St. Jean de Brébeuf (born March 25, 1593, Condé-sur-Vire, Normandy, France—died March 16, 1649, Saint-Ignace, near Sainte-Marie Among the Hurons, Huronia, New France [near what is now Midland, Ontario, Canada]; canonized 1930; feast day October 19) was a Roman Catholic missionary to New France and martyr who became one of the patron saints of Canada.
Brébeuf entered the Society of Jesus in 1617, was ordained a priest in 1623, and arrived in New France in 1625. Noted for his facility with language, he was assigned to Christianize the Huron people between Georgian Bay and Lake Huron in 1626. The language proved challenging for him, but he is said to have eventually mastered the oratory style of the Hurons and diligently worked to record the language so that other missionaries could also gain proficiency. He lived a harsh life in danger of death until forced by the English to return to France in 1629.
Back again in Huronia in 1634, Brébeuf laboured for 15 years in unforgiving surroundings. In 1639 he and another French Jesuit priest, Jérôme Lalemant, established Sainte-Marie Among the Hurons, the first European settlement in what is now Ontario. He was a veteran of 18 missions when, in 1647, peace was made between the French and the Iroquois, who were competitors with the Hurons in the fur trade and their bitter enemies. The Iroquois, determined to destroy the Huron confederacy, continued their fierce war against the Hurons and in 1648–50 destroyed all villages and missions. When they raided the mission of Saint-Louis, they seized Brébeuf and his fellow missionary Gabriel Lalemant (nephew of Jérôme) and ritually tortured the missionaries and Native American converts to death at the neighbouring village of Saint-Ignace. Brébeuf endured stoning, slashing with knives, a collar of red-hot tomahawks, a “baptism” of scalding water, and burning at the stake. Because he showed no signs of pain, his heart was eaten by the Iroquois. He was canonized with Lalemant and six other Jesuits who were killed on various dates in the mid-1600s in New France (collectively called the Canadian Martyrs or North American Martyrs) in 1930.
Brébeuf’s writings, which are source materials for historians and ethnologists, include a Huron grammar and a translation of the catechism into Huron. His annual narratives are translated in R.G. Thwaites’s Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents, 73 vol. (1896–1901).