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Huron missionary, born at Dieppe, in Normandy, 27 May 1601,
slain by the Iroquois at Teanaostae, near Hillsdale, Limcoe County,
Ontario, Canada, 4 July, 1648. After two years' study of philosophy and
one of law, he entered the Society of {ln:Jesus} in Rome, 1 October, 1621.
Sent to Canada in 1633 he was first stationed at Cape Breton, where his
brother Captain Daniel had established a French fort in 1629. For two
years he had charge at Quebec of a school for Indian boys, but with
this exception he was connected with the Mission at Ihonatiria, in the
Huron country, from July, 1634, until his death fourteen years later.
In the summer of 1648, the Iroquois made a sudden attack on the mission
while most of the Huron braves were absent. Father Daniel did all in
his power to aid his people. Before the palisades had been scaled he
hurried to the chapel where the women, children, and old men were
gathered gave them general Absolution and baptized the catechumens.
Daniel himself made no attempt to escape, but calmly advanced to meet
the enemy. Seized with amazement the savages halted for a moment, then
recovering themselves they discharged at him a shower of arrows. "The
victim to the heroism of charity", says Bancroft, "died, the name of
{ln:Jesus} on his lips, the wilderness gave him a grave; the Huron nation
were his mourners" (vol. II, ch. xxxii). Here Bancroft is in error. The
lifeless body was flung into the burning chapel and both were consumed
together. Daniel was the second to receive the martyr's crown among the
Jesuits sent to New France, and the first of the missionaries to the
Hurons. Father Ragueneau, his superior, speaks of him in a letter to
the general of the order as "a truly remarkable man, humble, obedient,
united with God, of never failing patience and indomitable courage in
adversity" (Thwaites, tr. Relations, XXXIII, 253-269).
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