Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate
Canada, Assumption Province

Blessed Joseph Gerard O.M.I. - Mission in Lesotho
Born near Nancy, France, in the village of
Bouxières-aux-Chénes on March l2th 1831, Joseph
Gérard spent his childhood on the family farm but,
with the help of the parish priest, was able to
commence studies for the priesthood. Whilst in the
local seminary he was impressed by accounts of the
missionary work of some priests of the newly-founded
Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, and, desiring
to join them in their endeavours, he entered the
Oblate Congregation. He was ordained a deacon by the
Founder of the Oblates, Blessed Eugene de Mazenod,
who with great confidence in Joseph assigned him, at
the age of 22, to the mission of Natal in South
Africa.
In May 1853 Joseph Gérard set off for his mission
field never to see France again. On Feb. l9th 1854
he was ordained priest by Bishop Allard O.M.I. in
Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, and started his
ministry to the local white population, but
especially to the Zulu People. His years of
journeying through difficult countryside, of
sleeping in the open, of learning new languages, of
cold and of heat began. Despite all his good
efforts, his ministry among the Zulus did not seem
to bear immediate fruit, and with a sense of great
disappointment in this apparent failure he moved in
1862 to Lesotho to bring the Gospel to the Basotho
People. Fr. Gérard, however, lived to see the
movement of faith later among the Zulus, and he
rejoiced in the grace of God so wonderfully given
and received. He had been part of sowing the first
seed.
But Lesotho was to become his new mission field, and
he laboured there for the next 52 years. Together
with this nation he was to travel a wonderful
journey to God. Faced initially with indifference,
even scorn at times, Fr. Gérard worked and prayed
for more than two years before he won his first
Basotho catechumen. Even after that progress was
slow, but his determination, his dedication, his
forgetfulness of self took effect quietly but
surely. The Catholic missionaries were well received
by the King, Moshoeshoe I, and Fr. Gérard showed his
gratitude for this by his loyalty especially when
the nation was under attack by the Boers. Moshoeshoe,
much to Gérard’s disappointment, never embraced
Christianity, but later his grandson Griffith
Lerotholi who rose to be Paramount Chief became a
Catholic, to the very great joy of Fr. Gérard.
However, more and more people in these early years
heard the message of Christ, and carne to the
Church. There were many baptisms, there were some
defections, but in God’s good time the work of Fr.
Gérard grew apace. Grace was taking hold of the
Basotho. Within five years of his corning there was
the beginnings of a Congregation of local sisters
and his first mission station at Roma was to
blossom. Today it is the site of many novitiates and
of seminaries, a University founded by the Oblates,
high schools, numerous religious houses, a hospital
- all the legacy of this remarkable man of God.
Throughout his years in Lesotho Fr. Gérard’s concern
and care for the sick and the old was remarkable -
even heroic at times. Despite the distance, despite
the weather, despite the inconvenience, he would set
out on foot or on horseback, carrying the Blessed
Sacrament, to minister to those afflicted. His deep
devotion to Mary was absorbed by his first converts,
and since his day the nation has been dedicated to
Mary Immaculate. There is no count of the miles he
travelled up and down the steep mountains of
Lesotho, and his all-embracing care of the weak, the
sick, of those in need is part of the history and
lore of the people of Lesotho. His deep commitment
to prayer was always an example to the people, and
at his funeral one of them expressed it well:
“Fr. Gérard was a man who, you might say, did not
eat food but fed himself on prayer, and if prayer is
something with which one can feed the people, then
he has fed us Basotho too for a very long time”.
Fr. Gérard laboured for many years preaching,
consoling, leading to God, and kept contact also
with people in South Africa. The last years of his
life were spent back at his first mission, Roma. He
still continued his rounds of visiting even when
arthritis bent him over almost double, his sight was
mostly gone, and he had to be lifted up on to his
faithful horse “Artaban”. Up to a month before his
death he was out on the mountain tracks caring for
those in need. He was 83 at the time. On May 29th
1914 after a life of patient and enduring devotion
Joseph Gérard in the fullness of years carne face to
face with the Master he had served so long and so
well.
Fr. Gérard, in one of his retreat notes, gave the
key to his constancy when he wrote about the people
he served: “... we must love them, love them in
spite of everything, love them always”. He lived out
his belief in the joy of spreading God’s Word,
despite the hardships and opposition he encountered.
In his loving he drew the Basothos with him to the
contemplation of God. The Church recognised this
when Pope John Paul Il, on his 1988 pastoral visit
to Lesotho, knelt at the grave of his great
missionary, and on September l5th before a vast
multitude of the Basotho people declared their
spiritual father, Blessed Joseph Gérard, O.M.I. Love
had reached its fullness.
“THE WORLD BELONGS TO THE PERSON WHO LOVES IT MOST, AND PROVES IT”
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