vincent had had a new martyr in the person of Blessed Francis Regis
Clet (18 February 1820). During the voyage, however, the young Louis, only 24
years of age, was called to the mission in heaven.
All that the young man had hoped for and done would have been useless if
John Gabriel had not made the request to replace his brother in the breach.
John Gabriel reached China in August of 1835. At that time the Occident
knew almost nothing about the Celestial Empire, and the ignorance was
reciprocal. The two worlds felt a mutual attraction, but dialogue was
difficult. In the countries of Europe one did not speak of a Chinese
civilization, but only of superstitions, of "ridiculous" ceremonies
and customs. The judgments were thus prejudices. China's appreciation of
Europe and Christianity was not any better.
There was a dark gap between the two civilizations. Someone had to cross it
in order to take on himself the evil of many, and to consume it with the fires
of charity.
After getting acclimated in Macau, John Gabriel began the long trip in a
Chinese junk, on foot, and on horseback, which brought him after eight months
to Nanyang in Henan, where the obligation to learn the language imposed itself.
After five months, he was able to express himself, though with some trouble,
in good Chinese, and at once threw himself into the ministry, visiting the
small Christian communities. Then he was transferred to Hubei, which is part
of the region of lakes formed by the Yangtze kiang (blue river). Even though
he maintained an intense apostolate, he suffered much in body and spirit. In a
letter he wrote: "No, I am no more of a wonder man here in China than I
was in France ... ask of him first of all for my conversion and my
sanctification and then the grace that I do not spoil his work too much..."
(Letter 94). For one who looks at things from the outside, it was
inconceivable that such a missionary should find himself in a dark night of
the soul. But the Holy Spirit was preparing him in the emptiness of humility
and the silence of God for the supreme testimony.
In chains for Christ
Unexpectedly in 1839 two events, apparently unrelated, clouded the horizon.
The first was the renewed outbreak of persecution which flowed from the decree
of the Manchurian emperor, Quinlong (1736-1795), which had proscribed the
Christian religion in 1794.
The second was the outbreak of the Chinese-British War, better known as the
"Opium War" (1839-1842). The closure of the Chinese frontier and the
pretence of the Chinese government to require an act of dependence from the
foreign ambassadors had created an explosive situation. The spark came from
the confiscation of loads of opium stowed in the port of Canton; this action
harmed the merchants, most of whom were English. The British flotilla
intervened, and the war began.
The missionaries, obviously interested only in the first event dealing with
the persecution of Christians, were always on their guard. As often happens,
too many alarms diminished the vigilance. And that is what happened on 15
September 1839 at Cha-yuen-ken, where Perboyre lived. On that day he was with
two other European missionaries, his confrere, Baldus, and a Franciscan,
Rizzolati, and a Chinese missionary, Fr. Wang. They were informed of the
approach of a column of about one hundred soldiers. The missionaries
underestimated the information. Perhaps the soldiers were going elsewhere.
Instead of being wary, the missionaries continued enjoying a fraternal
conversation. When there was no longer any doubt about the direction of the
soldiers, it was late. Baldus and Rizzolati decided to flee far away. Perboyre
hid himself in the surroundings because the nearby mountains were rich with
bamboo forests and hidden caves. As Fr. Baldus has attested for us, however,
the soldiers used threats to force a catechumen to reveal the place where the
missionary was hiding. The catechumen was a weak person, but not a Judas.
Thus began the sad Calvary of John Gabriel. The prisoner had no rights, he
was not protected by laws, but was at the mercy of the jailers and judges.
Given that he was arrested it was presumed that he was guilty, and if guilty,
he would be punished.
A series of trials began. The first was held at Kou-Ching-Hien. The replies
of the martyr were heroic:
- Are you a Christian priest?
- Yes, I am a priest and I preach this religion. - Do you wish to renounce
your faith?
- No, I will never renounce the faith of Christ.
They asked him to reveal his companions in the faith and the reasons for
which he had transgressed the laws of China. They wanted, in short, to make
the victim the culprit. But a witness to Christ is not an informer. Therefore,
he remained silent.
The prisoner was then transferred to Siang-Yang. The cross examinations were
made close together. He was held for a number of hours kneeling on rusty iron
chains, was hung by his thumbs and hair from a rafter (the hangtze torture),
was beaten several times with bamboo canes. Greater than the physical violence,
however, remained the wound of the fact that the values in which he believed
were put to ridicule: the hope in eternal life, the sacraments, the faith.
The third trial was held in Wuchang. He was brought before four different
tribunals and subjected to 20 interrogations. To the questioning were united
tortures and the most cruel mockery. They prosecuted the missionary and abused
the man. They obliged Christians to abjure, and one of them even to spit on
and strike the missionary who had brought him to the faith. For not trampling
on the crucifix, John Gabriel received 110 strokes of pantse.
Among the various accusations, the most terrible was the accusation that he
had had immoral relations with a Chinese girl, Anna Kao, who had made a vow of
virginity. The martyr defended himself. She was neither his lover nor his
servant. The woman is respected not scorned in Christianity, was the sense of
John Gabriel's reply. But he remained upset because they made innocents suffer
for him.
During one interrogation he was obliged to put on Mass vestments. They
wanted to accuse him of using the privilege of the priesthood for private
interests. But the missionary, clothed in the priestly garments, impressed the
bystanders, and two Christians drew near to him to ask for absolution.
The cruelest judge was the Viceroy. The missionary was by this time a shadow.
The rage of this unscrupulous magistrate was vented on a ghost of a man.
Blinded by his omnipotence the Viceroy wanted confessions, admissions, and
accusations against others. But if the body was weak, the soul was reinforced.
His hope by now rested in his meeting God, which he felt nearer each day.
When John Gabriel told him for the last time: "I would sooner die than
deny my faith!," the judge pronounced his sentence. John Gabriel Perboyre
was to die by strangulation.
With Christ priest and victim
Then began a period of waiting for the imperial confirmation. Perhaps John
Gabriel could hope in the clemency of the sovereign. But the war with the
English erased any possible gesture of good-will. Thus, on 11 September 1840,
an imperial envoy arrived at full speed, bearing the decree confirming the
condemnation.
With seven criminals the missionary was led up a height called the "Red
Mountain." As the criminals were killed first, Perboyre reflected in
prayer, to the wonderment of the bystanders.
When his turn came, the executioners stripped him of the purple tunic and
tied him to a post in the form of a cross. They passed a rope around his neck
and strangled him. It was the sixth hour. Like Jesus, John Gabriel became like
a grain of wheat. He died, or better was born into heaven, in order to make
fall on the earth the dew of God's blessing.
Many circumstances surrounding his last year of life (the betrayal, the
arrest, the death on a cross, its day and hour), are similar to the Passion of
Christ. In reality, all his life was that of a witness and a faithful disciple
of Christ. St. Ignatius of Antioch wrote: "I look for him who died for us;
I yearn for him who rose for us. Behold, the moment is near in which I will be
brought forth! Have compassion on me, brothers! Do not prevent me from being
born to life!"
John Gabriel "was born to life" on 11 September 1840, because he
always had sought "him who died for us." His body was brought back
to France, but his heart remained in his adopted homeland, the land of China.
There he gave his witness to the sons and daughters of St. Vincent who also
wait to be born to heaven after a life spent for the gospel and for the poor.
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