In August, Bishop Yoshinao Otsuka of Kyoto paid a visit to the town of Digna in the French diocese of Saint-Claude. His destination: the long-forgotten grave of one Father Leon Robin of Saint-Claude (1802—1882).
The reason for the visit and what joins the modern day Japanese prelate to the long departed Frenchman is their shared faith and a statue of the Virgin Mary.
Several years before Japan reopened borders that had been closed to foreigners for generations, Fr Robin had heard stories of Japanese martyrs and was so moved that he formed a prayer group to pray that missioners might again enter the country.
In one of these stories it was said that, when St. Francis Xavier traveled to Japan in 1549, he carried with him an image of the Blessed Virgin and prayed earnestly that a church might be erected at Kyoto, the capital at the time.Hundreds of years later, after Japan had shut and later reopened its doors to foreigners, Fr Robin used that image of Mary as a model and had a set of six statues of her cradling the Christ Child on her lap cast in Rome, where they received a blessing from Pope Pius IX.
In 1866, one of these six statues was sent to Fr Prudence Seraphin-Barthelemy Girard, a priest with the Paris Foreign Mission stationed in Yokohama, with the hope that St Francis Xavier’s wish for a church in Kyoto might yet become a reality.This statue is today known in Japanese as the Miyako no Seibo, or “Madonna of the Capital.”
A church Fr Girard had built in Yokohama in 1862 was the first erected in Japan after the opening of the country, and it was this church that became the temporary home of the Miyako no Seibo. All was not well for Christianity in Japan, however, as the year 1867 saw the beginning of a new period of persecution. In 1873, another priest took the Miyako no Seibo to the outskirts of Kyoto, where he buried it on a small hill overlooking the city. That same year, the persecution was lifted in a de facto, if tacit, recognition of Christianity; it was dug up in 1879 and now stands in Kawaramachi Cathedral in Kyoto. Recently, a replica of the statue was sent from Kyoto back to France, bringing the Miyako no Seibo full circle, back to the land of Fr Robin, the man responsible for its creation. “The grave site was right next to the town church,” said Bishop Otsuka after his visit this year. “But these days, even the locals there have forgotten him. They didn’t even know where the grave was, so they had to search for it.” The local bishop told Otsuka, “Thank you for helping us remember this story.”