Today
the Church in the United States commemorates "the Apostle of the Lepers,"
Belgian-born Saint Damien de Veuster (1840–1889). Ordained a
priest of the missionary Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary in
1864, he served his entire priesthood in Hawaii. A year after Damien's initial assignment to Hawaii, the
Kingdom of Hawaii established a leper colony on the island of Molokai where
Hawaiians who contracted “Hansen’s Disease” (then thought to be highly
contagious) were to be quarantined. In 1873, Father Damien went to Molokai as
the leper colony’s pastor. In a letter to his brother back in Belgium, Damien
wrote (paraphrasing St. Paul) “I make myself a leper with the lepers to gain
all to Jesus Christ.” Indeed, 20 years later, Damien himself contracted
leprosy. He died in 1889 - nursed by, among others, German-born, Franciscan Sister Marianne Cope (herself
just recently canonized by Pope Benedict XVI). Beatified in Brussels by Pope
John Paul II in 1995, he was canonized by Pope Benedict XVI in 2009.
Damien
achieved fame for his ministry in his own lifetime. The King of Hawaii honored
him, and the attendant publicity produced international interest in and support
for his mission. After his death, devotion to him spread among Catholics and
admiration of him extended beyond religious boundary lines. He is one of four
Catholic priests to be honored with a statue in the U.S. Capitol’s National
Statuary Hall.
Mahatma
Gandhi is supposed to have said of Fr. Damien: “The political and journalistic
world can boast of very few heroes who compare with Father Damien of Molokai.
The Catholic Church, on the contrary, counts by the thousands those who after
the example of Fr. Damien have devoted themselves to the victims of leprosy. It
is worthwhile to look for the sources of such heroism.” More recently, at the time of St. Damien's
canonization, President Obama said, "In our own time, as millions around
the world suffer from disease, especially the pandemic of HIV/AIDS, we should
draw on the example of Father Damien’s resolve in answering the urgent call to
heal and care for the sick."
Humanitarian
heroism may spring from diverse motivations, and much good is undoubtedly done in
the world by people whose inspiration is not explicitly religious. But, as St. Damien’s words to his
brother remind us, there can be no doubt what motivated him (and later religious
missionaries in Molokai like Saint Marianne Cope) as well as countless other
heroic practitioners of the corporal and spiritual works of mercy, known and
unknown, past and present.
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