Saint Isaac and the Indians
Author:
Milton Lomask
Illustrator:
Leo Manso
Publication:
1956 by Farrar, Straus and Cudahy
Genre:
Biography, Non-fiction
Series:
Vision Books
Series Number: 6
Pages:
187
Current state:
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Over three hundred years ago, many Frenchmen came to the unknown forests along the St. Lawrence River. Most of them came in search of furs and wealth. But there were some—a handful of Jesuit missionaries—who came not to get, but to give. They wished to give to the savage Indians the knowledge of God and of His love for them. One of these missionaries was Isaac Jogues, martyr and Saint.
This is the story of his dangerous and difficult life among the Indian tribes in their tree-dark country—of his work of conversion, of his efforts to teach the Indians rules of health and to set them free from their superstitious belief in the power of the medicine men. This is the inspiring story of his enslavement by the Mohawks, his daring escape, and finally, his death as a martyr for the Faith.
Without the courage and strength of men like Isaac Jogues, our American civilization might never have been built.
From the dust jacket