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Georgia: Franciscan missions & Heroic death of five Servants of God. by CNN on Feb 2, 2014More
Georgia: Franciscan missions & Heroic death of five Servants of God.

by CNN on Feb 2, 2014
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After 23 years of research by church officials, the Rev. Conrad Harkins, a historian at Franciscan University in Steubenville, Ohio, hand-delivered documents to the Vatican in April - marking the official start of the argument for martyrdom for the friars.
The documents include letters to King Philip III written after the slayings and records on the investigation that followed by the governor of …More
After 23 years of research by church officials, the Rev. Conrad Harkins, a historian at Franciscan University in Steubenville, Ohio, hand-delivered documents to the Vatican in April - marking the official start of the argument for martyrdom for the friars.
The documents include letters to King Philip III written after the slayings and records on the investigation that followed by the governor of Spanish Florida.
The next step in the process is an official decree from the Vatican saying the page numbers and signatures on the documents had been checked for accuracy.
As of Saturday, Harkins still hadn't received the notice.
"I don't think we should sit on the edge of our chairs and wait for this to happen," Harkins said Saturday during a day-long pilgrimage to the site on St. Catherines Island where two of the missionaries died. The process could take years, or even decades to complete, he added.
Bishop J. Kevin Boland lead a Mass on Saturday within a rectangle of palm trees planted to mark the perimeter of the former Santa Catalina de Guale church.
More than a dozen church leaders and supporters of the cause participated in the Mass.
"I've wanted to do this for years," said Paul Thigpen, leader of Friends of the Georgia Martyrs, a network of about 300 supporters. "This has really been a moving experience for me."
According to the historic records, Fray Pedro de Corpa had ministered to the Guale village of Tolomato near modern Darien for 10 years. He angered a chief's nephew, Juanillo, by rebuking the man for taking on a second wife. Juanillo conspired with a group of Guales and on Sept. 14, 1597, launched a three-day attack on de Corpa and other missionaries stationed in the area.
A Spanish-lead investigation into the slayings documents that the friars were all bludgeoned to death with a tomahawk. De Corpa was also decapitated and his head placed on a pike at the village landing for several days until it was finally buried.
On St. Catherines Island, the rebels killed two missionaries stationed there, Antonio de Badajoz and Miguel de Añon. A chapel, house and mission compound were ransacked and the bodies were later buried. Several years later, the remains were unearthed and transported to the Franciscan friary at St. Augustine, but then were lost.
The remains of Blas Rodríguez and Francisco de Veráscola stationed at missions on modern St. Simons Island and at Eulonia were reported to have been buried but were later lost.
After the Mass, Harkins also shared with the group information about a skull believed to be that of Pedro de Corpa.
The skull had been found in the 1950s on Fort King George and kept on a shelf until a few years ago when it was moved to the Fernbank Museum of Natural History in Atlanta.
Researchers at Arizona State University are now trying to extract DNA evidence indicating the ethnic origins of the skull. Preliminary analysis suggests severe cranial trauma, violent decapitation from the spine and exposure to sunlight before being buried, Harkins said.
"All of that is paramount to what we know about Pedro de Corpa's skull."
The final decision over martyrdom is up to the Vatican, and ultimately the pope.
Beatification would entitle the five friars to be called "blessed."
The friars would join a very short list of only three Christians the church recognizes as having been martyred within U.S. borders - fewer than half the number of U.S. saints.
The U.S. can claim just eight Catholic saints. Among them are the only beatified martyrs slain on American soil: three Jesuit priests killed in the 1640s by Iroquois Indians near present-day Auriesville, N.Y.
"There's probably no one in this room who will see them beatified in our lifetimes," Boland said.
However, the bishop praised the missionaries as early defenders the sanctity of marriage, a battle the church still fights today.
"Geographically, it's part of our diocese," Boland said. "That's part of our history and we're better people for understanding our history."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Georgia: Los desconocidos mártires del matrimonio
En el hoy estado norteamericano de Georgia, 400 años atrás, cinco franciscanos fueron martirizados por defender la santidad del matrimonio
Equipo de Redacción de “El Pueblo Católico”
Muchas veces la historia oficial olvida que el territorio que hoy constituye Estados Unidos, fue evangelizado en sus diversas áreas por un verdadero “ejército” de …More
Georgia: Los desconocidos mártires del matrimonio
En el hoy estado norteamericano de Georgia, 400 años atrás, cinco franciscanos fueron martirizados por defender la santidad del matrimonio
Equipo de Redacción de “El Pueblo Católico”
Muchas veces la historia oficial olvida que el territorio que hoy constituye Estados Unidos, fue evangelizado en sus diversas áreas por un verdadero “ejército” de sacrificados misioneros, la mayoría de ellos provenientes de España.
