As readers
of this Blog know, I am very fond of Hawaii , especially its "holy
people”. Our Oblate, whom I stay with on the Big Island, is here with her, soon to be off to college daughter and two of her friends, to help us out for the month. So it is fitting that I present some recently discovered people who are being considered for sainthood, one my pastor when I lived in Hawaii (Oahu) many years ago. The first, should be more widely
known, especially by his own people, the Hawaiians.
FATHER ARSENIUS WALSH, SS.CC., (1804 – 14 October 1869), was an
Irish Catholic priest who was among the first
Roman Catholic missionaries in the Kingdom of
Hawaii. He was a member of the Congregation
of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, the same order as St. Damien of Molokai. He is called
the Apostle of Hawaii.
The first
members of his congregation had arrived in Honolulu, Hawaii , on 9 July 1827, under the leadership of
Father Alexis
Bachelot, SS.CC., named the first Prefect
Apostolic for the region by the Holy See. The Picpus
community, composed of both priests and lay brothers, soon began
to gain converts among
the Native Hawaiians.
This quick success, however, sparked the
opposition of the Congregationist missionaries who had
arrived from the United
States several years earlier and who had
been embraced by the chiefs of the kingdom. Encouraged by the Protestant
clergy, the chiefs passed laws which imposed heavy penalties, such as forced
labor, beatings and imprisonment on their people who embraced Catholic
practice. This led to a Catholic underground where the two French priests had
to care for their new flock by presiding over private Masses in
darkened homes and had to offer catechetical instruction
for new converts in secret. The chiefs expelled the priests of the community on
Christmas Eve 1831, having them transported to Lower
California in Mexico ,
but allowed the lay brothers to stay. The priests were taken in by the Franciscans there
and served at the California
mission.
An Irish seminarian in the
Hawaiian community, Brother Columba
Murphy, SS.CC., still a layman in the eyes of
the government, made frequent visits to the mission, continually appraising the
situation for the Fathers in Mexico .
By the mid-1830s, the political climate in Hawaii had changed. Brother Columba went to Monterrey to
encourage the two priests to return. Unable to locate them, he left a message
advising them that the time was ripe. In response to this, Father Walsh was sent to Hawaii .
Father Walsh,
who might have been born Robert Walsh, a given name often ascribed to
him, arrived in Hawaii on 4 September 1836 and established himself with the lay
brothers of his congregation. His expulsion was urged by the Protestant
clergy, who had the king's ear. Unlike the other Picpus Fathers, (the orders other name because their
first house was on the Rue de Picpus in Paris , France), however, he
was a British subject, and gained the support of the British consul in Hawaii , whose favor was
being sought by the kingdom. Consequently, he was permitted to stay, on the
condition that he not engage in any proselytization of
the native people.
Encouraged
by his presence and changes in the island leadership, the two French priests
returned to Hawaii
the following year. They were joined by another priest of the
congregation, Louis Désiré
Maigret, who had been appointed as the first Vicar Apostolic of the Sandwich
Islands. Opposition and persecution continued, however, and Father Maigret
and another French priest had to leave that following December.
Religious
persecution eventually ended after the arrival of a French frigate, L'Artémise, captained by Cyrille Pierre Théodore Laplace,
in the process of circumnavigating the world. He had been
given instructions by the French government to protect the French residents of Hawaii and to ensure the
free exercise of the Catholic faith. Laplace
presented King Kamehameha III with an ultimatum, demanding these steps
with a monetary surety for compliance, otherwise threatening bombardment of the
island. Consequently, the king issued the Edict of Toleration, which led to the free
practice of the Catholic Church in Hawaii .
In 1841,
with the successful establishment of a congregation in Honolulu ,
Father Walsh was sent to establish a mission on the island of Kauai, a recently
conquered island in the kingdom. He landed on 22 December and was given a
warm welcome the islanders. He celebrated the first Mass on Christmas Day, under a tree in the village of Koloa,
by which he inaugurated the Mission of St. Raphael. He then began
classes of instruction in the faith and opened a school at the mission,
following which he set out on a tour of the island to expand his mission to
the surrounding population. He was able to have a small chapel built on the
site by the following March.
St. Raphael |
On this
island, however, Father Walsh encountered the same hostility and persecution
which had taken place on Oahu. The chieftess of the island, Amelia Kekauonohi, was a
staunch Protestant, and, while not taking any open steps, did not interfere
when lower chiefs would imprison and impose heavy penalties on those who
established ties with the mission. Father's energy was thus divided between
preaching the Gospel to the populace and defending his followers against the
local chiefs.
Despite
this opposition, and the eventual failure of some of his missions on the
island, Father Walsh spent the next six years establishing churches and schools
around the island, including the St Raphael Catholic Church,
which began in 1843.
He even
extended his mission to the island
of Niihau celebrating the first Mass there on 31 July 1842. He returned to Oahu either in 1848 or in 1859, where he became the pastor
of Ahuimanu. It was there that he died on 14
October 1869.
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