Everything about Joseph Vaz totally explained
Blessed Joseph Vaz (born
April 21 1651,
Benaulim - died
January 16 1711,
Kandy) was a
Catholic Oratorian priest from
Goa. He is known as
of Ceylon.
He arrived at
Ceylon (now
Sri Lanka) at a time of Protestant evangelism. He traveled throughout the island and preached to Catholics, rebuilding churches. Later in his mission he found shelter in the Kandyan kingdom where he was able to work freely. At the time of his death he managed to rebuild the Catholic church on the island. On
January 21 1995, Joseph Vaz was beatified by
Pope John Paul II in
Colombo,
Sri Lanka.
Birth and early life
He was born on
April 21 1651 at Benaulim, his mother's village. His parents, Cristóvão Vaz and Maria de Miranda, were
Christians of the
Konkani Brahmin caste. He was the third of six children. He learned
Portuguese in
Sancoale, his father's village, and
Latin in Benaulim.
He studied
rhetoric at the
Jesuit college and
philosophy and
theology at the College of
Saint Thomas Aquinas, Goa, was
ordained in
1676, and became a favorite
preacher and
confessor. He opened a Latin school in Sancoale for perspective
seminarians. In
1677 he
consecrated himself as a "
slave of
Mary", sealing it with a document known as his "Letter of Enslavement".
Sri Lanka mission
Hearing of the oppressed state of the Catholics of Ceylon who reportedly had had no priests for 50 years, Father Vaz desired to go to their rescue. But instead he was named Superior of the
Kanara Mission, a post which he occupied for three years. On his return to Goa in
1684 he spent his time preaching in the villages, and joined the
Oratorians then recently established in Goa, at the Church of the Holy Cross of Miracles. He was soon named
superior there. In
1686 he obtained permission to give up this office and to proceed to Ceylon. Disguised as an itinerant worker, he reached the port of
Tuticorin on
Easter 1687.
Jafna mission
On landing at
Jaffna he found a strong Protestant evangelism. He was forced to travel disguised, and to work in secret. He traveled barefoot as an Indian
sanyasi.
He suffered from acute dysentery, contracted from the terrible traveling conditions. Upon recovering he began contacting Catholics and hiding from the Dutch. He was taken in and ministered to his secret flock by night. In
1689 taking up his residence in a village called
Sillalai where the Catholics were numerous and resolute, he succeeded in reviving the spirit of the faithful. In
1690 he was forced to change his quarters for
Puttalam, where he worked with great success for a whole year.
Kandy mission
In
1692 he settled in
Kandy, the capital of a native independent state, as his centre of operations. On his arrival he was deemed to be a
Portuguese spy and was imprisoned with two other Catholics. There he learned
Sinhala, the local language. They were left alone by the prison guards as long as they didn't try to escape and he built a hut-church and later a proper church dedicated to Our Lady, and began converting other prisoners.
In
1696 the Kingdom of Kandy was suffering a serious drought, and the king asked the
Buddhist monks to pray to their gods for rain as there was no rain. He turned to Father Vaz, who erected an altar and cross in the middle of the square and prayed. Abundant rain began to fall, while Father Vaz and the altar stayed dry. This prompted the King to grant Father Vaz license to preach throughout the kingdom.
Making the most of his new-found freedom, he made a mission visit to the Dutch zone and visited Catholics in Colombo. Three missionaries from the Oratory of Goa arrived in
1697 to help him with the news that Bishop Pedro Pacheco of Cochin had appointed Vaz as
Vicar General in Ceylon. He was organizing the basic mission structure when
smallpox broke out in Kandy. His work with the sick convinced the king to allow Father Vaz freedom in his labors.
Father Vaz carried his mission to the main centers of the island. He returned to
Kandy in
1699 with Father
Joseph de Carvalho who had been expelled at the instigation of Buddhist monks. He completed the construction of his new church, and went into service for the king, translating Portuguese books into Sinhala. From this vantage point, he intensified his ministry, and converted some
Sinhalese notables. New missionaries arrived in
1705, which enabled him to organize the mission into eight districts, each led by a priest. He worked on the creation of Catholic literature comparable to that of the Buddhists, and to affirm the rights of Catholics with those of the Dutch
Protestant Government.
Death
King
Vimaldharna Surya II, Father Joseph Vaz's patron, died in
1707, but
Narendrasimha, his successor, was an even greater supporter. New missionaries arrived in
1708. In
1710, despite health problems, Father Vaz took another apostolic trip. On his return, he fell ill. He recovered from a series of infections and fevers, but was left weakened. He undertook nine days of spiritual exercises prescribed by the Rule, but before the seventh day he died at Kandy on
January 16 1711, at the age of 59.
Beatification
The subject of his
beatification was first urged upon the consideration of the
Holy See about
1737 by Dom Francisco de Vasconcellos, S.J., Bishop of
Cochin, who also claimed jurisdiction over Ceylon.
The process was begun in Goa, and a number of
miracles were registered. But the non-fulfillment of certain essential formalities led
Benedict XIV to cancel the proceedings, with an order, however, that they should be re-instituted. In South Kanara, he's generally known as Venerable Father Joseph Vaz. On
January 21 1995, Joseph Vaz was beatified by
Pope John Paul II in
Colombo,
Sri Lanka.
Further Information
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