This Blessed Mother statue was carved by an Angel; Our Lady of Liesse aka Our Lady of Joy
By Larry Peterson
I'm sure most of us have heard of the people known as French Creoles. The Creoles are simply descendants of the settlers of Louisiana who were of French descent. The term also became applied to African-descended slaves who were born in Louisiana. One of those descendants was a woman by the name of Henriette Delille.
Meet Venerable Henriette Delille
Henriette was born in 1813 in New Orleans. Her father had been born in France, and her mom was a "free woman of color". Theirs was a common-law marriage, which, at the time, was quite typical in New Orleans. The people practiced the placage, a recognized "legal" system whereby European men, although legally married, entered into relationships with non-European women of African, Native American, or mixed-race descent. As a Creole, Henriette was a qualified 'candidate' for a placage common-law marriage, and her mom was resolved to see that it happened. Her daughter was not so determined.
Henriette's mother, on a quest to see that her daughter became a common-law wife to a wealthy white man, trained Henriette in the fine arts of dance, literature, and music. She made sure that Henriette attended as many "quadroon balls" as possible. There was one problem: Henriette was not interested. Her mind, heart, and soul were pointing in a different direction.
Henriette had developed a deep faith in Catholicism and its teachings. She wanted no part of the life her mother was planning for her. Instead, she became an outspoken adversary of the placage system because it violated the Church's teachings on the Sacrament of Matrimony. Henriette's objections to her mom's wishes began causing serious discord between mother and daughter.
When Henriette was 22 years old, her mother suffered a nervous breakdown, and the courts declared her "incompetent." Henriette was granted control of her mom's assets and immediately made provisions for her care. After ensuring her mom was well cared for and in good hands, she sold all the other assets. She took the remaining proceeds and founded a small, unrecognized order of nuns. They called themselves the Sisters of the Presentation. The order consisted of seven young Creole women and a young French woman.
Henriette and her little group began their fledgling ministry by taking in some elderly women who had nowhere to go. In effect, Henriette Delille had opened America's first Catholic home for the elderly. To this day, this is one of their primary charitable works. (Ironically, during the same year of 1836, a woman named Jeanne Jugan was in France acquiring a small cottage and beginning a new order. She brought a blind, disabled, elderly woman into her home, and so began the Little Sisters of the Poor.
Henriette Delille had officially devoted her life to God. In 1836, she wrote, "I wish to live and die for God." She and her group began caring for the sick, helping the poor, and teaching both free and enslaved men, women, and children. Henriette became a frequent sponsor for mixed-race babies at Baptisms in nearby St. Louis Cathedral and in St. Augustine Church. She also became very active in St. Claude School, founded for young women of color.
In 1837, Henriette's new order received recognition from the Holy See. In 1842, the congregation changed its name to the Sisters of the Holy Family. Today, the Sisters of the Holy Family have over 200 members continuing to serve the poor by operating free schools for children, retirement homes, and nursing homes in Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, California, and Belize.
Henriette Delille died in 1862. She was 49 years old. On March 27, 2010, Pope Benedict XVI declared that Henriette Delille had led a life of "heroic virtue" and claimed the Creole woman from New Orleans, "Venerable". When the sisters in her order heard the news, they quickly gathered together, headed to their chapel and sang the Te Deum, praising God for the great blessing. I believe that Venerable Henriette may well become the first African-American woman to be canonized a saint.
Venerable Henriette Delille, please pray for us.