On its 200th anniversary, a glimpse at the birth of the Roman Catholic Church in Manitoba - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 08:08 AM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

On its 200th anniversary, a glimpse at the birth of the Roman Catholic Church in Manitoba

Two centuries years ago, after a more than 60-day journey, a pair of French-Canadian priests and a seminary student stepped out of a canoe onto the land of what would one day become Winnipeg.

Joseph-Norbert Provencher arrived in what would become Manitoba on July 16, 1818

Joseph-Norbert Provencher arrived in what would become Winnipeg on July 16, 1818. His arrival is seen as the birth of the Roman Catholic Church in Northern and Western Canada. (Societe Historique de Saint-Boniface Archives/Collection generale de SHSB, SHSB 497)

Two centuries years ago, after a more than 60-day journey, a pair of French-Canadian priests and a seminary student stepped out of a canoe onto the land of what would one day become Winnipeg.

A painting believed to be from 1836 showing Bishop Joseph-Norbert Provencher. (Collection Musee de Saint-Boniface, MSB 0238/Societe Historique de Saint-Boniface Archives)

One of them, a towering six-foot-four Roman Catholic priest in his early 30s, was Joseph-Norbert Provencher, soon to be known as the "giant of the West."

To the governor of the small settlement and the group of Mtis residents who greeted them, Provencher and his companions were an "oddity," says Winnipeg historian Claude de Moissac.

"Nobody had seen black robes before," he said, using aterm forCatholic priests based on their long black robes.

"They were the first priests to step foot on the banks of the Red River, the [Hudson's Bay Company]settlement."

That was July 16, 1818 decades before the birth of Manitoba or Canadian Confederation.

Two hundred years later, Provencher's arrival is still seen as the birth of the Roman Catholic Church in Northern and Western Canada.

Provencher went on to lead what would become the archdiocese of St. Boniface, which is markingthat anniversary this Sunday.

The archdiocese's celebration, called Jubilation, includes a public mass, musical performances, family programming and a re-enactment of Provencher's arrival, with Provencher portrayed by current Archbishop Albert LeGatt.

An early archival photograph of the altar at Bishop Provencher's first cathedral, which burned in 1860. The image is possibly from 1836. (Societe Historique de Saint-Boniface Archives/Collection Musee de Saint-Boniface, MSB 1267)

LeGatt, who admits he's a history buff, says Provencherhimself is one of his favourite figures from the province's Roman Catholic history.

"He was a giant of a man, and that proved itself morally and [in] determination," LeGatt said of Provencher.

"When he was first asked to come here, he said, 'I'm not worthy.'"

Provencherand his companions fellow priest Svre Dumoulin and seminarianGuillaume Edge had been sent by Quebec BishopJoseph-Octave Plessis at the request of Lord Selkirk, who led the Red River settlement, and following a petition written by Mtis residents in the area, deMoissacsaid.

They were sent with the mandate to spread Catholicism in the area, including converting Indigenous Peoples, conducting baptisms and overseeing legitimate marriages, as well as to help establish education, he added.

A painting depicting the arrival of Alexandre-Antonin Tach, future archbishop of St. Boniface, with the Grey Nuns and Bishop Provencher on the beach. (Collection generale de SHSB, SHSB 1753/Societe Historique de Saint-Boniface Archives)
A drawing of Alexandre-Antonin Tach, the second bishop and first archbishop of St. Boniface. (Societe Historique de Saint-Boniface Archives/Collection generale de SHSB, SHSB 16783)

Provencherwas named a bishopin 1822. In 1847, hebecame the first bishop of the diocese of St. Boniface.

He died in St. Boniface in 1853 at age 66.

He was succeeded byAlexandre-Antonin Tach, a young man whose arrival in the area in 1845 is a favourite storyof de Moissac's.

"He wasn't a priest yet because he wasn't old enough to be a priest. He actually turned old enough to be a priest when he was on his trip here," de Moissac said.

"Bishop Provencher, upon greeting him, said, 'I asked for men and you're sending me boys.' Except the boy that they sent him became his successor and was probably as important, if not more important, in the history of Manitoba and of Canada."

DeMoissacsays the church they established would become instrumental in supporting some of Manitoba's earliest "social services," including hospitals and schools.

But over its 200 years, the legacy of the Catholic Church in Manitoba has included negative impacts on the province as well, including the church's role in establishing residential schools in the province.

A black and white photo shows young students sitting in desks looking at the camera, with a woman in a nun's habit standing behind them.
A group of students sit in a residential school classroom in Cross Lake, Man. (Department of Indian and Northern Affairs/Library and Archives Canada)

"That's really a dark, dark period, and as a church, we really need to ask forgiveness for that," said LeGatt.

He calls residential schools a betrayal of the gospel.

"I feel the need to ask for forgiveness, to apologize, for all of the ways from contact till now, that the Catholic Church, Catholic individuals, the Catholic Church as an institution has dismissed or even repressed the spirituality, the values, the teachings, the ceremonies, the wisdom of being on this land for 10,000 yearsin essence, in harmony with this land, finding their soul in this land."

With that history in mind, LeGatt said the 200th anniversary must be celebration but also commemoration.

"Commemoration means you remember the past for what it was in its totality," he said. "And especially, the consequences upon various peoples of the life and the activity of the church."

Archbishop Albert LeGatt says the 200th anniversary of Catholic Church in Manitoba must be not only a celebration but a commemoration, which 'means you remember the past for what it was in its totality.' (CBC)

The modern Catholic Churchin Manitoba is multicultural, he said, including parishes that are Vietnamese, Korean, African, Hispanic and Polish, along with a vibrant Filipino population.

He'll be thinking about all the peoples of the church on the anniversary, he said.

"All the ways of being one, of continuing to try to be one, we recommit ourselves to that," he said.