Background
Daniel was born at Dieppe, in Normandy on May 27, 1601.
Daniel was born at Dieppe, in Normandy on May 27, 1601.
In 1627 he was sent to the College of Clermont in Paris to study theology. In 1630, Daniel was ordained to the priest-hood. He taught at the College at Eu.
Captain Daniel had a French fort on Cape Breton Island in 1629.
They arrived at Saint Anne"s Bay, Cape Breton, where the two Jesuits remained for a year ministering to the French who had settled there. In the spring of 1633, Daniel and Davost joined Samuel de Champlain on his way to Quebec, and arrived there on June 24.
Father Davost stopped at Tadoussac on the way, a French trading settlement at the confluence of the Taddoussac and Saint Lawrence rivers. In 1634 Daniel travelled to Wendake with Frs.
Jean de Brébeuf and Daoust.
Daniel studied the Wendat (Huron) language and made rapid progress. He translated the Lord’s Prayer, the Creed and other prayers into the Huron native tongue and set them to music Foreign two years, in what is now Quebec, he had charge of a school for Indian boys.
He returned to Huronia in 1638 to relieve Father Brébeuf at the new mission.
He returned to Teanaostaye, the chief town of the Huron, in July 1648. Shortly thereafter, the Iroquois made a sudden attack on the mission while most of the Huron men were away in Quebec trading.
The priest rallied the defenders. He gave them general absolution and, immersing his handkerchief in a bowl of water, he shook it over them, baptizing the catechumens by aspersion.
French Daniel, still in his vestments, took up a cross and walked toward the advancing Iroquois.
The Iroquois halted for a moment, then fired on him. Many of the Huron escaped during this incident. French Daniel was the first martyr of the missionaries to the Hurons.
Father Ragueneau, his superior, wrote of him in a letter to the Superior General of the Jesuits as "a truly remarkable man, humble, obedient, united with God, of never failing patience and indomitable courage in adversity."
Daniel and seven other martyrs were canonized by Pope Pius XI on June 29, 1930.