
Brother André expressed a saint’s faith by a lifelong devotion to St.
Joseph.
Sickness and weakness dogged André from birth. He was the eighth of 12 children born to a
French Canadian couple near Montreal. Adopted at 12, when both parents had died, he became a
farmhand. Various trades followed: shoemaker, baker, blacksmith—all failures. He was a factory
worker in the United States during the boom times of the Civil War.
At 25, he applied for
entrance into the Congregation of the Holy Cross. After a year’s novitiate, he was not admitted
because of his weak health. But with an extension and the urging of Bishop Bourget (see Marie-Rose
Durocher, October 6), he was finally received. He was given the humble job of doorkeeper at Notre
Dame College in Montreal, with additional duties as sacristan, laundry worker and messenger. “When I
joined this community, the superiors showed me the door, and I remained 40 years,” he
said.
In his little room near the door, he spent much of the night on his knees. On his windowsill,
facing Mount Royal, was a small statue of St. Joseph, to whom he had been devoted since childhood.
When asked about it he said, “Some day, St. Joseph is going to be honored in a very special way on
Mount Royal!”
When he heard someone was ill, he visited to bring cheer and to pray with the sick person. He
would rub the sick person lightly with oil taken from a lamp burning in the college chapel. Word of
healing powers began to spread.
When an epidemic broke out at a nearby college, André volunteered to nurse. Not
one person died. The trickle of sick people to his door became a flood. His superiors were uneasy;
diocesan authorities were suspicious; doctors called him a quack. “I do not cure,” he said again and
again. “St. Joseph cures.” In the end he needed four secretaries to handle the 80,000 letters he
received each year.
For many years the Holy Cross authorities had tried to buy land on Mount Royal. Brother André
and others climbed the steep hill and planted medals of St. Joseph. Suddenly, the owners yielded.
André collected 200 dollars to build a small chapel and began receiving visitors there—smiling
through long hours of listening, applying St. Joseph’s oil. Some were cured, some not. The pile of
crutches, canes and braces grew.
The chapel also grew. By 1931 there were gleaming walls, but money ran out.
“Put a statue of St. Joseph in the middle. If he wants a roof over his head, he’ll get it.” The
magnificent Oratory on Mount Royal took 50 years to build. The sickly boy who could not hold a job
died at 92.
He is buried at the Oratory. He was beatified in 1982 and canonized in 2010. At his
canonization in October 2010, Pope Benedict XVI said that St. Andre "lived the beatitude of the pure
of heart."
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