Jesuits in the New
World:
A Contrast in
Conversion of North and South America
John C. Haynes, Jr.
HIS-4150: History and
Historians
Dr. Amanda Snyder
December 2, 2021
1
European Exploration
and Expansion
European
exploration of the New World began in the fifteenth century CE and continued
into the sixteenth century as the emerging naval powers of Portugal, Spain,
France, England, and the Netherlands allowed these countries to discover, as it
was a new discovery for them, the lands of North, Central, and South America
along with the islands of the Caribbean. Catholic missionaries established
missions in these areas with the intent of converting the indigenous
populations to Christianity as well as to influence them to adopt European
values. This paper will compare the success of Jesuit missions in New France
(Canada) and South America. Those missionaries who were sent to North America,
primarily Canada, faced a hostile native population and overall failed to have
any major success in bringing native Americans into their missions or
converting large numbers. However, in South America, a much greater number of natives
flocked to the missions (called reductions, Spanish reducciones) and
converted, particularly in the areas of present-day Brazil (along the Portuguese/Spanish
border, Paraguay, and Uruguay. While there were many cultural differences that
account for the contrasting relationships between the native populations and
the European colonizers of North and South America, the primary reason for the
large influx of South American indigenous to the Jesuit reductions was a
reaction to the Portuguese slave trade. Guarani, in particular, fled to the
reductions in an effort to escape the slave traders and converted to
Christianity with the hope that, if caught, they would not be sold into slavery
due to their conversion.
Initially, the European nations took
to the seas seeking new routes to the Indies in search of trade in spices and
other goods. Upon realizing they had stumbled upon a “new world” which would
soon come to be called the “Americas,” named after the famous Italian explorer
Amerigo
2
Vespucci, the European explorers hoped to find gold, silver,
and other raw goods with which they could trade. What they did find was a land
full of native peoples, whom the Europeans had never encountered and who had
never encountered others outside of their regional homes. Collectively, we can
refer to these peoples as “Native Americans” although they were culturally as
different as the English were from the Spanish. This encounter of cultures,
along with the European drive for profit from trade, would soon lead to
cultural exchanges that were often violent.
Along with officials, merchants,
and soldiers, the European nations also sent missionaries. Primary amongst the
Catholic missionaries who deployed to the Americas were the Dominicans, the
Franciscans, as well as the Jesuits. The order of the Jesuits, the Society of
Jesus, was founded by St. Ignatius of Loyola. Ignatius was a Basque army
officer who, wounded in battle, turned to the spiritual life, and became a Catholic
priest. He and seven companions formed a new order in 1540 dedicated to service
to the Pope and the conversion of non-Christians. This small order, who
initially Ignatius called simply in Italian a “compagnia di Gesu” or
“brotherhood (Company) of Jesus” would soon grow to become an army of priests dispatched
around the globe with the purpose of conversion and become officially known by the
Latin form of compagnia di Gesu, the Societas Iesu, the Society
of Jesus.[1] Many early references to the order give the
name Company of Jesus, as it was often called in its early days, based on the
Italian statement.[2]
3
While all Jesuits are led by and
answer to the head of their order, the Superior General, the individual provinces
of Jesuits, generally along national lines, are colored by their cultural and
national histories and exhibit differing natures, as much as is possible. Thus,
in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, we find that Jesuits from different
countries, relocating to different areas of the Americas, brought with them
different political and cultural values, all still consistent under the banner
of the spirituality of the Society of Jesus. For purposes of comparison, this
paper will be focusing on the French Jesuits who operated in North America,
specifically the area along the St. Lawrence River, which they called “New
France” and is today in Canada, and the Spanish Jesuits who entered South
America and established their missions in the regions of present-day Brazil, Paraguay,
and Uruguay. French Jesuits in New France, while having some small degree of
success in gaining converts to Christianity and spreading European influence,
were largely unsuccessful in winning over the majority of the native population.
While different tribes reacted in diverse ways to the mission of the Jesuits,
this paper will look primarily at the Hurons along the St. Lawrence River. In
contrast, the Spanish Jesuits of South America were largely successful in
conversion and integration with local populations. Here, I will discuss
primarily the Guarani tribes along present-day Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
Large numbers of Guarani relocated to Jesuit reducciones or reductions
voluntarily and converted to Christianity.
