Brother James Miller, FSC Chapel
  
  
   	  
                  
The Brother James Miller, FSC Chapel was dedicated on  February 15, 2017 as part of º£½ÇÉçÇø’s commemoration of the 35th  Anniversary of Brother James’ death and his life as a De La Salle Christian  Brother committed to the poor of Central America.
                
      
                  This sacred space is made possible through a generous gift  from Patty and Phil Dion to º£½ÇÉçÇø in honor of Brother Philip  Johnson, FSC, a classmate and friend of Brother James.
 
                   
    
                 
                 
                  "I am personally weary of violence, but I continue to feel a strong commitment to the suffering poor of Central America. ... I pray to God for the grace and strength to serve Him faithfully among the poor and oppressed in Guatemala. I place my life in His Providence. I place my trust in Him."
Brother James Miller, FSC
            
              
                          
                    Brother James Miller, FSC
                  1944-1982
                  De La Salle Christian Brother, Friend of the Poor, and  Martyr
                                    Brother  James Miller, FSC was martyred on February 13, 1982 at the age of 37 in  Huehuetenango, Guatemala.  James Alfred Miller was born into a family of farmers  near Stevens Point, Wisconsin on September 21, 1944. He attended Pacelli High  School where he met the De La Salle Christian Brothers for the first time. He  joined the Brothers in September 1959 and formally took the habit in August  1962. He was assigned to Cretin High School (now Cretin-Derham High School) in  St. Paul, Minnesota for three years, where he taught Spanish, English, and  Religion, supervised school maintenance, and coached football. In 1969, he was  sent to Bluefields, Nicaragua.   
                  
                  [ Read More ]
                  
                
                         
                           			                          			 
                           				
                  
 
                  He  taught there until he was assigned to Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua in 1974, where  he helped build an industrial arts/vocational complex and supervised the  construction of ten new rural schools. His religious superiors ordered him to  leave Nicaragua in July 1979 during the time of the Sandinista revolution. It  was feared that since he worked for the Somoza government, he might be at risk.  For that reason, he returned to the United States in 1979. In 1981, Brother  James was sent to Guatemala, where he taught and worked with the young  indigenous Mayans.
                  On  February 13, 1982, while outside repairing a wall of the Casa Indigena De L a  Salle, he was brutally shot by several armed men and died instantly. Attempts  to identify the assassins were unsuccessful.  
                  In 2009, the Diocese of  Huehuetenango, Guatemala initiated the process for Brother James Miller’s  canonization by declaring him a martyr.   The Vatican recognized the validity of his cause and in 2010 Brother  James was designated a “Servant of God and martyr for the faith” and began the  process of beatification.  Because  Brother James is considered a martyr, a miracle was not required for his  beatification; consequently, on December 7, 2019, he was beatified in a  ceremony in Huehuetenango. A miracle will  be needed, however, for Blessed Brother James Miller to be declared a saint in  the Church.  
                  
 
 Resources
 
			   Share ➤
 
 
Share ➤