“This is the first time I was ever in a city where you couldn’t throw a brick without breaking a church window,” quipped the American writer.
That was in 1888. Today, as Montreal prepares to mark the 375th year of its founding, those bells would probably be silenced if left to the officials planning a year of celebrations.
As reported before Christmas, despite several proposals to honour MontrealƵapp religious heritage, . That means scant recognition for not only the founding of a Catholic missionary outpost on the St. Lawrence in 1642, but a cold shoulder towards the contributions made by Catholic institutions and individuals to the political, economic, cultural and spiritual life of a city that, for much of its history, was CanadaƵapp largest metropolis.
There will be fireworks, art exhibitions, light shows, concerts and other events to showcase the social and cultural vibrancy of Montreal. No doubt, it will be fun. But, officially, there will be few nods to MontrealƵapp deep Catholic roots or to the fact that the city owes its very existence to men and women of deep faith.
ItƵapp up to “individual religious sects to decide how to deal with their religious heritage,” said a planning committee spokesperson. So this is no oversight. ItƵapp a deliberate decision, and it seems petty.
Montreal Archbishop Christian Lépine calls the founding of Montreal “a God-inspired” undertaking. The city began as a missionary outpost which, upriver in Quebec City, was regarded as a grand folly that would never last. But a small band of missionaries endured and, before their first winter ended, erected a wooden cross atop Mount Royal to proclaim their intentions.
Today itƵapp near impossible to wander old Montreal without encountering Catholic history. The Hôtel-Dieu de Montréal, North AmericaƵapp first hospital, was founded in 1645 by nuns from the Religious Hospitallers of St. Joseph. The original Notre-Dame Basilica dates back to 1672. Saint-Suplice Seminary, the oldest continuously standing structure in Montreal, opened in 1687. The remains of CanadaƵapp first female saint, St. Marguerite Bourgeoys, who opened MontrealƵapp first schools, are buried in Notre-Dame-de-Bon-Secours Chapel. Visitors can pray in the room where St. Marguerite d’Youville, founder of the Sisters of Charity, served soup to the poor in the 18th century.
There is no harm in celebrating the city that Montreal has become. But to minimize its rich Catholic history, to downplay the ChurchƵapp enduring social contributions, to devalue its gifts of art, literature and architecture, is misguided. Montreal may have become a secular society but its heritage is Catholic.
That deserves to be recognized and celebrated.