Algunos trabajaron durante muchos años no sólo anunciando el Evangelio, sino trayendo cultura, educación y civilización a muchas regiones. El jesuita Eusebio Kino o el beato Franciscano Junípero Serra son dos ejemplos de estos hombres virtuosos.
Sin embargo, en la historia de tierras norteamericanas han existido también otros hombres llamados por el Señor a evangelizar con su sangre, mediante el martirio.
Georgia… tierra de mártires
Entre estos últimos se encuentran cinco franciscanos martirizados en el territorio que hoy constituye el estado norteamericano de Georgia. Una tierra que los españoles habían llamado “La Florida” -porque fue descubierta en Pascua de Resurrección, también conocida como “Pascua Florida”- donde los Franciscanos establecieron una serie de centros misioneros a lo largo de la costa atlántica, de la que hoy apenas se conservan ruinas.
Más de 400 años atrás, numerosos franciscanos se dirigieron a esta región para evangelizar a los nativos de la tribu Guale, que inicialmente se mostró alegre de conocer y recibir el anuncio de Jesús.
Pero en 1597, un grupo de rebeldes, opuestos ferozmente a la doctrina de la Iglesia católica sobre la santidad del matrimonio, acabó con la vida de cinco heroicos frailes franciscanos: Fray Pedro de Corpa, Fray Blas Rodríguez, Fray Antonio de Badajoz, Fray Miguel de Añon y Fray Francisco de Veráscola.
Cinco hombres virtuosos
Pedro de Corpa nació en Corpa, en la diócesis española de Madrid-Alcalá, cerca de 1560. Desde joven decidió unirse a los Franciscanos de la provincia de Castilla, y pronto se hizo conocido como un extraordinario predicador y confesor, por lo que fue enviado a la Florida española en 1587. Luego de servir en la primera ciudad fundada en Estados Unidos, Saint Augustine, fue enviado a la importante misión de Tolomato.
Un historiador de la época lo describe diciendo que “como hombre sabio y santo, el amor de Dios ardía en su corazón, y mediante la oración, la abstinencia y la disciplina personal dio un gran ejemplo a los nativos, por cuya conversión trabajaba sin cesar”.
Fray Pedro sería el primero en derramar su sangre por defender las enseñanzas de la Iglesia sobre la santidad del matrimonio.
Fray Blas de Rodríguez nació en el pueblo español de Cuacos, en la década de 1550. Se unió de joven a la provincia franciscana de San Gabriel en la estricta rama de la Orden conocida como los Descalzos de Alcántara. Después de trabajar en España durante varios años con mucho fruto pastoral, se ofreció como voluntario para ir a Florida en 1590, donde fue asignado a la villa de los Guales de Tupiquí, cerca de Tolomato.
Fray Miguel, nacido en lugar desconocido en España, como Pedro, también se unió a los Franciscanos de la provincia de Castilla y llegó a Florida en 1595 para encargarse de la misión en la cercana isla de St. Catherines.
Fray Antonio de Badajoz, un hermano laico franciscano, nació en La Albuera cerca de Badajoz, y como Fray Blas era miembro de la estricta rama de Alcántara. Llegó con Fray Pedro de Corpa a Florida en 1587, y aprendió tan bien el lenguaje de los Guale, que se convirtió en el intérprete de Fray Miguel.
Fray Francisco de Veráscola nació el 13 de febrero de 1564, en Gordejuela en el seno de una próspera y noble familia basca constituida por los esposos Domingo de Veráscola y Maria Sáez de Castañiza. Se unió a los Franciscanos de la provincia de Cantabria y tras su ordenación fue enviado a Florida en 1595, y debido a su gran tamaño y su sorprendente fortaleza física, solía ser enviado a las expediciones de exploración. Pronto fue conocido con el sobrenombre de “el Gigante de Cantabria” y por su tamaño, se convirtió en el misionero favorito de los niños Guale, que gustaban jugar con él diversos deportes, especialmente el lanzamiento de lanzas.
La santidad del matrimonio
La vida de armonía con los nativos se vio interrumpida bruscamente en 1597, cuando el líder de los franciscanos, Fray Pedro de Corpa insistió en la enseñanza de que aquellos que habían sido bautizados debían vivir según las enseñanzas de la Iglesia, especialmente en lo referido a la santidad del matrimonio.
