Augustin Hacquard
{{Infobox Christian leader
| type =
| honorific_prefix =
| name = Augustin Prosper Hacquard
| honorific_suffix =
| title = Apostolic Vicar of Sahara and Sudan
| image = Mgr Hacquard.jpg
| image_size =
| alt =
| caption = Augustin Hacquard in 1898
| church = Catholic Church
| archdiocese =
| province =
| metropolis =
| diocese =
| see =
| elected =
| term =
| quashed =
| predecessor =
| successor =
| opposed =
| other_post =
| ordination = 8 September 1884
| ordained_by =
| consecration = 28 August 1898
| consecrated_by = François-Marie-Benjamin Richard
| rank =
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1860|09|18|df=y}}
| birth_place = Albestroff, Moselle, France
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1901|04|04|1860|09|18|df=y}}
| death_place = Niger River near Ségou, Mali
| buried =
| resting_place_coordinates =
| nationality = French
| religion = White Fathers
| residence =
| parents =
| occupation = Missionary
| profession =
| education =
| alma_mater =
}}
Augustin Prosper Hacquard (18 September 1860 – 4 April 1901) was a French missionary who became Apostolic Vicar of Sahara and Sudan in 1898.
After several years in Algeria, including a short period as head of the Armed Brothers of the Sahara, he was appointed to the French Sudan, the newly acquired territories along the Niger River to the east of Senegal, where he established several mission stations. The missionaries founded several villages, where they settled former slaves.
Early years (1860–84)
Augustin Prosper Hacquard was born on 18 September 1860 in Albestroff, Moselle, France.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
He attended primary school, then in 1873 entered the minor seminary of Pont-à-Mousson, and in 1877 went on to the major seminary of Nancy.
On 27 June 1878 he decided to seek admission to the White Fathers novitiate at Maison-Carrée in Algiers.
His parents would not give their permission, but he left anyway and embarked from Marseille for Algiers on 1 September 1878.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
At the Maison-Carrée the program included prayer, spiritual formation and the Arabic language.
In September 1881 Hacquard was appointed a teacher at the Collège de Carthage and taught there for two years before resuming his theological studies in 1883.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
Hacquard was strongly built, bearded, lively and very brave.
He learned to speak Arabic fluently.{{sfn|Shorter|2003}}
Priest in Algiers (1884–91)
Hacquard was ordained a priest of the White Fathers on 8 September 1884.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
He was appointed a teacher of humanities at the minor seminary of Saint Eugène in Algiers.
In 1886 Cardinal Charles Lavigerie put him in charge of the baccalaureate class and told him to prepare himself for his university entrance exam, which he passed first of 47 candidates in September 1886.
He wanted to go with the next caravan to the Great Lakes led by Bishop John Joseph Hirth, but was told by the Cardinal that it would be a good test for him to wait a few years.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
He was appointed Prefect of Studies at the minor seminary of Saint Eugène, a demanding job.
On 28 July 1887 he obtained his degree from the faculty of Aix-en-Provence and was told by the Cardinal to prepare his doctorate on the ancient Christian Africa.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
Armed brothers of the Sahara (1891–93)
A group of missionaries who tried to cross the Sahara were massacred in 1877, and another group was massacred in 1881.{{sfn|Shorter|2003}}
The official Flatters expedition was also destroyed in 1881.{{sfn|Brower|2011|p=240}}
After this the authorities prohibited the White Fathers from trying to enter the southern Sahara.{{sfn|Shorter|2003}}
However, in 1891 the Cardinal appointed Hacquard to Biskra as first superior of a new religious and military institute, the Frères armés du Sahara (Armed Brothers of the Sahara).
The main role of these volunteers would be to receive slaves escaped from the caravans.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
The lay brothers would give the slaves refuges and promote agriculture.{{sfn|Rodriguez|2011|p=383}}
A barrack was built in Biskra for the brotherhood, who wore a uniform with elements from the garb of the crusaders and the French North African cavalry.
The volunteers were expected to provide examples to the "heathens" of ascetic, martial Christian virility.{{sfn|White|Daughton|2012|p=136}}
The work was hard and spartan, but there were many volunteers attracted by the romance of the desert.
Hacquard was very selective and out of 1,700 applications chose only 30, a number that soon dropped to 22.
In October he and six brothers were posted to Ouargla.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
One of the 22 Armed Brothers, the layman Maurice Delafosse, was later a member of the Temporary Slavery Commission of the League of Nations.{{sfn|Rodriguez|2011|p=383}}
The Armed Brothers of the Sahara were portrayed in the international press as the Cardinal's private army.{{sfn|Shorter|2003}}
The governor general of Algeria asked Lavigerie to disband them.{{sfn|Rodriguez|2011|p=383}}
He complied in October 1892.
