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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Priest who helped lepers to be sainted

Father Damien is pictured two months before he died in 1889.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Associated Press

VATICAN CITY – A 19th-century Belgian priest who ministered to leprosy patients in Hawaii, and died of the disease, will be declared a saint this year at a Vatican ceremony presided over by Pope Benedict XVI.

The Rev. Damien de Veuster’s canonization date of Oct. 11 was set Saturday.

Born Joseph de Veuster in 1840, he took the name Damien and went to Hawaii in 1864 to join other missionaries of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary. Nine years later, he began ministering to leprosy patients on the remote Kalaupapa peninsula of Molokai island, where some 8,000 people had been banished amid an epidemic in Hawaii in the 1850s.

The priest eventually contracted the disease, also known as Hansen’s disease, and died in 1889 at age 49.

“He went there (to Hawaii) knowing that he could never return,” the Rev. Alfred Bell, who spearheaded Damien’s canonization cause, told Vatican Radio. “He suffered a lot, but he stayed.”

De Veuster was beatified – a step toward sainthood – in 1995.