- Tekakwitha, Kateri
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born 1656, probably Ossernenon, New Netherlanddied April 17, 1680, Caughnawaga, Que.First North American Indian considered for canonization.The daughter of an Algonquin Christian mother and a non-Christian Mohawk father, she was born in what is now Auriesville, N.Y., U.S., and was partially blinded by smallpox as a child. She was deeply impressed by the lives and words of three Jesuit missionaries she met at age 11, and at 20 she was baptized. Harassed and threatened with torture in her home village, she fled 200 mi (320 km) to a Christian Indian mission near Montreal, where she became known as the "Lily of the Mohawks" for her kindness, faith, and heroic suffering before her early death. She was beatified in 1980.
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▪ Mohawk ChristianTekakwitha also spelled Tegakwitha or Tegakouitaborn 1656, probably Ossernenon, New Netherland [now Auriesville, N.Y., U.S.]died April 17, 1680, Caughnawaga, Que. [now in Canada]; beatified June 22, 1980; feast day in the U.S., July 14first North American Indian proposed for canonization in the Roman Catholic church.Tekakwitha was the child of a Mohawk father and a Christianized Algonquin mother. At age four she was the only member of her family to survive smallpox, which affected her own health. Staying with her anti-Christian uncle, she was deeply impressed at age 11 by the lives and words of three visiting Jesuits, likely the first white Christians she had ever encountered. She began to lead a life inspired by the example of these men, and at age 20 she was instructed in religion and baptized Katharine (rendered Kateri in Mohawk speech) by Jacques de Lamberville, Jesuit missionary to the Iroquois Indians.Harassed, stoned, and threatened with torture in her home village, she fled 200 miles (320 km) to the Christian Indian mission of St. Francis Xavier at Sault Saint-Louis, near Montreal. There she came to be known as the “Lily of the Mohawks” in recognition of her kindness, prayer, faith, and heroic suffering. Accounts of Tekakwitha's life written by de Lamberville and fellow missionaries contributed significantly to the documentation necessary for her beatification, the process for which began in 1932 and was proclaimed by Pope John Paul II in 1980.Additional ReadingAllan Greer, Mohawk Saint: Catherine Tekakwitha and the Jesuits (2005).* * *
Universalium. 2010.