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Servant of God

Father Joseph Verbis Lafleur

1912 to 1944

“I shall stay with you until the end.”

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Path to Sainthood

USCCB bishops voted 99% to advance, June 2021

Servant of God

2020

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Venerable

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Blessed

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Saint

The Chaplain Who Would Not Leave His Men

Joseph Verbis Lafleur was born on January 24, 1912, in Ville Platte, Louisiana, a small Cajun town in the heart of Evangeline Parish. Raised in a deeply Catholic family, he entered the seminary and was ordained a priest for the Diocese of Lafayette in 1938. Two years later, with war looming, he volunteered as a United States Army chaplain.

Father Lafleur was stationed at Clark Field in the Philippines when the Japanese attacked on December 8, 1941. As the situation deteriorated, he was offered evacuation. He refused. “Where my men go, I go,” he said. When Corregidor fell in May 1942, Lafleur was captured along with thousands of American and Filipino soldiers. He entered the brutal Japanese prisoner of war camp system.

For two years in the camps, Father Lafleur ministered to his fellow prisoners. He celebrated Mass in secret with whatever materials he could find. He heard confessions, administered last rites, and comforted the dying. He shared his own meager rations with the sick. Survivors later testified that his presence kept men alive, that his faith was the one thing the Japanese could not take from them.

On September 7, 1944, the Japanese prison ship SS Shinyo Maru was torpedoed by an American submarine off Zamboanga in the southern Philippines. As the ship began to sink, Father Lafleur helped other prisoners climb the ladder to the deck. When urged to save himself, he refused, staying below to help more men escape. He went down with the ship. He was thirty-two years old. He was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Service Cross (twice), the Bronze Star, and the Purple Heart (twice). In 2020, the Diocese of Lafayette opened his cause for canonization, and in June 2021 the USCCB bishops voted 99% to advance it. Greater love has no man than this: to lay down his life for his friends.

In His Own Words

I shall stay with you until the end.

To his men before capture

Where my men go, I go.

Refusing evacuation from Corregidor, 1942

God is here, even in this place.

To fellow prisoners of war

Timeline
1912Born January 24 in Ville Platte, Louisiana, to a Cajun Catholic family
1938Ordained a priest for the Diocese of Lafayette in Louisiana
1940Volunteers as a United States Army chaplain
1941Stationed at Clark Field in the Philippines when war begins on December 8
1942Refuses evacuation from Corregidor; stays with his men as the fortress falls to Japan in May
1942Captured after the fall of Corregidor; enters the Japanese prisoner of war camp system
1943Spends two years ministering to fellow prisoners: celebrating Mass in secret, hearing confessions, comforting the dying
1944September 7: the prison ship SS Shinyo Maru is torpedoed off Zamboanga. Refuses to leave the sinking ship, stays behind helping other men climb the ladder
1944Dies at sea. Awarded the Distinguished Service Cross (twice), Bronze Star, and Purple Heart (twice)
2020Cause for canonization opened September 5 by the Diocese of Lafayette in Louisiana; declared Servant of God
2021USCCB bishops vote 99% to advance the cause of canonization
Support Father Lafleur’s Cause

A Cajun priest who refused to leave his men, ministered in POW camps for two years, and gave his life helping others escape a sinking ship. The USCCB voted 99% to advance his cause. Pray for the advancement of his cause.

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Born

Jan 24, 1912

Ville Platte, LA

Died

Sep 7, 1944

Off Zamboanga, Philippines

Cause Opened

Sep 5, 2020

Diocese of Lafayette

Stage

Servant of God

USCCB 99% vote 2021

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