ST PETER CLAVER
THE SLAVE OF THE NEGROES
From Butler’s Lives of the Saints1
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He was born in Catalonia, about 1581… He graduated with distinction
[and entered] the Society of Jesus. He left Spain forever in April 1610, and was
ordained priest at Cartagena, in what is now the republic of Colombia. By the
time of his ordination the slave trade had been established in the Americas for
nearly a hundred years, and the port of Cartagena was one of its principal
centers…
At this time the leader of the work among the Negroes was Father Alfonso
de Sandoval, a great Jesuit missionary who spent forty years in the service of
the slaves, and after working under him Peter Claver declared himself “the slave
of the Negroes forever”. Although by nature shy and without self-confidence he
threw himself into the work with method and organization. He enlisted bands
of assistants, and as soon as a slave-ship entered the port… St. Peter Claver
plunged, with medicines and food, bread, brandy, lemons, tobacco to distribute
among the Negroes, some of whom were too frightened, others too ill, to accept
them. “We must speak to them with our hands, before we try to speak to them
with our lips”, Claver would say. When he came upon any who were dying, he
baptized them, and then sought out all babies born on the voyage that he might
baptize them. He had a band of seven interpreters, one of whom spoke four
Negro dialects, and with their help he taught the slaves and prepared them for
baptism, not only in groups but individually. He made use of pictures, showing
our Lord suffering on the cross; above all he tried to instill in them… some idea
that as redeemed human beings they had dignity and worth, even if as slaves…5
It is estimated that in forty years St. Peter Claver instructed and baptized
over 300,000 slaves… He took the same trouble to teach them how properly to
use the sacrament of penance, and in one year is said to have heard the
confessions of more than five thousand. Many of the stories both of the heroism
and of the miraculous powers of St. Peter Claver concern his nursing of sick and
diseased Negroes, in circumstances often that no one else, black or white, could
face.
In 1650… sickness attacked his emaciated and weakened body, and he
was recalled to the Jesuit residence at Cartagena. But here a virulent epidemic
had begun to show itself, and one of the first to be attacked among the Jesuits
was the debilitated missionary… After receiving the last sacraments, he
recovered, but he was a broken man…
On September 6, 1654 he was taken very ill and became comatose. The
rumor of his approaching end spread round the city, everyone suddenly
remembered the saint again, and numbers came to kiss his hands before it was
too late. His cell was stripped of everything that could be carried off as a relic.
St. Peter Claver never fully recovered consciousness, and died two days later on
the birthday of our Lady. The civil authorities who had looked askance at his
solicitude for mere Negro slaves, and the clergy, who had called his zeal
indiscreet and his energy wasted, now vied with one another to honor his
memory… He was canonized in 1888 and was declared by Pope Leo XIII patron
of all missionary enterprises among Negroes.