Pero Juanillo, sobrino del jefe local que había tomado una segunda esposa, se rebeló ante la enseñanza de los misioneros, quienes le recordaban constantemente que había recibido el bautismo y debía, por tanto, tomar una sola mujer de por vida, como enseña la Iglesia.
Lleno de furia, Juanillo abandonó la misión, reunió una banda de guerreros en el campo y procedió a asesinar a los misioneros de la región, comenzando por Fray Pedro.
Los aniversarios de los mártires son el 14, 16 y 17 de septiembre.
Fray Pedro fue el primero en ser martirizado el 14 de septiembre, porque fue el primero en la lista de odio de Juanillo.
Fray Blas, el 16 de septiembre, fue el segundo en ser asesinado en su propia misión.
Luego, el 17 de septiembre, en el día que se celebra la fiesta de los estigmas de San Francisco, Fray Miguel fue asesinado por los Guales rebeldes pese al esfuerzo del jefe local de la tribu, que lo tenía en gran estima.
El Hermano Antonio, pese a haber sido advertido de su próxima muerte, aceptó el martirio junto con Fray Miguel en la Misión de la Isla de St. Catherines.
Fray Francisco no se encontraba en la misión cuando los seguidores de Juanillo atacaron; sino que estaba de camino a St. Augustine para traer provisiones.
Se conoce poco de los detalles de su muerte, pero todo hace pensar que fue emboscado en el camino por un grupo numeroso de nativos, que conocían de su sorprendente fuerza física. Su cuerpo nunca fue encontrado; pues fue seguramente ocultado en el bosque.
Camino a los altares
Según el P. Conrad Harkins, O.F.M., Vice Postulador de la Causa de canonización de los mártires de Georgia recientemente explicó que “ha llegado el tiempo para reconocer el martirio de estos heroicos misioneros”.
Según el sacerdote, estos santos españoles “apelan especialmente a la piedad de los católicos hispanos… pero en realidad importa a todos los católicos norteamericanos, llamados a proteger la naturaleza del matrimonio en la sociedad de hoy y a dar testimonio de lo que constituye la fibra moral de nuestra sociedad”.
“Estos mártires nos recuerdan que vale la pena morir por algunas verdades fundamentales”, agrega el P. Harkins.
Por lo pronto, se han recibido algunos informes de posibles milagros obtenidos de Dios por la intercesión de los mártires. Cualquier información al respecto debe ser dirigida al P. Harkins, para su cuidadosa investigación.
Según el Dr. Paul Thigpen, Director ejecutivo del Centro para la Fe y Cultura Stella Maris de Georgia, señala que “en nuestros días, cuando la santidad del matrimonio se ve desafiada por la sociedad actual, necesitamos urgentemente el valor y la ayuda de estos cristianos heroicos. Por su amor a Dios, dieron sus vidas defendiendo la verdad de la Iglesia sobre la santidad del matrimonio”.
Oración para la Beatificación de los Mártires de Georgia
Oh Señor Jesucristo, te pedimos que premies el fervor apostólico de Fray Pedro de Corpa y sus cuatro compañeros, Blas, Miguel, Antonio y Francisco, que trabajaron por el bien espiritual de los Nativos de Georgia y entregaron sus vidas en testimonio de su Fe cristiana.
Por los méritos de su amable intercesión te pedimos que me concedas el favor que humildemente te pido, para que, para gloria de Tu nombre, su heroico sacrificio sea oficialmente reconocido por la Iglesia. Amén.
www.archden.org/…/especial1_Augus…
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The Georgia Martyrs-Heroic Witnesses to the Sanctity of Marriage
Ask about old Spanish missions in America, and most people will think of the adobe churches from the late eighteenth century that span the coast of California. Yet these missions, however historic and celebrated, were by no means the first of their kind in what is now the United States. A full two centuries before Bl. Junipero Serra …More
The Georgia Martyrs-Heroic Witnesses to the Sanctity of Marriage
Ask about old Spanish missions in America, and most people will think of the adobe churches from the late eighteenth century that span the coast of California. Yet these missions, however historic and celebrated, were by no means the first of their kind in what is now the United States. A full two centuries before Bl. Junipero Serra preached to the Native Americans along the West Coast, his brother Franciscan friars from Spain were spreading the Gospel in what are now the southeastern states.
