Posted on 03/21/2008 7:29:54 AM PDT by marshmallow
Executed for murder in 1957, the Church is considering his beatification.
"Only five hours to live! In five hours, I shall see Jesus.
As day dawned over Paris, a slim, dark-haired young man stepped through a doorway into the courtyard of La Santé Prison. Surrounded by guards, hands and feet shackled, he walked to the guillotine erected in a corner of the yard during the night. He was pale but otherwise calm.
On the scaffold, he asked the priest beside him for the crucifix and kissed it. Before the blade fell, he uttered his last words: Holy Virgin, have pity on me!
The date: October 1,1957.
Jacques Fesch, a 27-years-old playboy, was beheaded for the murder of a police officer following a bungled robbery.
Yet many Catholics in France now believe that the killer died a saint. Thirty years after his execution, the archbishop of Paris, Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger, signed a decree that may one day see him beatified.
The story begins near the Paris Stock Exchange on February 25, 1954. During the evening rush hour, Fesch arrived with a friend at a office of Alexandre Silberstein, a currency dealer in the Rue Vivenne. Om the previous day, Fesch had arranged to change 2 million francs into gold bars.
Silberstein asked his son to bring the gold from the safe. With the young man out of the way, Fesch pulled a revolver from his briefcase, pointed it at Silberstein, and demanded the cash from the till. His friend, meanwhile turned and fled.
As Silberstein tried to reason with him, Fesch hit the dealer twice across the head with the revolver butt. He grabbed 300,000 francs and ran.
Once outside, he tried to melt into the crowd on the busy street but Silberstein recovered very quickly. Running from his office, he shouted to passers-by that Fesch had robbed him.
Now, with a crowd at his heels, the thief took refuge in a building on Les Grandes Boulevards. Minutes later, he re-emerged, attempting to play the part of an innocent citizen. Immediately someone cried, Thats him!
By this time, Jean Vergne, a 35-years-old police officer, had arrived at the scene. Vergne drew his revolver and ordered Fesch to put his hands up. Instead, Fesch reached inside his raincoat pocket for his own gun, and fired three times. Vergne, a widower with a 4-year-old daughter, was shot through the heart.
Enraged, the crowd chased the killer into the Richelieu-Drouot Metro station. Fesch, still firing, wounded one persuer in the neck before he was finally surrounded and overcome.
The public was shocked to learn that Vergnes murderer was no common criminal, but the son of a wealthy banker, Georges Fesch. Jacques, born April 6, 1930, had idled his way trhough school, then travelled to Germany with the army. After he completed his service, his father found him a well-paying job at the bank, but he soon tired of it.
Georges Fesch had never taken much interest in his son, who was closer to his mother, Marthe.
Eventually, Jacquess parents parted.
After the stint at the bank, Jacques had no real occupation. He sailed boats, rode horses, drove fast cars, and hung out with a band, where he tried to learn the trumpet. In a civil ceremony at age 21, he married Pierrette Polack, a neighbors daughter who was expecting his child. His anti-semitic parents were horrified: Pierrette, herself Catholic, had a Jewish father.
A daughter was born, but Fesch continued to see other women.
With one of these he had an illegitimate son, Gerard, whom he abandoned to public care. Soon after, Jacques and Pierrette separated, but remained friends.
Bored and restless, Jacques Fesch now conceived a grand plan. He would buy a boat, sail away to the South Pacific, and a start a new life in the sun. For this, of course, he would need money. He petitioned his parents first, but, for once, they refused.
Very well, he would get the cash for himself. He would rob Alexandre Silberstein.
That his mad scheme might go wrong seems not to have occurred to Jacques. Sitting in court with a bandaged head, his mood was defiant. He said he was only sorry he had not carried a submachine gun.
Later, to the chaplain at La Santé Prison, he declared, Ive got no faith. No need to trouble yourself about me.
