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Stephanie and
Jeanne Bigard
The Story of the Beginnings of
the
Society of St Peter the Apostle
n 1889 a desperate Bishop of Nagasaki in Japan
wrote to two French women, Mme Stephanie Bigard
and her daughter, Jeanne:
‘Might I
interest you a little in my seminary?
At the moment it holds more than fifty
students. Despite all our economies, even these
fifty mouths are a burden on our meagre
resources. At the beginning of last year, we
had to announce that we could only admit twelve
new students, two from each district. Well, from
one district alone fifteen presented
themselves. We had to invent a thousand
pretexts for sending them back to their families
- boys who would have made excellent priests.’
The Bigard family were from good backgrounds and
often involved with high society. Charles did
not share his wife Stephanie’s faith but
supported her wish to attend daily Mass. They
had two children, René and Jeanne.
Tragedy struck the
Bigard family when Charles committed
suicide at the age of 57 in 1878, and her son
René, Jeanne’s elder brother, was killed when a
paraffin lamp exploded in his face.
Stephanie and Jeanne were distraught and threw
themselves into a life of prayer and sacrifice
for the salvation of husband and brother,
both of whom had lost their faith, dedicating
themselves to working for the missions.
Some years before, after Charles Bigard’s death,
a French missionary whom they had befriended
asked for help in building a church at Kyoto in
Japan. Stephanie and Jeanne set to work with
resolve to raise the money. In the end, to
ensure the completion of the building, Jeanne
sold her dowry along with a plot of land and a
farm. Her sacrifice was great - with her dowry
gone, she could no longer look forward to
marriage.
So when the Bishop of Nagasaki needed help
maintaining his seminarians,
it was not surprising that
he turned to
Stephanie and Jeanne. They again
agreed to help, appealed to friends, and the
Society of St Peter the Apostle was born.
Almost immediately they were robbed. To avoid
drawing attention to themselves and the money
they collected, they moved into a small and
decrepit house in a poor area of Caen, a move
which was to adversely affect their health.
Despite suspicion and hostility from bishops and
clergy alike, the work of the Society grew until
within four years it
attracted the notice
of Pope Leo XIII, who was greatly
interested in promoting the growth of a local
clergy in the Missions.
Armed with the Pope’s blessing, the two women
travelled throughout France to promote the work
of the Society and eventually established a
central office in Paris. The anti-clerical
government refused the Society legal
recognition, so within a year they moved to
Switzerland. The work and worry took their toll
and in 1903 Stephanie died, at the age of 69,
and tragedy struck again. Jeanne became
depressed and, realising that she now could no
longer give the Society the support it required,
she resigned. Two years later, after a series
of severe delirious fits, she was admitted to a
mental asylum where she died in obscurity nearly
28 years later on 28 April 1934, at the age of
75.
Before her mental collapse, Jeanne Bigard wrote,
‘Because I am a faulty instrument, a rusty and
bent tool, God chose me to begin the Society.’
She could not then have foreseen where her
vision would lead.
In 1922, Pope Pius XI placed the Society under
papal patronage and gave it the task of
supporting every seminary in the missionary
world.
Mission dioceses are now called young churches.
It is within these young churches that
the
Church is now most
active and growing.
Many new mission dioceses have been established
in recent years.
However, most of the young churches are in
developing countries. They have the faith, but
often material poverty and hardship means that
they are not able to train the many young men
and women who wish to become priests and
religious at the service of God and their
communities.
Jeanne Bigard’s
Society of St Peter the Apostle
is now responsible for financing the training
of all these young people and for building their
seminaries and novitiates. An
impossible task without adequate funding, and
over a hundred years after the Bishop of
Nagasaki wrote his letter to the Bigards, young
men and women are still being turned away
because the money is just not available for
their training.
The Society worldwide now supports over 30,000
major seminarians and 10,000 religious.
The SPA continues to bring Christian
missionaries throughout the world in communion
with each other and tries to ensure that good
vocations are not turned away through lack of
financial resources. The SPA also enables us to
take up our duty as missionaries and followers
of Christ to make both spiritual and financial
sacrifices, continuing the work begun by a young
woman over 100 years ago.
The Society of St Peter the Apostle
Pontifical Mission Societies
23 Eccleston Square, LONDON
SW1V 1NU
Registered Charity No. 1056651
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