Their mission base was a Spanish settlement on the Florida peninsula, St. Augustine—the oldest still-inhabited city in our nation, founded in 1565. It was here in La Florida, as the Spanish called the colony, that the Christian faith first took root in the lands that today form the United States. Here were the first Mass, the first construction of a church, the first baptisms, and the first Christian conversions in what is now our nation.
Long before the founding of the first permanent English colony in America—Jamestown, Virginia, celebrating this year its four-hundredth anniversary—and longer still before the Pilgrims came to Plymouth Rock (1620), Jesuit and then Franciscan missionaries established missions in what are now Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina. They labored with remarkable courage and devotion to evangelize native peoples of the region, and tens of thousands were baptized, catechized, and provided the sacraments.
In the late sixteenth century, six of the Spanish Franciscans ministered to the people called Guale who lived along what is now the Georgia coast. Their names were Pedro de Corpa, Blas Rodríguez, Miguel de Añon, Antonio de Badajóz, Francisco de Veráscola, and Francisco de Avila. All but de Avila were murdered on September 14, 16, and 17 in 1597.
Only One Wife
Life in the American mission field was harsh. These men left behind the comforts of home in Spain to live as the natives did, in huts made of tree trunks, branches, and mud, thatched with palmetto fronds. Agriculture was primitive, yielding at best a few humble garden items to supplement a diet of gathered acorns, local shellfish and wild game from the forest.
Basic items of clothing and even liturgical vestments were sometimes lacking. The men were tormented throughout much of the year by excessive heat, a blazing sun, and the mosquitoes, ticks, and tiny biting sand gnats that are the scourge of the Georgia coast. Worse yet, the closest Spanish soldiers were far away in St. Augustine, so the friars had no protection from natives who might turn hostile.
Add to all these the great challenges of bringing the Gospel to a people of a different tongue and culture who had no knowledge of much that the Spaniards had been raised to take for granted. All in all, it was perhaps near-miraculous that they did in fact meet with success and began bringing new converts into the fold.
Among the difficulties faced by the missionaries, perhaps the greatest was that of sharing Christ’s teaching on marriage—that marriage is a lifetime union of one man and one woman—with a people whose culture allowed polygamy. This teaching comes to us from Christ himself, so the missionaries neither could nor would change it. The practice of the missionaries was not to admit an adult male Guale to baptism unless he first promised to live in a permanent marriage with no more than one wife.
A Broken Promise
Death came to the five martyrs after a baptized Guale named Juanillo, living in one of the missions, broke his promise and took a second wife. It fell to Fray Pedro in the mission at Tolomato to admonish Juanillo to live the Christian faith in which he was baptized. In this he was seconded by Fray Blas in the nearby mission at Tupiquí (near modern Eulonia, Georgia).
Juanillo left the mission in anger to recruit natives from the interior to rid the Guale territory of the "troublesome" friars. Under cover of darkness on a Saturday night, the war party crept into the mission compound and waited for dawn. When Fray Pedro was about to leave his cabin to celebrate morning Mass, the war party broke in and slew the missionary with a blow of the macana, the Guale version of the tomahawk. It was Sunday, September 14: the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross.
With Christian morality thrown aside, a licentious celebration ensued, during which Fray Pedro’s severed head was displayed on a pike at the mission landing. The body was left to decay in the sun for several days and then buried in an unmarked grave so that it would never be recovered.
One Final Sermon
The war party now proceeded to Tupiquí and seized Fray Blas. During the two days he was held prisoner, he was permitted to celebrate Mass and to preach his last sermon. He said:
My sons, for me it is not difficult to die. Even if you do not cause it, the death of this body is inevitable. We must be ready at all times, for we, all of us, have to die someday. But what does pain me is that the Evil One has persuaded you to do this offensive thing against your God and Creator. It is a further source of deep grief to me that you are unmindful of what we missionaries have done for you in teaching you the way to eternal life and happiness. (qtd. in Luis Gerónimo de Oré, The Martyrs of Florida [1513-1516] )
Fray Blas distributed his personal things among his flock and then, bound by ropes, watched the profaning of the sacred images, vestments, and vessels by the war party. On September 16, he was clubbed to death. After his body was left exposed for several days, a faithful Christian buried it in the woods, where it was found later by a detachment of Spanish infantry sent from St. Augustine to investigate the deaths.
A Brave Local Chief
Meanwhile, the war band sent word to the local chief (or mico) on St. Catherines Island to kill the two friars stationed there, Fray Miguel, the priest, and Fray Antonio, the lay brother who was his co-worker and interpreter. The chief refused and instead informed Fray Antonio, offering a canoe and rowers to take the friars to safety at the heavily Christian San Pedro (now Cumberland) Island. Antonio did not believe the warning, or perhaps he simply would not flee the crown of martyrdom.