But Paul Baudet, his defense attorney and a deeply spiritual Catholic, resolved to fight, not only for his clients life, but also for his soul. At first, Fesch viewed the lawyers efforts with amused disdain. He called him Pope Paul and Torquemada (after the infamous Spanish inquisitor).
Fesch had another advocate in the tough-minded Dominican chaplain, Père Devoyod, and in Brother Thomas, a young Benedictine who knew Pierrette and wrote regularly from his monastery. Feschs mother-in-law, Madame Polack also cared for him as for a son.
From the outset, Fesch had a little doubt that he would face the guillotine. Yet, despite his bravado, he was afraid. He was also sick with guilt at the trouble he had brought upon his family. Yet he remained a skeptic, until the night of February 28, 1955, when he experienced a sudden and dramatic conversion. He wrote an account of it two months before his execution:
I was in bed, eyes open, really suffering for the first time in my life ... It was then that a cry burst from my breast, an appeal for help My God and instantly, like a violent wind which passes over without anyone knowing where it comes from, the spirit of the Lord seized me by the throat.
I had an impression of infinite power and kindness and, from that moment onward, I believed with an unshakeable conviction that has never left me.
Fesch was to spend another two and a half years in prison.
During that time, he lived a life even more ascetic than the rules demanded. He went to bed at 7 each evening, gave up chocolate and cigarettes, and took only a half-hour of exercise each day. To Brother Thomas he wrote, In prison there two possible solutions: You can rebel against your situation, or you can regard yourself as a monk. Though he suffered periods of depression, his fear of death was now supplanted by an even stronger feeling the fear of dying badly.
Meanwhile, the legal process ground slowly on. More than three years after his crime, Fesch finally came to trial. Baudet argued that the shooting had not been premeditated, but was the act of a frightened man facing a hostile crowd.
Fesch himself now expressed remorse for the murder of Jean Vergne and for the grief he had caused the officers family. This feeling is also shown movingly in his letters and in the journal, published after his death, which he dedicated to his daughter, Veronique.
Neither Baudets eloquence nor Feschs remorse moved the court. At 7:45 p.m. on April 8, 1957, Jacques Fesch was sentenced to death.
Though he continued to live an intense prayer life, Fesch did not find it easy to accept his fate.
Since his crime was unpremeditated, he believed that he did not deserve to die. He was tempted to hate those who were sending him to the guillotine, but he overcame the temptation. May each drop of my blood wipe out a mortal sin, he wrote.
News of his conversion began spreading, and some began to show sympathy for the repentant killer. His final hope lay with the French president, René Coty, a man known for his humanity. But Coty was under strong police pressure not to show mercy, especially at a time when police officers were being murdered by Algerian terrorists.
Tell your client that he has all my esteem and that I wanted very much to reprieve him, the president replied to Baudets personal appeal. But if I did that, I would put the lives of other police officers in danger. He asked that Fesch accept his death so that officers lives might be saved.
Coty admitted later that he passed a sleepless night before Fesch was guillotined. As the president lay awake, Fesch wrote in his journal: The last day of struggle, at this time tomorrow I shall be in heaven! May I die as the Lord wishes me to die Night falls and I feel sad, sad I will meditate on the agony of Our Lord in the Garden of Olives, but good Jesus, help me! ... Only five hours to live! In five hours, I shall see Jesus.
Gerard, his abandoned son, was also on his mind. He pleaded that the boy should be well cared for.
The publication of Feschs journal and letters created widespread interest among the French public, and touched young people especially.
Those who seek Feschs beatification point to his mystical experience, his fervent spirituality, his self-conquest, and his victorious battle against the demons of bitterness and despair. But the move to beatify him has created controversy.
Where are we headed, if we start beatifying criminals? demanded a police union chief. Another, while accepting feschs sincerity, warned that the proposed step might encourage offenders to use conversion as a ploy to avoid punishment. One editorial predicted dryly that Fesch would become the patron saint of gunmen, who would in future pack a votive medal of St. Jacques along with their Magnum 357s.
