Pedro Vásquez
Blessed Pedro Vásquez, OP | |
---|---|
Born | 1591 Verín, Spain |
Died | 25 August 1624 Ōmura, Japan |
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church |
Beatified | 7 July 1867 by Pope Pius IX |
Feast | 25 August |
Blessed Pedro Vásquez, also known as Peter Vásquez, (1591 – 25 August 1624) was a Roman Catholic Missionary from Spain. He was beatified in July of 1867 by Pope Pius IX.[1][2]
Early Life
Pedro Vásquez was born in 1591 in Verín, in the Province and Roman Catholic Diocese of Ourense, in Spain.[3] He was educated in Monterrei, before he entered the Order of Preachers at the Priory of Our Lady of Atocha in Madrid. He received the habit of Dominican Order, made profession on 30 April 1609 and was known as Hermano Pedro de Santa Catalina (Br Peter of St Catherine). He studied philosophy in the Royal Priory of Holy Cross in Segovia, then theology at the Priory of St. Thomas in Ávila.[4]
Missionary
In 1613, Fr James Aduarte arrived to recruit missionaries for the Far East.[4] Pedro was chosen for this mission after showing great enthusiasm. Pedro and Fr Aduarte departed Spain and sailed to the Philippines via Mexico, They arrived in Manila at the end of April 1615. Pedro’s first assignment was in the province of Cagayan. He learned the regional language at Lal-lo, Cagayan in New Segovia. For the next five years, he was assigned to pastoral care within the Philippines. In 1621, Pedro was then appointed to act as Superior of St. Vincent Community in Balunguei. He was not happy with this apostolate and repeatedly asked to be allowed to go to Japan, as the martyrdom of Dominican Father Alphonso Navarrete, in 1617, had made a profound impression on him. Ultimately, his superiors granted his request. In July 1621, he left Manila for his new apostolate work in Nagasaki.
Arrest and Martyrdom
Because of the shortage of missionaries, Pedro promptly started his mission work in the spring of 1622, once he educated himself with the language. On 14 August, he disguised himself as a Japanese guard, with a pair of swords slung at his side, he entered the prison of Nagasaki. He marched boldly through three sets of doors guarded by eight sentinels, without being discovered, to reach the imprisoned Christians and administer the Sacraments to them.[5] Two renounced Christians, whose confessions he heard, exposed Pedro’s cover. In spite of these traitors, he escaped detection. He continued the intense labor of preparing many Christians who, he believed, would be martyred before long.[4] Pedro and his fellow missionaries were able to witness the cruel executions. In early November 1622, he was appointed acting Vicar-Provincial. Before his arrest, Pedro had been working with Dominican Father Domingo Castellet, ministering to the Christians in Arima, Ōmura, and Nagasaki.
During Holy Week, April 1623, Pedro was in great danger of being arrested, but managed to evade capture. After his escape, he met Fr. Castellet in Fuchi before proceeding to Inasa, a village in the mountains, where he was unexpectedly arrested on April 27. He was then taken to the Courthouse for a hearing on the matter of his illegal activities. After the trial, he was sentenced to prison in Nagasaki. On 15 June 1623, he was transferred to prison in Ōmura. In the local prison, he joined Luis Sotelo OFM, Miguel de Carvalho SJ and two Japanese Franciscans, Ludovicus Sasada OFM and tertiary Ludovicus Baba.[6] On 24 August, a death sentence was ordered, which was performed the next day in Ōmura.[1][7] On 25 August 1624, Pedro and his companions were burned at the stake.[1] The ashes of these martyrs, whose dead bodies we re-burnt, to prevent them being carried away by the Christians, were cast into the sea, however Father Castellet managed to secure a small portion of the relics of Pedro.[5] His relics were eventually deposited in the Jesuit church in Macau.
He was beatified by Pope Pius IX on 7 July 1867.[3]. In the Roman Catholic Church, his feast day is celebrated on 25 August[7], as well as 10 September, the anniversary of the massacre of 205 Japanese martyrs.
See also
References
- ^ a b c Fros SJ, Henryk “Book of names and saints”, pp. 423-37, 2007 ISBN 978-83-7318-736-8
- ^ "Martirologio", Roman Curia Pontifical Academies
- ^ a b "Pedro (San)". Enciclopedia Universal Ilustrada, Europeo-Americana. Vol. 42. Madrid: Espasa-Calpe. 1920. p. 1305.
- ^ a b c García OP, José Delgado "Witnesses of the Faith in the Orient, Dominican Martyrs of Japan, China, and Vietnam", Provincial Secretariat of Missions, 2006
- ^ a b Wilberforce OP, Bertand A. (1897). "Chapter X. Martyrdon of Brother Lewis Yakiki – Father Didacus Collado – Life and Martyrdon of Blessed Peter Vasques". Dominican Missions and Martyrs in Japan. London and Leamington: Art and Book Company. pp. 112–27.
- ^ Fros SJ, Henryk “Saints and Blessed of the Society of Jesus”, Kraków: Wydawnictwo Apostolstwa Modlitwy, pp. 108-9, 1992, ISBN 83-85304-50-9
- ^ a b Borrelli, Antonio "Blessed Michael Carvalho, Jesuit martyr", 2005-02-22
- 1591 births
- 1624 deaths
- People of Spanish colonial Philippines
- Spanish beatified people
- Spanish Dominicans
- Spanish saints
- Dominican saints
- Spanish expatriates in Japan
- Martyred Roman Catholic priests
- Roman Catholic missionaries in Japan
- Spanish Roman Catholics
- Spanish Roman Catholic priests
- 17th-century executions by Japan
- Spanish Roman Catholic missionaries
- Spanish people executed abroad
- 17th-century Spanish people
- 17th-century Roman Catholic martyrs
- 17th-century venerated Christians
- People executed by Japan by burning
- Dominican missionaries
- Roman Catholic missionaries in the Philippines