Hacquard remained in charge of the mission in Ouargla until 21 July 1893, when he was sent to Maison Carrée.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
Tuareg exploration (1893–94)
{{Location map+|Algeria|width=220|relief=y|caption=Locations in Algeria| places =
{{Location map~|Algeria|label=Maison-Carrée|position=left |lat_deg=36.71 |lon_deg=3.14}}
{{Location map~|Algeria|label=Biskra|position=left |lat_deg=34.85|lon_deg=5.733333}}
{{Location map~|Algeria|label=Touggourt|position=right |lat_deg=33.1|lon_deg=6.066667}}
{{Location map~|Algeria|label=Ouargla|position=left |lat_deg=31.95|lon_deg=5.317}}
{{Location map~|Algeria|label=Aïn Taïba|position=left |lat_deg=30.2667|lon_deg=5.81667}}
{{Location map~|Algeria|label=Lake Menghough |position= |lat_deg=26.382478 |lon_deg=8.817555 }}
}}
On 10 September 1893 Hacquard and François Ménoret of the White Fathers were appointed to serve on a mission of exploration to Tuareg country led by Gaston Méry.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
The other European members were Albert Bonnel de Mézières(fr) and Antoine Bernard d'Attanoux, a former officer who had become editor of Le Temps.{{sfn|Pottier|1947|p=272}}
The mission set out in October 1893.{{sfn|Dubief|1999|p=113}}
The leadership of the mission had not been well defined, and the members quarrelled.{{sfn|Guénot|1896|p=603}}
Méry did not want to carry books or the geologist's equipment and would not listen to the advice of more experienced travellers.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
He was emotionally unstable and had a violent temper.
He shot a guide in the arm during an argument, and killed his interpreter's dog after it refused a command to attack a gazelle.
At one point he threatened to blow everyone up with boxes of blasting powder.{{sfn|Brower|2011|p=207}}
At Touggourt Méry announced that he would dispense with guides.
The other members of the mission decided that they could not continue in these circumstances.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
Méry left the expedition and returned to France.{{sfn|Marbeau|Demanche|1896|p=234}}
On his return to Biskra Hacquard was offered command of the mission, but refused, and Antoine Bernard d'Attanoux took the position.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
The mission left again on 12 January 1894.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
It went south from Biskra past Touggourt and Ouargla, past Aïn Taïba, El Biodh and Temassinin, and along the Ighargharen valley to Lake Menghough.{{sfn|Dubief|1999|p=113}}
Méry decided to return to the desert once more, at his own expense.{{sfn|Guénot|1896|p=603}}
He left Toulouse in January 1894 with a companion named Moulai and followed the trail of the Attanoux mission which he rejoined at Ain-Taieba.{{sfn|Marbeau|Demanche|1896|p=234}}
The two explorers fell out again, and Méry was repatriated a second time.{{sfn|Guénot|1896|p=605}}
The mission returned to Algiers on 17 April 1894, and later that month Hacquard participated in a General Chapter of the White Fathers at Maison-Carrée.
After returning to France Hacquard lectured about the Tuareg's in Lille and Paris.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
Ségou and Timbuktu (1894–95)
Around this time the French moved inland from the coast of Senegal into what is now Mali and Burkino Faso, reached Timbuktu in 1894 and declared a protectorate over the French Sudan in 1895.
Lavigerie's successor as Apostolic Vicar of the Sahara and Sudan, Bishop Anatole-Joseph Toulotte, decided to organize a mission in the Sudan, and in 1894 was given permission to enter the Sudan from Senegal with a mission headed by a Frenchman.{{sfn|Shorter|2003}}
The Ministry of the Colonies issued the authorization on 9 November 1894 and on 25 December 1894 the first caravan, four White Fathers, left from Marseille.
Hacquard was the leader of the group.
They arrived in Dakar and went by train to Saint-Louis, where they stayed until 16 January 1895.
The missionaries than travelled by boat up the Senegal River and reached Kayes on 12 February 1895.
They continued by land to Ségou on the Niger River, which they reached on 1 April 1895.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
The White Father were committed to eliminating slavery.
The Congregation of the Holy Spirit mission at Kita gave the first group of White Fathers two orphans.
They often bought slaves, and also received refugees.
A large caravan was stopped at Ségou just after the White Fathers arrived.
