Francis Douglas (priest) explained

Type:priest
Honorific-Prefix:The Reverend
Francis Douglas
Honorific-Suffix:S.S.C.M.E.
Church:Roman Catholic Church
Ordination:29 October 1934
Ordained By:Archbishop Thomas O'Shea
Birth Name:Francis Vernon Douglas
Birth Date:22 May 1910
Birth Place:Johnsonville, Wellington, New Zealand
Death Place:Longos, Kalayaan, Laguna, Philippines
Nationality:New Zealander
Parents:George Charles Douglas (father)
Kathleen Gaffney (mother)
Occupation:Missionary Priest
Venerated:Roman Catholic Church

Francis Vernon Douglas (22 May 1910 – July 1943) was a New Zealand priest of the Missionary Society of St. Columban who was killed in the Philippines by Japanese soldiers in 1943.

Biography

He was born in Johnsonville, in Wellington, the fifth of eight children (five sons and three daughters) of Kathleen (née Gaffney) and George Charles Douglas, an Australian-born railway worker. His mother was a devout Catholic from County Sligo, Ireland, and his father became a Catholic in 1926.[1]

Douglas trained for the Catholic priesthood at Holy Cross Seminary, Mosgiel. Within a few months of his ordination, at the end of 1934, he applied to join the Missionary Society of St. Columban. He was curate at New Plymouth when he left to join the society at the start of 1937. He was appointed to the Philippines in July 1939. He was posted to Pililla. Five years later during the Japanese occupation he was taken by secret police looking for information on guerrillas active in his area.

Over three days in the Church of Saint James the Apostle in Paete, Laguna, he was beaten and tortured, the presumption being that police were trying to extort information from him about guerrillas whose confessions he may have heard. He remained silent and on 27 July 1943, very weak but still conscious, was put on a truck with a guard of Japanese soldiers. He was never seen again. He is remembered in the name of a boys college in New Plymouth, Francis Douglas Memorial College.[2]

Beatification

In collaboration with the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Wellington, the Columban Missionaries are preparing the steps in opening Douglas' cause for sainthood.[3] [4] He is honored for his steadfast devotion to his religious duties, and stands with Mother Mary Joseph Aubert and Emmet McHardy as one of the New Zealand Catholic Church’s three models of sanctity.[5]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/biographies/5d23/douglas-francis-vernon Hugh Laracy. 'Douglas, Francis Vernon', from the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand; updated 7 June 2013.
  2. Michael O'Meeghan, page 260
  3. Web site: Cause for Canonisation. St. Columbans Mission Society. 25 June 2019. 17 January 2021.
  4. Web site: Father Francis Vernon Douglas. Patricia Brooks. 1 March 2020. Marist Messenger. 17 January 2021.
  5. Web site: Douglas, Francis Vernon. Hugh Laracy. Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. 17 January 2021.