On September 17, the war band arrived on St. Catherines, and the friars knew their fate. The mico boldly told them he would do the missionaries no harm, and he even offered the assassins all he owned if they would let the friars go free. But the offer was refused.
Fray Miguel offered Mass. It was the feast of the Stigmata of St. Francis, and the Gospel reading of the day contained the words of the Lord Jesus: "Whoever loses his life for my sake will find it" (Matt. 16:25).
For four hours the friars gave themselves to prayer, awaiting the crown of martyrdom. Antonio was the first to receive the blow of the macana, and then Miguel. Their mutilated bodies were left to rot in the sun until crudely buried by faithful Christians at the foot of the great mission cross that Fray Miguel had erected. Later the relics were gathered and taken to the central friary at St. Augustine, now the National Guard Armory, known as "St. Francis Barracks."
The Last to Die
While the other murders were occurring, Fray Francisco was returning by canoe from St. Augustine to his mission, probably on what is now St. Simon’s Island (though perhaps at another location). On some unknown date before the end of September, he arrived home with the supplies needed for Mass and for the ongoing construction of the mission, and with gifts for his Guale flock.
The details of his reception are told succinctly by a chronicler: "They waited for him, and when he disembarked, two natives took him in their arms, while the others came and killed him with blows from the macana. Then they buried him" (Captivity narrative of Fr. Francisco de Avila, qtd. in Oré, The Martrys, 94). His Franciscan capuche, or hood, and his sombrero were later recovered from the Guales who were wearing them, but his body was never found.
News of the terrible events soon spread throughout the Spanish missions of La Florida. A few weeks later Friar Pedro Fernandez de Chozas wrote to the Spanish governor at St. Augustine: "How lonely they must have been, Señor General, these little lambs, at the moment of martyrdom" (Letter of Fr. Pedro Fernandez de Chozas to Gozalo Mendez de Canzo, Oct. 4, 1597).
The Cause of Canonization
The heroic death of these five Servants of God was recognized from the beginning. An official Franciscan report to his Majesty Philip III on October 16, 1612, bears witness:
Though [the natives] did not kill them because of doctrine, it is certain that they slew them because of the Law of God they were teaching them and because of our moral precepts—so contrary to their way of life and their customs. Specifically they slew them because we would not consent that any married Christian should have more than one wife. . . . This is the reason which the Indians gave and, recognizing their sin, this day cite for their slaying of the friars. It is a recognized fact in this land that since the death of these blessed religious the native people have been turning more docile and peaceful, attaining their present state. It is the pious belief that these blessed ones are in God’s presence, interceding for the conversion of this land. (Archivo General de Indias, qtd. in Oré, 94)
Martyrologies, chronicles, and histories continued to recall the heroic deaths of the Georgia martyrs. But only in the 1950s did the Franciscans begin in earnest the movement for canonization. On February 22, 1984, the Bishop of Savannah, Raymond W. Lessard, officially opened the Cause of Beatification. Work on the cause continues with the endorsement and encouragement of the present bishop, J. Kevin Boland.
After 23 years, the Diocesan Inquiry—which is the first stage of the canonization process—has at last come to a close. The inquiry was the informative phase of the cause, whose main purpose was to gather information related to the life, deeds, martyrdom, and enduring reputation of sanctity of the missionaries.
The official Acts of the Process run nearly 500 pages, each one carefully notarized to ensure their authenticity. This official document was hand-carried to the Congregation of the Causes of Saints in Rome in late March 2007 by Fr. Conrad Harkins, OFM, the vice-postulator of the cause. There the Congregation, and ultimately Pope Benedict XVI, will make the final judgment concerning the genuineness of their martyrdom.
If that ruling is favorable, they will need no miracle to be beatified—that is, declared "Blessed." But full canonization—which would result in their designation as "saints"—is a still further process, during which the Church would look for a single miracle in confirmation of their holiness.
We Need their Example Today
Why is it so important that the heroism of these missionaries be recognized now? Today many American Catholics remain timid about sharing their faith with others, even when talking with people who are not hostile to the Church. At the same time, certain cultural, legal, and political developments exert increasing pressure on Catholics to remain silent about urgent moral issues. In these circumstances, the Georgia martyrs have much to teach us about the necessity of living the Gospel, sharing it generously, and defending it vigorously, without compromise, even when such faithfulness is costly.
