Michael Dinh-Hy Ho

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Michael Dinh-Hy Ho
Martyr
Born c. 1808, Vietnam
Died May 22, 1857
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church
Beatified July 5, 1900 by Pope Leo XIII
Canonized June 19, 1988 by Pope John Paul II
Feast May 22
Saints Portal

Michael Dinh-Hy Ho was a native of Vietnam (North Cochin-China). He was born to Christian parents, and was by profession a wealthy silk trader. Youngest of the five remaining twelve children, he was married to a Christian from another family and had two sons and three daughters. Like other Christians at the time, they practiced their faith in private. At age of 21, he obtained the rank mandarin and appointed Superintendent of the Royal silk mills afterward. He was one of the few trusted officials who traveled abroad to conduct trades with other countries like Singapore and Malaysia. At the height of Christian persecution, when his eldest son requested to become a priest, he arranged to have him studied in Indonesia. After his remaining son died at the age of 12, Michael Dinh-Hy Ho declined to have his elder son returned home, according to Confucian traditions, citing he could not protect his own faith. During his years at the king's post, he performed many charitable acts to local unfortunates and helped to transport French and Portuguese missionaries on the waterways through his region under the guise of official business. He was entrusted to guard missionaries written records. He did not practice the faith publicly until late in life, becoming protector of the Christian community, which irked his fellow mandarins.

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[edit] Late in Life

Unlike other unnamed Vietnamese Martyrs whose lives and deeds were orally recorded, parts of his life could be found in memoirs of Fathers of Foreign Missions (Society of Foreign Missions of Paris), France. A local magistrate petitioned to the king for his arrest based on his Christian activities and he suffered beheading by royal decree. He was the last high ranked official to be executed under the Nguyễn Dynasty.

[edit] Controversy

During his imprisonment and torture, he played a gambit with the local magistrates by signing a confession that he was involved with the French government, who did not favor the Vietnam courts persecuting Christians. The gambit did not work. The bishop of Society of Foreign Missions of Paris secretly requested that he recant his confession because it only resulted in more persecutions and France would not justified her presence in Vietnam based on religious persecutions. He repented and signed a corrected confession, but it never made to the king's court. His last days were spent in repentance and humility. Twenty five years after his death, his eldest son, a priest, returned from Indonesia, justified his father's gambit.

At the king's decree, he was beheaded after suffering public humiliation, and all of his possessions were confiscated by the local magistrates. Some witnesses accounted that he refused his last meal and chose to die near his birth place instead of at the execution site. He also chose to wear his official robe instead of prisoner garb on his last day. The memoirs of Fathers of Foreign Missions (Society of Foreign Missions of Paris) mentioned he received last rites discretely by local priests and was survived by his wife and a married daughter. His remains were buried in Basilica of Phú Cam and his birth place.

[edit] Road to Sainthood

He was petitioned to the Vatican for sainthood in 1867 by Father Louis Pallard of the Society of Foreign Missions of Paris. He was beatified in 1900 by Pope Leo XIII in the Fortissimorum Virorum Seriem. Pope John Paul II canonized him in 1988 along with other 116 Vietnamese Martyrs.

To commemorate his beatification in 1900, a historian, Phước Môn Nguyễn Hữu Bài, educated under the Vietnam court, summarized his life as followed:

Traditional characters Modern translations
Tự Đức ngự đề văn khổ khắc,

Đức Lêo châu điểm nét tiêu diêu


Emperor Tự Đức condemned his earthly life,
Pope Leo glorified him in the after life.

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