French
Jesuits in North America
4
One of the first Jesuits to arrive
in New France was Fr. Paul Le Jeune. By his own accounts, relations with the Hurons
were initially cordial, but not productive.[3] That would soon change,
however, as the missionaries began to encounter both the Iroquois and the
Algonquin tribes. The Jesuit order had a rocky start in France and was often
opposed by the French monarchy and government.[4] Support from Europe was lackluster and large colonial
centers simply failed to materialize. In addition, French colonists never
numbered very highly in this region, most departing for French colonies in the
Caribbean. Estimates place approximately 70,000 settlers from France in the
area of the St. Lawrence River, including the city, which was to become the
chief population center, Quebec.[5] Due to the lack of strong government support
and small numbers of colonists, French colonizers never built a substantial
infrastructure in New France and the Jesuits there, small in number to begin
with, did not have the support they needed. Small teams of Jesuits were often
on their own, making their way through the native wilderness.
The Jesuits first encountered the
Huron along the St. Lawrence, and later the Iroquois, who were enemies of each
other. Initial contact and attempts at conversion among the Huron were mostly
friendly, however the Hurons were less willing to accept conversion. While
reports
5
back to their superiors were hopeful, the reality on the
ground showed that the Huron were not desirous of accepting Christian ideas. In
a 1636 letter from Fr. Jean de Brebeuf, another early Jesuit missionary, the
indigenous response to Christianity was that the European religion was not
their “custom.” A reply from an unknown native was “your world is not our
world.”[6] While missionaries did make some inroads into
native culture and have some small success in winning converts, the Jesuits
soon found themselves facing hostile, even violent, conflict as well as deeply
embroiled in the politics and wars between the Huron and Iroquois nations. Push
back against conversion as well as political infighting often led to the death
of many French Jesuits, including the martyrdom of Fr. Jean de Brebeuf.[7] Another letter from Fr.
Brebeuf, written in 1637, described an epidemic that swept the native
populations and the blame that was placed on the Europeans for having caused
it.[8] According to Dubois,
however, both the Huron and the Iroquois “remained populous, strong, and
autonomous” nations even after the epidemic.[9] It seems the French and native populations developed
a relationship of interdependence upon each other that took the form of an
“intercultural alliance.”[10]
6
The primary methodology used by
French Jesuits was twofold: that of political diplomacy as well as
philanthropy.[11]The
Jesuits were simply never able to convert the indigenous peoples to
Christianity wholesale. Notwithstanding years of violent conflict and hundreds
of missionaries killed, the Europeans and natives settled into an uneasy
relationship of acceptance. There never were large numbers of French in New
France to begin with. For assorted reasons, the majority of French colonists
preferred the Caribbean as a region to colonize. Perhaps due to the rugged
terrain and climate of Canada, the violence with the native peoples, or the
difficult trade in furs as the primary source of trade, or perhaps a combination
of all three, led to the sparse numbers. This, combined with the history of war,
epidemic, and the Huron resistance to Christianization led to the decrease of
conversions and the failure of missions, at least in the eyes of the European
Catholics and as compared to other regions of the New World.
Spanish
Jesuits in South America
The Spanish maintained a much
firmer control over South America than did their French counterparts in New
France. Spain began to colonize the area earlier than the French, greater
numbers of officials, both civilian and military, came to the Americas, and of
those that did, they established an encomienda infrastructure.[12] The encomienda was
a land grant given to a Spaniard for a specific area that allowed him to
collect resources and taxes. The holder of the grant, an
7
encomendero, could also utilize labor from local
indigenous villages. In exchange for work, taxes, and resources, the encomendero
provided military protection and religious instruction.[13] The area of South America
became divided primarily between Portugal, which had claimed modern-day Brazil
and the Spanish, which claimed the rest of the continent. The government of
Portugal did not desire to officially colonize Brazil preferring instead to
offer large land grants to wealthy individuals.[14] The border between
Portuguese Brazil and the remainder of Spanish South America was often in
dispute and would play a significant role in the events affecting the lives of
the native tribes, in particular the Guarani people who lived along this
border in Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
When
Spanish Jesuits arrived in this area, they established missions which they
called reducciones, translated as “reductions.” Like the encomienda, the
reductions provided both protection and religious instruction. The Jesuits
arrived in South America in the mid-1500’s and by the early seventeenth century
established a number of missions and centers of learning in the area that was
home to the Guarani.[15] In The Guarani and
their Missions: A Socioeconomic History, Julia Sarreal argues that the
Guarani missions in what is called the Rio de la Plata region, were the most
successful of all the Jesuit missions in terms of “number of indigenous
8
inhabitants, economic prosperity, and historical
importance.”[16]
The first members of the Society of Jesus to enter Paraguay were three Spanish
Jesuits and three Italian Jesuits, led by Father Diego de Torres.[17] This information, and
much of what is known of those early years were documented by Father Antonio
Ruiz de Montoya, a Jesuit of Spanish descent who was born in Lima, Peru. Father
de Montoya is known for his prolific writing on the history of the Jesuit
missions as well as his defense of the indigenous Guarani.