In particular, marriage and the family are suffering a sustained attack in our society. We hear increasingly strident demands to redefine matrimony by legalizing, not just same-sex unions, but polygamy as well. The Georgia martyrs inspire us to reaffirm the moral truths about marriage they died to defend.
The heroic missions and courageous deaths of these five daring witnesses to the faith are not yet widely known. But the time has come for their story to be told, their faith imitated, their help sought. The martyrs’ sacrifice teaches us that some truths are worth dying for. We need their example and their intercession now more than ever.
SIDEBARS
Profiles of the Martyrs
Pedro de Corpa
was born in a tiny village in central Spain in the diocese of Madrid-Alcalá, probably around 1560. A Franciscan priest of the province of Castile, he was known as a skilled preacher and confessor when he came to Spanish Florida in 1587. After serving for a short time near St. Augustine, he was sent north to the mission at the important Guale village of Tolomato, near modern Darien, Georgia. A contemporary described Fray Pedro this way: "Since he was a wise and holy man, the love of God burned in his heart, and by means of prayer, abstinence, and self-discipline he gave good example to the Indians of the West whom he strove to convert."
Blas de Rodríguez was born in the Spanish town of Cuacos, probably in the 1550s. He had joined the Franciscan Province of St. Gabriel in the strict Alcantaran branch of the order. Ordained to the priesthood in the 1580s, Fray Blas labored in Spain for several years and received the title of confessor. In 1590, he volunteered for Florida.
Antonio de Badajóz was a Franciscan lay brother born in La Albuera near Badajóz. Like Fray Blas, he was a member of the strict Alcantaran reform. He came with Fray Pedro de Corpa to Florida in 1587, learned the language of the Guale well, and served as interpreter for Fray Miguel de Añon. He was also instructed by the priests how to evangelize the native people.
Fray Miguel de Añon was in charge of the mission on St. Catherines Island. He had arrived in La Florida only two years before. His birthplace is uncertain, but some evidence suggests that he was of noble origin. Like Pedro, he was a member of the Franciscan province of Castile and ordained to the priesthood in Spain. When Miguel came to America, the Spanish colonists in Havana sought his services. But he ultimately declined their invitation, convinced that God was calling him to Florida.
Francisco de Veráscola was born on February 13, 1564, at Gordejuela into a relatively prosperous Basque family. He joined the Cantabrian Franciscan province, and after his ordination he served for a few years in the region of Vizcaya before volunteering to be sent to Florida. Soon after his arrival in 1595, Francisco was made a kind of bodyguard for a Spanish official on a reconnaissance expedition into the interior. He was chosen for this role because of his great physical stature and strength, which earned him the nickname "the Cantabrian Giant." His size and athletic prowess also made him popular with the Guale youth, who invited him to join them in sports such as spear-throwing, wrestling, and a game similar to soccer.
Support the Cause
To support the cause of the martyrs’ canonization, join the Friends of the Georgia Martyrs, an association whose mission is to spread the story of the martyrs, pray for their canonization, share testimonies of answered prayer, and otherwise promote the advancement of the cause.
Members receive literature about the martyrs, including pamphlets, prayer cards, and occasional issues of the association newsletter, The Palmetto, which provides historical information about these Servants of God and updates about the progress of their cause. Members commit themselves to pray for the cause, to share the heroic story of the martyrs with others, and to report any extraordinary favors they believe they have received through the martyrs’ intercession.
To join, e-mail name, address, and phone number to georgiamartyrs@comcast.net, or mail a stamped, self-addressed business envelope to The Stella Maris Center for Faith and Culture, P.O. Box 30157, Savannah, GA 31410-0157.
For More Information
www.georgiamartyrs.org
www.PaulThigpen.com
David Arias, Spanish Cross in Georgia (University Press of America, 1994)
Michael V. Gannon, The Cross in the Sand: The Early Catholic Church in Florida, 1513-1870 (University Press of Florida, 1992 ed.)
Paul E. Hoffmann, A New Andalucia and a Way to the Orient: The American Southeast During the Sixteenth Century (Louisiana State University Press, rev. ed., 2004)
Jerald T. Milanich, Laboring in the Fields of the Lord: Spanish Missions and Southeastern Indians (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1999)
Luis Gerónimo de Oré, The Martyrs of Florida (1513–1516) , Maynard J. Geiger, trans. (J. F. Wagner, 1937)
www.catholic.com/…/the-georgia-mar…