Apostle of Brazil, St. Joseph Anchieta
By T.J Campbell: nobility.org
A famous Jesuit missionary, commonly known as the Apostle of Brazil, born on the Island of Tenerife, in 1553, of noble family; died in Brazil, 1596.
After studying in Coimbra, he entered the Society of Jesus, at the age of seventeen, and when a novice nearly ruined his health by his excessive austerity, causing an injury to the spine which made him almost a hunchback. He was sent to the New World, with no idea of making him a missionary, but in the hope of restoring his shattered health. He reached Brazil in 1553, and laboured there among the colonists and savage natives for about forty-four years. His first work was teaching Latin to some of the junior members of the Society and to a certain number of externs. Very likely it was the first classical school in America. He was a perfect master of Latin, Castilian, and Portuguese, and quickly acquired a knowledge of the native tongue, as well as two books of religious instruction, to assist the missionaries in the work of converting the natives. He was a poet, and wrote canticles which immediately became very popular among the natives and Portuguese. To effect a reformation of morals, he composed and directed a drama which was acted in the open air at Bahia.
St. José de Anchieta preaching in the jungle.
Painting by Benedito Calixto.
By means of interludes in Brazilian the Indians were able to grasp its
meaning. This also was possibly the first attempt at dramatic art in the
New World. Though not a priest, he accompanied the missionaries on
their apostolic journeys, and on one occasion remained a willing hostage
among the wild Tamuins who were waging a fierce war against the
settlers; twice he was on the point of being killed and eaten. During
his captivity he is said to have composed a poem of nearly five thousand
verses, and, as there were no means of putting it on paper, he
committed it to memory and wrote it out after he returned to the colony.
It was during the last military operations to suppress the Tamuin
uprising that he was recalled from the expedition, and ordained a priest
by Peter Leitano, the first bishop who arrived in Brazil. Apart from
his supernatural gifts, he was remarkable for his captivating eloquence
and gracefulness of speech. He had a fair knowledge of medicine, which
he made of in helping his Indians, and he displayed an unusual skill in
the details of business when, latter in life, he was called to the
office of rector and provincial.
But it is chiefly as a thaumaturgus, as a daring missionary, and as a
man of extraordinary holiness, that Anchieta is remembered. It is
narrated of him that the birds of the forest submitted to his caresses;
the waters of the sea formed a wall about him while he was praying; the
touch of his garments restored health to the sick. He possessed the gift
of prophecy and frequently described events that were occurring at
great distances. Though constantly suffering from bodily infirmities, he
undertook the most laborious missions, and thus at times seemed to have
a supernatural power to do without sleep or rest. The districts which
he evangelized were always the most exhausting and dangerous. His power
over men, both savage and civilized, was irresistible. His prayer was
constant, and he was frequently, though unaware of it himself,
surrounded by a dazzling light. He was almost absolutely without any
earthly possessions, and went barefooted on his apostolic expeditions.
Even before he was a priest he was entrusted with the investigation of
the houses of the Society; and when he could be spared from his
missions, he was made rector of the College of St. Vincent, and,
subsequently, Provincial of Brazil, relinquishing this post only when
his failing strength made it impossible for him to fulfill his duties.
The people clamoured for his canonization…
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