Relics of Canadian Saints were stolen from Quebec City's Cathedral. They were stolen after a break-in last month. Monsignor Denis Bélanger told CNA that on the night of September 11, someone broke into the cathedral by breaking a window. The money had already been collected for the day from the church’s donation boxes, so the still-unknown person stole a large reliquary containing relics of Canadian saints as well as some items from the church’s gift shop. “A guard was making his rounds and then he saw that something was forcing the door, so he tried to intervene, (but) that the person fled,” Bélanger said. The cathedral filed a complaint about the incident with the police, Bélanger said, but they have yet been unable to locate the reliquary or identify the suspect. Bélanger added that while normally the Cathedral has security cameras, staff realized after the incident that a disc was broken in the hard drives of the camera system, and so no footage of the reported theft was recorded. He said he hopes the relics can be recovered, but in the meantime, the cathedral is already working to obtain other relics from the same saints. “The fact is that the relics themselves have no commercial value, and we just hope to get them back…most of the relics are relics of blesseds and saints of our country,” he added. Relics are physical objects that have a direct association with the saints or with Jesus. They can be objects from the saint themselves, known as first class relics, such as a lock of hair or a vial of blood, or items of clothing that belonged to the person, which are known as second class relics, or third class relics, which are items touched by the saint. A reliquary is a case in which relics are enclosed. Some of the native Canadian saints whose relics were contained in the stolen reliquary include St François de Laval, Saint André of Montreal, St Marguerite Bourgeoys, and St Kateri Tekakwitha. The reliquary also contained relics from three of the eight North American martyrs – Fr Jean de Brébeuf, Fr Charles Garnier, and Fr Gabriel Lalemant –
Text Edited from CNA - Image Source: Catholic News World (Notre Dame Interior)
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