The first Guarani reductions began
in 1609 and reached their peak population of approximately 140,000 in 1723.[18] The Guarani relocated to
these missions, mostly of their own accord, and were converted to Catholicism
receiving an education, protection, and medical care. The native population
within the reductions provided labor and received food and supplies from a
communal storehouse. The primary difference between the encomienda and
the reducciones was that labor on the encomienda was often forced
producing for the benefit of the landowner. The Jesuit missions were
established and often ran similar to a communal life of mutual benefit. This
certainly helped sway the Guarani to relocate to the reductions but does not
adequately explain why they would want to do so in the first place. To
understand the reasons, it is necessary to look at the political relations
between Spain and Portugal in South America.
9
Continual skirmishes along the border between Brazil and Paraguay/Uruguay
would lead to constant slight changes in territory as the border moved slightly
from one side to the other. This situation would not get rectified until the
Treaty of Madrid in 1750.[19] Caught in the middle were
the Guarani, whose ancestral home in the Rio de la Plata encompassed lands on
both sides of the whimsical border drawn up by European powers.
As stated previously, Portugal had
no desire to officially colonize South America and left the administration to
the landowners. As a result, Portuguese slave-traders, many out of Sao Paolo, conducted
raiding parties deep into the Guarani territory capturing as many as they could,
bringing them back into Portuguese-controlled territory and selling them on the
open market. These raiding parties would later come to be known as Paulistas
or bandeirantes.[20] The Guarani found
protection within the reduction, and at times, the Jesuits would even arm them
so that they could defend themselves. Father Antonio Ruiz de Montoya himself
reported from his own witness, after visiting Rio de Janeiro, that between 1628
and 1630, over sixty thousand natives were captured by the Paulistas from
the areas protected by the reductions.[21] Father de Montoya goes on
to say that they “are being used in an incredibly cruel and inhumane manner.”[22]
10
Conclusion
The French Jesuits who came to the
area of modern-day Canada faced a hostile environment and hostile native
populations. They were never afforded the full support of their government and made
do without an established infrastructure in either colonials or resources. The
Hurons they interacted with initially were steadfast in their desire to
continue practicing their ancient religious customs and beliefs and showed no
desire to convert to Christianity. Later interactions with both the Iroquois
and the Algonquin, with whom the Hurons often warred, would prove even more dangerous
for the Jesuit priests. Although the environment within which the missionaries
found themselves, and within which the native populations lived, was often
filled with conflict, the Hurons felt no need to seek protection from the
French. A policy of diplomacy first eventually helped as the Jesuits fell into
a relationship of “intercultural alliance” with the Hurons. Both sought the
help of each other without recourse to one being dominant over the other. The
Jesuits needed the Hurons to survive in the harsh climate of Canada, both
climatically and politically.
In the Rio de la Plata region of
South America, Spanish Jesuits also found native populations who often warred
with each other. Like the French, many Spanish Jesuits faced martyrdom in
initial encounters with these indigenous. However, the Spanish had established
a strong infrastructure that operated from the southwest of North America
through Mexico and Central America, down to South America, back up to the
Caribbean and even into Florida. Jesuit reductions received solid financial
support. They also enjoyed a substantial number of officials and clergymen to
maintain the structure. The Guarani missions, deep in the rough jungle of
Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay served as an essential element to the lifestyle
of those Guarani
11
who fled their indigenous homes for the safety of the
reductions. Large numbers of these eagerly converted to Christianity.
