The Catholic Register

New York site honouring St. Kateri, Canadian martyrs named a national shrine

Isaac Jogues, René Goupil and Jean de Lalande slain at New York village

SHRINE - JESUITS, KATERI.JPG

Deborah Amell touches a statue of St. Kateri Tekakwitha in 2012 at Our Lady of the Martyrs Shrine in Auriesville, New York, the site of a 17th century Mohawk village where three Jesuit missionaries were killed for their faith in and St. Kateri was born. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops designated the site a national shrine Jan. 27, 2025.

OSV News photo/Jason Greene, Reuters

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The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has designated Our Lady of Martyrs Shrine in Auriesville, New York, as a national shrine for pilgrims, the sanctuary announced Jan. 30.

The site, once known as the National Shrine of the North American Martyrs, encompasses the former Ossernenon village where Canadian martyrs Sts. Isaac Jogues, René Goupil and Jean de Lalande were martyred in the 1640s. It is also where convert St. Kateri Tekakwitha was born in 1656.

The Jesuit missionaries Jogues, Goupil and de Lalande, along with St. Jean de Brebeuf, St. Antoine Daniel, St. Gabriel Lalemant, St. Charles Garnier and St. Noel Chabanel, were canonized by Pope Pius XI in 1930 as the Canadian Martyrs (they are also known as the North American Martyrs). They were slain as they missioned to the Wendat (Huron) people in the mid-1600s (Brebeuf, Daniel, Lalemant, Garnier and Chabanel died at the hands of Mohawk warriors in the Huronia area near Midland, Ont., where the Martyrs’ Shrine stands).

Our Lady of Martyrs Shrine opened in 1885 and was administered for most of its history by a succession of Jesuit U.S. provinces, it said in the announcement. In 2017, the nonprofit Shrine of Our Lady of Martyrs Inc. transferred ownership of the shrine to Friends of Our Lady of Martyrs, a nonprofit corporation chaired by Bishop Edward B. Scharfenberger of Albany, New York.

"We are delighted that the bishops have confirmed what the faithful have long instinctually known: The National Shrine of Our Lady of Martyrs is our home for the cultivation of holiness here in the U.S., Canada and Mexico," Scharfenberger said in a statement.

"The inspiration of the martyrs in my upstate New York backyard was foundational to my own early calling to the priesthood," he added. "To this day, I go to the Shrine as a pilgrim to refuel in prayer for God's outpouring of graces in my daily decisions and the lives of the faithful people the Church has entrusted to me."

Julie Baaki, executive director of Our Lady of Martyrs Shrine, said, "Pope Francis has said that there are more Christian martyrs in the world today than in the early Church.

"Our National Shrine is a haven where pilgrims come to pray for our persecuted brothers and sisters throughout the world as well as for growth in courage for any trials we face as we try to live lives of virtue, grow in faith and try to pass it along," Baaki said.

"As a wife and mother," she added, "I see the fruits of my prayers to the Martyrs in everyday family life, and a superabundance of graces in the testimonies of faithful who visit. Even before this new designation, our Shrine has drawn multitudes from across the country to upstate New York to learn from the faith of the martyrs and St. Kateri."

Msgr. Roger Landry, national director of the Pontifical Mission Societies USA and a board member of Friends of Our Lady of the Martyrs, underscored the shrine's emphasis on mission and encouraged people to visit the shine to "experience its enormous spiritual riches."

The shrine is, he said, "because of its association with four great saints and heroes of our faith, probably is, after the tabernacles that adorn our churches and the souls of newly baptized babies, the holiest place for Catholics in the country."

The National Shrine of Our Lady of Martyrs will begin its 2025 season May 3 and remain open until the feast day of the North American martyrs Oct. 19, the announcement said. This year is the centenary of the North American martyrs' beatification.

A version of this story appeared in the February 09, 2025, issue of The Catholic Register with the headline "Site honouring St. Kateri, Canadian martyrs named U.S. national shrine".

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