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Gabriel Deshayes was born on December 6th, 1767 in Beignon, a small rural village of Morbihan, on the border of the forest of Paimpont.

When the French Revolution broke out, he was still a Seminarian and was ordained Deacon in September, 1790. To become a priest, he had to join Jersey where Mgr. Le Mintier, Bishop of Tréguier in exile, ordained him on March 4th, 1792.
He might have waited there. He took a risk and returned to France, eight days after his ordination. He began his ministry as a banned priest, exposed to the most serious dangers. He found several of his colleagues. Their assembly point was the parish of the Verger. With the greatest discretion, they travelled through the countryside at night, gathered Christians in their barns or their attics, for the celebration of Mass and Sacraments.

In this team, Gabriel was the youngest, the most intrepid also, as it was said. To mislead the soldiers of the Revolution, he disguised himself as a miller, as a farmer who handles a scythe in the Breton moor, as a farm-labourer who was sent into the fields and who was called  “Grand Pierre” !  He narrowly escaped death several times !

One day, the house where he was hidden was surrounded by soldiers: “Yes, yes, it is said. Deshayes is here, I am sure of that,  Let us look, citizens”. And, he disappeared into the crowd.

Another time hardly he was sitting at the table in a castle with his friend, Fr. Georges, that a handmaid rushed: ” The court is full of Blues!” Gabriel Deshayes jumped out through the window, hid his companion in bushes, in a single jump he crossed the moat and ran away into  the countryside . The Blues perceived him and cocked their rifles. Bullets whistled at his ears without hitting him. Having outstripped his prosecutors, he had time to change his clothes of a farmer and to seize his billhook. When the gendarmes arrived where he was, he indicated them, shamelessly, the direction taken by the fugitive …
Another time still, he worked quietly with Fr. Georges and another companion when a messenger came to warn them: “Take off fast. We are on your tracks. The revolutionary Court waits for you.” It was in the evening. Three friends took out of the place where they were hidden, and took the main road: it was less suspect. Exactly, the gendarmes came straight ahead on them and the moon was full. Impossible to run away. Three men line up silently along the ditch. The gendarmes passed  and saw nothing …

On many other occasions, Gabriel Deshayes escaped the soldiers who pursued him, and during the more serene days of the Consulate, he was available for a quieter ministry.

A social Priest
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It is in April, 1805 when Gabriel Deshayes arrived at Auray, a parish of 3000 inhabitants. He tackled diverse emergencies which his sense of God and of man made him spot them out soon.
He helped in the restoration of the home which still gathered at that time old men, disabled persons and abandoned children. He worried about beggars and about unemployed persons and enlisted them for a community work. He opened a textile mill and created a weaving workshop for prisoners. His presbytery was always solicited, and the priest deprived himself of his coat or a blanket to help a needy family.

In the streets of Auray, he met hearing-impaired people. At that time, they were called deaf persons. Easily, they are treated as idiots or as stupid ones. Gabriel Deshayes was moved. From 1810, he entrusted the girls to the Sisters of Wisdom, at the Chartreuse which he had just acquired. Later, he entrusted the boys to the Saint Gabriel Brothers and developed his work in favour of the blind persons and the partially-blind  persons. During His life, they will be his favorite children.

From 1816, he welcomed in his presbytery the young people that with the help of the Brothers of the Christian Schools he prepared as teachers for the Breton countryside. United to the recruits of Fr. de la Mennais in Saint-Brieuc, these young people formed the first core of the Institute of the Brothers of Christian Instruction of Brittany.

As his Bishop summarised it, Msgr. de Pancemont: ” Fr.Deshayes goes to bed in the evening only to dream about the new marvels that he will accomplish the next day “. And himself testifies: ” I have never distrusted  Providence. On Her part, She has never missed me. ”

The Founder
Further to a set of circumstances, Father Deshayes was called to Saint-Laurent-sur-Sèvre where, on January 17th, 1821, was elected Superior general of the Montfort Fathers and the Sisters of Wisdom. During twenty years, he filled this responsibility.
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At the same time, he took care of the Sisters of Christian Instruction that he established  at Beignon and bought for them a property in Saint-Gildas-des Bois: it will be their Mother House. Rapidly, he entrusted the management of his institute to the Vicar-general of Nantes, Fr. Angebault. Likewise, he confided  to Fr.de la Mennais the high direction of the Brothers of Ploërmel.
He had enough work, because in Saint-Laurent-sur-Sèvre, he managed the Montfort Congregation, boosted with the Saint Gabriel Brothers his work of instruction of the countryside started in Auray, established, in the diocese of La Rochelle, a Congregation of farming Brothers, the Brothers of Saint Francis of Assisi and helped Fr.Ormières to establish the institute of the Sisters of the Guardian Angel,in Quillan, in the diocese of Carcassonne.

Nothing could slow down his zeal. One week before his death arisen on December 28th, 1841, he continued to make projects for the instruction of the blind persons: ” You think, maybe”, he said to the Sisters of Wisdom, “that I am very old to make all these projects: I know it, but when I would have only eight days to live, I would still take care of the good works. “

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