A small group of religiously devoted men, also known as
donnés (offered, given or gifts), worked at Sainte-Marie among the Hurons, in return for food, clothing, and shelter. The Jesuits hired
engagés, labourers, and non-clerical Jesuits known as "lay brothers". The Jesuits preached the
Christian Gospel to the Huron, often adapting the story to local customs and symbols. One of the most famous examples of this was the "
Huron Carol", a
Christmas hymn written by
Jean de Brébeuf. A translated version of this song remains popular in Canadian churches to this day. Soldiers had a small but important presence at the mission. Twenty-three soldiers wintered at Sainte-Marie in 1644, but many of the Jesuits resisted the idea of a military presence. They feared the soldiers would "bring the worst of Europe" with them. The founding of the mission led to division amongst the Wendat, with conflict between those who
converted to Christianity and those who maintained traditional beliefs.
Infectious disease, an unintended result of first contact between the Jesuits, their farm animals and the Wendat, served to further the gap between the traditional Wendat and the missionaries.
Epidemics of
smallpox, which raged from 1634–1640, were brought by the increased number of children emigrating to the colonies with families from cities where the disease was
endemic in France,
England and the
Netherlands. Also during this time, the rivalry between the Wendat and
Iroquois began to reignite. The Wendat were weakened by their internal divisions and their losses from disease. Prior to their contact with Europeans, the Wendat numbered twenty to twenty-five thousand. By 1642, after epidemics of
Old World diseases, they numbered 9,500. ==War and martyrdom==