Isaac Jogues
Beatified Martyred Jesuit Priest
Patron of Causes
missionaries
BornOrléans (1607)
DiedAuriesville (1646)
CountryFrance
VocationsJesuit priest, Missionary, Martyr
Biography
Isaac Jogues was born on January 10, 1607, in Orléans, France, into a devout bourgeois family. Educated in Jesuit schools, he entered the Society of Jesus as a young man and was ordained a priest in 1636. That same year he sailed for New France, longing to bring Christ to the peoples of North America. He labored among the Huron and Algonquian communities near Lake Huron, learning their language and sharing their hardships with patient charity. In these missions he also became the first European to name Lake George, calling it the Lake of the Blessed Sacrament.
In 1642, while traveling with fellow missionaries and Christian Hurons, he was captured by the Mohawk. He endured brutal torture and a long captivity, yet continued to pray, comfort the suffering, and minister as he could, even baptizing and hearing confessions. Returning again to the Mohawk, he was killed for the faith at Ossernenon near the Mohawk River on October 18, 1646. Venerated as one of the North American Martyrs, he is patron of the Novitiate of St. Isaac Jogues. His feast day is October 18.