When our world seems so close to a great war, it is good to remember some who not only gave their life for our country, but to God as well.
JOSEPH VERBIS LAFLEUR was born into a large Cajun family in Ville PlatteLouisiana in 1912.
From early childhood his desire was to be a priest. Entering Saint Joseph ’s Minor Seminary in Saint Benedict , Louisiana
he quickly became noted for his good humor, quick wit and athletic
prowess. He also had a marked interest in French military history and
would recite the last words of Marshal Michel Ney before his execution by the
restored Bourbons after the Hundred Days: “Come see how a soldier dies in
battle, but he dies not.”
On Oct. 17
in St. Landry Church before family, the local bishop, school students and local
dignitaries, heroic Second World War chaplain Father Joseph Verbis Lafleur posthumously received a second Distinguished
Service Medal and Purple Heart for actions on board a Japanese prisoner of war
ship that cost him his life but saved scores more.
U.S. Rep.
Ralph Abraham, R-La., presented the medals to Father Lafleur’s nephew Richard
Lafleur and his wife, Carol, at at St. Landry Catholic Church, where the
priest celebrated his first Mass following ordination in 1938. It was the
second event honoring the chaplain in as many months, following an annual
memorial Mass Sept. 7 attended by some 800 people.
JOSEPH VERBIS LAFLEUR was born into a large Cajun family in Ville Platte
After ordination in 1938 he was assigned as
assistant pastor at Saint Mary Magdalene in Abbeville , Louisiana . In the depression era Louisiana
knew poverty that people today would find hard to believe. Father Lafleur
supplied balls, bats and gloves to the boys in his parish and helped organize
baseball games. After his death some of the boys learned that Father
Lafleur had purchased the equipment by pawning his wristwatch.
Father LaFleur joined the Army Air
Corps in 1941 six months before Pearl Harbor . Four months later Lieutenant LaFleur
was sent with the 19th Bombardment Group to Clark Field in the Philippines .
The new chaplain was popular with the men: he helped organize a baseball
team, founded a discussion group and his door was always open to them.
On December 8, 1941 the Japanese
attacked Clark Field and Chaplain LaFleur sprang into action. Ignoring
exploding bombs and flying shrapnel he helped treat the wounded and
administered the Last Rites to those beyond human help. For his actions that
day he was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.
As the Philippines
were conquered by the Japanese Father LaFleur passed up an opportunity for
evacuation, stating that his place was with the men.
Over one-third of all Allied POWs in
Japanese hands died. Death from starvation, at the hands of the brutal guards
or disease was a constant fact of life for every prisoner of the Rising
Sun. Into this hell on earth Father Lafleur brought Christ. So
long as he had a little bread and wine he said Mass for his fellow
prisoners. While in captivity Father Lafleur built a makeshift chapel
which he called Saint Peter in Chairs. His fellow POWs flocked to his
services, Catholic and non-Catholic alike.
As best he could Father LaFleur also
ministered to the physical needs of his flock. He would
continually visit and assist the many sick. He would often exchange his
clothes for those worn by another prisoner and he would give away some of his
own food to help out men who seemed to need it. Moved by this charity, other prisoners began to give to Father LaFleur pieces of their own
clothing and scraps of their own food for him to distribute.
As the war
progressively turned against Japan, orders came out from the Japanese High
Command to begin shipping POWs back to Japan to serve as slave labor.
Father LaFleur and 749 other prisoners were on board the ship the Shiniyo Maru when the USS Paddlefish torpedoed it off the coast of Mindanao
on September 7, 1944. The sinking occurred because the Japanese adamantly
refused throughout the war to indicate when a ship was carrying POWs.
Father LaFleur, despite the urgings of his fellow captives, refused to leave
the ship’s hold, instead holding the ladder so that other men could
attempt to climb out of the hold and escape. That was the last anyone
ever saw on this Earth of Father LaFleur.
There
is a plaque to Father LaFleur at the Notre Dame seminary in New Orleans : It is inscribed:
“Venez voir comment
meurt un pretre en bataille …mais il ne meurt pas.” – “Come, see how a priest
dies in battle, but he dies not.”
Painting in
Our Lady of the Saints, Ville Platte by David Andrews
Pictured:
St. Katherine Drexel, King St. Louis IX, Father Joseph Verbis,
Ven. Henriette
De Lille, Bl. Francis X. Seelos & Ven Cornelia Connolly
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