While geography, infrastructure,
politics, and methodology all contributed to some degree to differences in
success or failure in maintaining strong missions and numbers of conversions,
these were not the most crucial factor in the difference between New France and
Rio de la Plata. Running from the Portuguese slave trade, the Guarani found a
safe place in the reductions. Due to political ramifications, the protection
provided by Spanish missions from Portuguese raiding parties fell in lands that
were disputed territory. Converting to Christianity would also give them some
hope of escaping slavery if caught by the slave-traders. However, even being
Christian did not always protect the Guarani from deplorable situations.[23]The Guarani attempted to
fight back but were ill-equipped. The Spanish Jesuits supplied them with arms
and sometimes joined them in conflict.[24] Father de Montoya tells
us of the horrific treatment of the Guarani at the hands of the slavers: “they
also suffer the hatred of the Paulistas in Brazil…who inflict havoc, death, and
captivity,” and again “they have assaulted towns that were already Christian,
killing many innocent people, and taking many away as prisoners to Brazil…”[25] In the end, the only safe
place for the Guarani was to move into the Jesuit reductions where they had
some hope of avoiding slavery and violent death.
12
Bibliography
AbĂ©, Takeo. “Conclusion: The French Jesuit Mission
Revisited.” In The Jesuit Mission to New
France: A New Interpretation in
the Light of the Earlier Jesuit Experience in Japan, 201–8. Brill, 2011.
205. http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1163/j.ctt1w8h1cb.11
Andrien, Kenneth. “The Spanish Atlantic System.” Atlantic
History: A Critical Appraisal. Eds.
Jack Greene and Philip Morgan. New
York: Oxford University Press, 2009
De Brebeuf, Jean. Letter to Mutius Vitelleschi dated 1636. Jesuit
Relations, vol. II. Ed. Reuben
Gold Thwaites. 1896-1901. English
translation by Thom Mentrack.
http://puffin.creighton.edu/jesuit/relations/relations_11.html
De Brebeuf, Jean.
Letter to Mutius Vitelleschi dated 1637. Jesuit Relations, vol. II. Ed. Reuben
Gold Thwaites. 1896-1901. English
translation by Thom Mentrack.
http://puffin.creighton.edu/jesuit/relations/relations_11.html
De Montoya, Antonio Ruiz. The Spiritual Conquest: Early
Years of the Jesuit Missions in
Paraguay. Translated and
edited by Barbara A. Ganson and Clinia M. Saffi. Chestnut Hill: The Jesuit
Conference, Inc., 2017
Dubois, Laurent. “The French Atlantic.” Atlantic History:
A Critical Appraisal. Eds. Jack
Greene and Philip Morgan. New York:
Oxford University Press, 2009
13
Le Jeune, Paul. “Account of What Transpired in New France in
the Year 1636,” The Jesuit
Relations and Allied Documents:
Travels and Explorations of the Jesuit Missionaries in New France, 1610-1791,
ed. Reuben Gold Thwaites (Cleveland: The Burrows Brothers Co., 1897), Vol. IX:
Quebec: 1636 National Humanities Center, 2006,
http://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/pds/amerbegin/settlement/text3/JesuitRelations1636.pdf
McShea, Bronwen. Apostles of Empire: The Jesuits and New
France. Lincoln: University of
Nebraska Press, 2019
Monteiro, John. Blacks of the Land: Indian Slavery,
Settler Society, and the Portuguese Colonial
Enterprise in South America.
Edited and translated by James Woodward and Barbara Weinstein. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2018
O’Malley, John. The Jesuits: A History from Ignatius to
the Present. London: Rowman &
Littlefield Publishing Group, 2014
Regnaut, Christophe. Undated report. “A Veritable Account of
the Martyrdom and Blessed
Death of Father Jean de Breboeuf.” The
Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents: Travels and Explorations of the Jesuit
Missionaries in New France, 1610-1791, ed. Reuben Gold Thwaites (Cleveland:
The Burrows Brothers Co., 1897), Vol. 34. 25-37
Sarreal, Julia. The
Guarani and their Missions: A Socioeconomic History. Stanford: Stanford
University Press, 2014
14
Thornton, John. A Cultural History of the Atlantic World,
1250-1820. New York: Cambridge
University Press, 2012
[1]
O’Malley, John. The Jesuits: A History from Ignatius to the Present. London:
Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, 2014. 2
[2]
Given Ignatius de Loyola’s military background along with the militant nature
of the order, “company” often gave the impression of a military organization,
instead of the original meaning in Italian of “companions.” The English translation of the Latin name
“Societas Iesu,” Society of Jesus, is more in keeping with the original intent.
