at Parc de l'Île-de-la-Visitation Among the first missionaries sent by France to its colony, Viel traveled to
Huron territory, arriving there with fellow Recollect Father
Joseph Le Caron in 1623. He was studying the language and collecting material to add to Le Caron's dictionary. After almost two years, in May 1625, Viel decided to return to Quebec in the company of a band of
Hurons, with the intention of making a few days' retreat and then returning to his missions. It is known that he never reached Quebec, but was drowned in the last chute of the Riviere des Prairies, which from that time bears the name of
Sault-au-Récollet. The neophyte
Auhaitsique, whom he had instructed and baptized, met with the same fate.
Sagard and
Le Clercq give accounts of Father Viel's missionary work, and of his death. Their information regarding his death was obtained after the fact and through interpreters. The canoe(s) apparently attempted to shoot a rapid that would usually have been portaged. Suspicions that the drowning was intentional appear to be weakly based on the survival of the accompanying Hurons, and tensions between the Hurons, the Iroquois, and the French. They have, nonetheless, led to repeated assertions that Viel and his companion were murdered. French Jesuit priest
Charlevoix could only conclude "Whether there was some miscalculation in the measures they took or whether it was brought about by design the canoe capsized." A painting by
Georges Delfosse in
Cathédrale Marie-Reine-du-Monde,
Montreal, Quebec, shows Viel holding aloft a cross as the canoe is about to capsize. The scene, in which one person holds a broken paddle and another has one arm around Viel, can be ambiguously interpreted. The designation of martyr has been strongly opposed by those who see it as supporting the belief that Viel and Auhaitsique were murdered by the Hurons. According to the records of the Recollets, Father Viel was buried in St. Charles's Chapel,
Quebec City, 25 June 1625. ==References==