  
   In 1776, when the American Revolution was beginning in the east, 
another part of the future United States was being born in California. 
That year a gray-robed Franciscan founded Mission San Juan Capistrano, 
now famous for its annually returning swallows. San Juan was the seventh
 of nine missions established under the direction of this indomitable 
Spaniard. 
 
Born on Spain’s island of Mallorca, Serra entered the Franciscan 
Order, taking the name of St. Francis’ childlike companion, Brother 
Juniper. Until he was 35, he spent most of his time in the 
classroom—first as a student of theology and then as a professor. He 
also became famous for his preaching. Suddenly he gave it all up and 
followed the yearning that had begun years before when he heard about 
the missionary work of St. Francis Solanus in South America. Junipero’s 
desire was to convert native peoples in the New World.  
Arriving 
by ship at Vera Cruz, Mexico, he and a companion walked the 250 miles to
 Mexico City. On the way Junipero’s left leg became infected by an 
insect bite and would remain a cross—sometimes life-threatening—for the 
rest of his life. For 18 years he worked in central Mexico and in the 
Baja Peninsula. He became president of the missions there.  
Enter 
politics: the threat of a Russian invasion south from Alaska. Charles 
III of Spain ordered an expedition to beat Russia to the territory. So 
the last two conquistadors—one military, one spiritual—began 
their quest. José de Galvez persuaded Junipero to set out with him for 
present-day Monterey, California. The first mission founded after the 
900-mile journey north was San Diego (1769). That year a shortage of 
food almost canceled the expedition. Vowing to stay with the local 
people, Junipero and another friar began a novena in preparation for St.
 Joseph’s day, March 19, the scheduled day of departure. On that day, 
the relief ship arrived.  
Other missions followed: Monterey/Carmel
 (1770); San Antonio and San Gabriel (1771); San Luís Obispo (1772); San
 Francisco and San Juan Capistrano (1776); Santa Clara (1777); San 
Buenaventura (1782). Twelve more were founded after Serra’s death.  
Junipero
 made the long trip to Mexico City to settle great differences with the 
military commander. He arrived at the point of death. The outcome was 
substantially what Junipero sought: the famous “Regulation” protecting 
the Indians and the missions. It was the basis for the first significant
 legislation in California, a “Bill of Rights” for Native Americans.  
Because
 the Native Americans were living a nonhuman life from the Spanish point
 of view, the friars were made their legal guardians. The Native 
Americans were kept at the mission after Baptism lest they be corrupted 
in their former haunts—a move that has brought cries of “injustice” from
 some moderns.  
Junipero’s missionary life was a long battle with 
cold and hunger, with unsympathetic military commanders and even with 
danger of death from non-Christian native peoples. Through it all his 
unquenchable zeal was fed by prayer each night, often from midnight till
 dawn. He baptized over 6,000 people and confirmed 5,000. His travels 
would have circled the globe. He brought the Native Americans not only 
the gift of faith but also a decent standard of living. He won their 
love, as witnessed especially by their grief at his death. He is buried 
at Mission San Carlo Borromeo, Carmel, and was beatified in 1988. 
   Comment:  The word that best describes Junipero is zeal.
 It was a spirit that came from his deep prayer and dauntless will. 
“Always forward, never back” was his motto. His work bore fruit for 50 
years after his death as the rest of the missions were founded in a kind
 of Christian communal living by the Indians. When both Mexican and 
American greed caused the secularization of the missions, the Chumash 
people went back to what they had been—God again writing straight with 
crooked lines. 
            Quote:  During his homily at Serra’s 
beatification, Saint John Paul II said: “Relying on the divine power of 
the message he proclaimed, Father Serra led the native peoples to 
Christ. He was well aware of their heroic virtues—as exemplified in the 
life of St. Kateri Tekakwitha [July 14]—and he sought to further their 
authentic human development on the basis of their new-found faith as 
persons created and redeemed by God. He also had to admonish the 
powerful, in the spirit of our second reading from James, not to abuse 
and exploit the poor and the weak.” | 
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