Vergnes daughter, now a lawyer, has refused to comment publicy, but privately has met with cardinal Lustiger.
Frequently, Fesch is likened to the good Thief on Calvary. Nobody is ever lost in Gods eyes, even when society has condemned him, Lustiger has said. He wishes to see Fesch beatified to give a great hope to those who despise themselves, who see themselves as irredeemably lost.
An edited version of an article published at Solidarity Mission.
A reflection for Good Friday as we meditate on the Crucifixion of Jesus and the two who died with Him on Calvary.
That doesn't mean society should give him sainthood. He was evil and he's just one of many who "claim" to have found Jesus in prison so sounds like hogwash to me.
Have we become so cynical in our modern times?
Freep-mail me to get on or off my pro-life and Catholic List:
Please ping me to note-worthy Pro-Life or Catholic threads, or other threads of interest.
Very interesting, and assuming he was sincere, I’m sure Fesch is with the Lord now. However, like the thief on the cross, the Church shouldn’t give him a title of sainthood.
Still, true visitations from God do happen, and true repentances do happen. Now the Church starts on the road to possible canonization, a road whose conclusion will need two well-investigated and documented miracles.
I think we can afford to let God have the last word.
You wrote:
“That doesn’t mean society should give him sainthood.”
Society doesn’t. God does.
“He was evil and he’s just one of many who “claim” to have found Jesus in prison so sounds like hogwash to me.”
He did evil. Other evil minded men have changed, including a man once known as Saul. Also, Fesch did more than claim to have found Jesus. He actually lived the life of a man who had been converted.
You wrote:
“Very interesting, and assuming he was sincere, Im sure Fesch is with the Lord now. However, like the thief on the cross, the Church shouldnt give him a title of sainthood.”
If God has made him a saint, there is no reason why that should not be recognized on earth by the Church.
-ccm
Actually, tradition names the theif on the cross Dismis, St. Dismis. Otherwise known as the theif who stole Heaven.
theif....thief. Whatever.
The wikipedia article on St. Dismas borders on the pious:
"Though never canonized by the church, the Good Thief carries the sole distinction of being the only human to be canonized by Jesus himself, if by canonized one means the formal recognition of a person's place in heaven."
“That doesn't mean society should give him sainthood.”
“Society” doesn't give anyone sainthood, at least not the real thing. God gives sainthood. The Catholic Church merely recognizes publicly that fact in a small number of lives.
sitetest
“However, like the thief on the cross, the Church shouldnt give him a title of sainthood.”
The Church recognizes the Good Thief as a saint. St. Dismas’ feast day is March 25 in the Catholic Church.
sitetest
Though he did not partake in murder, he fathered a child out of wedlock.
For Saul of Taursus, he thought he was doing God'w will when he took part in the stoning of Saint Stephen. The Torah called for the death penalty for a number of sins.
Since we are raised on mercy, the concept of punishing sinners according to the LAWS OF THE TORAH will sound strange to us.
Saul thought he was doing God's will. He was obeying the commandment of the Torah.
Because he was a righteous man and tried to do God's will, Jesus Himself converted him -- in a very overt way.
Though Saul was struck down and blinded, he was healed of his blindness.
The key point is that Saul of Taursus THOUGHT he was doing God's will and that the Christians were false. God straightened him out.
Saul took the name Paul because it meant small.
Saul felt very small after being corrected by God's hand and being blinded...
He was responsible for carrying out the execution of Jesus.
Did Saint Longinius kill people in battle? Unknown.
But it is the church named after him (Saint Longinius) where one of the most important miracles of the Eucharist occurred...
Obviously, you haven’t read “Light Over Scaffold: Prison Letters of Jacques Fesch.” Would urge you to reserve judgment regarding the authenticity of his conversion until you’ve read it with an open mind (and heart).
Could have happened. Wasn’t St Paul once a Jewish version of the Taliban before he started to follow Jesus?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.