[3]
Le Jeune, Paul. “Account of What Transpired in New France in the Year 1636,” The
Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents: Travels and Explorations of the Jesuit
Missionaries in New France, 1610-1791, ed. Reuben Gold Thwaites (Cleveland:
The Burrows Brothers Co., 1897), Vol. IX: Quebec: 1636 National Humanities
Center, 2006, http://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/pds/amerbegin/settlement/text3/JesuitRelations1636.pdf
[4]
McShea, Bronwen. Apostles of Empire: The Jesuits and New France. Lincoln:
University of Nebraska Press. 6
[5] Dubois, Laurent. “The French Atlantic.” Atlantic History: A Critical Appraisal. Eds. Jack
Greene and Philip Morgan. New York: Oxford University Press, 2009. 139
[6]De
Brebeuf, Jean. Letter to Mutius Vitelleschi dated 1636. Jesuit Relations, vol.
II. Ed. Reuben Gold Thwaites. 1896-1901. English translation by Thom Mentrack. http://puffin.creighton.edu/jesuit/relations/relations_11.html
[7]
Regnaut, Christophe. Undated report. “A Veritable Account of the Martyrdom and
Blessed Death of Father Jean de Breboeuf.” The Jesuit Relations and Allied
Documents: Travels and Explorations of the Jesuit Missionaries in New France,
1610-1791, ed. Reuben Gold Thwaites (Cleveland: The Burrows Brothers Co.,
1897), Vol. 34. 25-37.
[8]
De Brebeuf, Jean. Letter to Mutius Vitelleschi dated 1637. Jesuit Relations,
vol. II. Ed. Reuben Gold Thwaites. 1896-1901. English translation by Thom
Mentrack. http://puffin.creighton.edu/jesuit/relations/relations_11.html
[9]
Dubois, Laurent. “The French Atlantic.”
Atlantic History: A Critical Appraisal. Eds. Jack Greene and Philip Morgan.
New York: Oxford University Press, 2009. 142.
[10]
Ibid.
[11]
AbĂ©, Takeo. “Conclusion: The French Jesuit Mission Revisited.”
In The Jesuit Mission to New France: A New Interpretation in the Light of
the Earlier Jesuit Experience in Japan, 201–8. Brill, 2011. 205. http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1163/j.ctt1w8h1cb.11.
[12]
Andrien, Kenneth. “The Spanish Atlantic System.” Atlantic History: A
Critical Appraisal. Eds. Jack Greene and Philip Morgan. New York: Oxford
University Press, 2009. 59.
[13]
Andrien, Kenneth. “The Spanish Atlantic System.” Atlantic History: A
Critical Appraisal. Eds. Jack Greene and Philip Morgan. New York: Oxford
University Press, 2009. 59.
[14]
Thornton, John. A Cultural History of the Atlantic
World, 1250-1820. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012. 49.
[15]
Monteiro, John. Blacks of the Land: Indian Slavery,
Settler Society, and the Portuguese Colonial Enterprise in South America. Edited
and translated by James Woodward and Barbara Weinstein. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2018. 7.
[16] Sarreal, Julia. The Guarani and their
Missions: A Socioeconomic History. Stanford: Stanford University Press,
2014. 1.
[17]
De Montoya, Antonio Ruiz. The Spiritual Conquest: Early
Years of the Jesuit Missions in Paraguay. Translated and edited by Barbara
A. Ganson and Clinia M. Saffi. Chestnut Hill: The Jesuit Conference, Inc., 2017.
31.
[18]
Sarreal, Julia. The Guarani and their Missions: A Socioeconomic History.
Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2014. 1.
[19]
Sarreal, Julia. The Guarani and their Missions: A Socioeconomic History.
Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2014. 1.
[20]
Ibid. 22.
[21]
De Montoya, Antonio Ruiz. The Spiritual Conquest: Early Years
of the Jesuit Missions in Paraguay. Translated and edited by Barbara A.
Ganson and Clinia M. Saffi. Chestnut Hill: The Jesuit Conference, Inc., 2017. 343.
[22]
Ibid.
[23]
De Montoya, Antonio Ruiz. The Spiritual Conquest: Early Years of the Jesuit
Missions in Paraguay. Translated and edited by Barbara A. Ganson and Clinia
M. Saffi. Chestnut Hill: The Jesuit Conference, Inc., 2017. 341.
[24]
Ibid. 327-328.
[25]
Ibid. 341.
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