From Meghan Ferrara of
Regina Magazine:
“A
friend suggested ‘Why don’t you do the War of the Vendée?’ Jim Morlino
recounts. “And I said, ‘The what?’ I’d never heard the word; I had no
idea what he was talking about. That was a period of history and an
event that had escaped me.”
The War of
the Vendee (1793 to 1796) was an armed rebellion against the French
Republican troops which resulted in a general massacre of over 100,000
Catholics – men, women and children – in the west of France. As an
early modern example of revisionist history, this shocking genocide was
completely whitewashed from French history, and in fact until recently
denied by the French government.
[...]
Jim
clarified how, despite the horrific efforts of the Infernal Columns to
wipe out resistance to the Revolution and to eliminate the Catholic
population, the Vendean soldiers conducted themselves with dignity and
honor.
“The
architects of the French Revolution knew exactly what their generals
were doing, as proved by documentation which still exists in the
National Archives.” Though they fought with cunning and used their
knowledge of the land to their advantage, the Vendeans also treated
captured Republican soldiers humanely, even when this was difficult.
On one
occasion, when his soldiers wanted to exact revenge against Republican
prisoners, Louis d’Elbée urged them to recite the Our Father. At the
words, “forgive us our trespasses,” the Vendeans’ anger dissipated and
they abandoned their plans for retribution.
Later, on
his deathbed, Vendee commander Charles de Bonchamps pardoned five
thousand captured Republicans. This act was commemorated by a statue
designed by the French sculptor Pierre Jean David, whose father was
among the pardoned.
The sacrifice of these Vendeans ensured the survival of the Faith in France. (Read more.)
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