Hacquard offered to look after the freed slaves and to give them huts, clothes, tools, seed and grain until the next harvest.
For several years the mission operated a liberty village near Ségou.{{sfn|Klein|1998|p=116}}
On 30 April 1895 Hacquard and Father Dupuis took a boat down the Niger to Kabara, the port of Timbuktu, which they reached on 21 May 1895.
They quickly established a mission where Hacquard ran the pharmacy and Dupuis taught about 15 children.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
The mission in Timbuktu did not last long.{{sfn|Shorter|2011|p=67}}
Last years (1898–1901)
On 19 January 1898 Hacquard was appointed Titular Bishop of Rusicade and Apostolic Vicar of Sahara and Sudan.{{sfn|Cheney}} He succeeded Toulotte in the latter role.{{sfn|Shorter|2003}} He was in Ségou when he was informed of the appointment. In a letter he wrote on 11 April 1898 he downplayed the significance of the promotion, noting that there was no use for ceremony at the mission and everyone shared the same food. He returned to France, arrived in Marseille on 17 July 1898 and received his episcopal consecration on 28 August 1898 in the chapel of the Dames de Sion, in Paris. He visited Rome to meet the Pope and the Cardinal Prefect of the Propaganda Fide.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
Hacquard left Marseille for the last time on 25 October 1898 with three new priests, two brothers and three sisters, and reached Ségou on 10 January 1899.
After a month he set out to visit part of his huge vicariate.
Between 24 February 1899 and 12 April 1899 he visited the Bobo, Samo and Mossi countries south of the river and spent a few days in Ouagadougou. He made another trip to the Mossi country from December 1899 to March 1900.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}} The missionaries had difficulty making converts in Bamako and Kayes, where most people were Muslim. In Ségou and Kita they did better, but Islam was growing fast there too. Their best prospects were in the south among the Mossi, Bobo and Minianka people, who had little contact with Islam.
However, they were handicapped by lack of money and the insistence of the authorities that they keep their northern missions open.{{sfn|Klein|1998|p=116}}
A mission had been founded at Bamako in 1897.{{sfn|Klein|1998|p=115}}
Hacquard founded mission stations among the Mossi and Gurma people of what is now Burkina Faso. He contacted the British authorities, and gained their permission to start a mission station in the north of the Gold Coast (now Ghana).{{sfn|Shorter|2003}} He noted that the Gold Coast could provide a refuge if the anti-clerical French administration made it impossible for missionaries to work in the French protectorate.{{sfn|Shorter|2011|p=67}} The missions took in many children, whether as pawns or purchases.
There was a famine in 1899 when the price of grain rose tenfold.
The missions at Segu and Banankuru purchased more than 100 people, all that they could afford.{{sfn|Klein|1998|p=117}}
The missionaries were generally treated well by the soldiers, many of whom came from strictly religious families. The missions were useful to the authorities since they educated the local people to become clerks, minor officials and teachers, ran orphanages and supplied nurses and chaplains for the hospitals.{{sfn|Klein|1998|p=115}}
However, there were tensions. The missionaries maintained their independence from the state, often taught in local languages rather than French and could not accept the relaxed attitudes of the military to sex and slavery.{{sfn|Klein|1998|p=115}}
Hacquard made another trip to Djenné, Bandiagara, Lake Débo and Dori in November–December 1900.
He died in an accident on 4 April 1901 while bathing in the Niger at Ségou.{{sfn|Vanrenterghem|2005}}
Writings
Publications by Hacquard include:{{sfn|Augustin-Prosper Hacquard (1860–1901) – BnF}}{{efn|The entry for Augustin-Prosper Hacquard (1860–1901) on the website of the Bibliothèque nationale de France site includes works by Augustin Hacquard (15 May 1809 – 31 May 1884), Bishop of Verdun from 1867 to 1884.{{sfn|Augustin-Prosper Hacquard (1860–1901) – BnF}}{{sfn|Cheney (2)}}}}
- {{citation |title=De Tombouctou aux bouches du Niger avec la mission Hourst |year=1897 |author=Augustin-Prosper Hacquard |author2=Émile Hourst}}
- {{citation |title=Manuel de la langue soñgay, parlée de Tombouctou à Say dans la boucle du Niger |pages=253 |location=Paris |publisher=J. Maisonneuve |year=1897 |author=Augustin-Prosper Hacquard|author2=Dupuis}}
- {{citation |title=Monographie de Tombouctou |pages=119 |location=Paris |publisher=Société des études coloniales et maritimes |year=1900 |author=Augustin-Prosper Hacquard |url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k103743p }}
Notes
{{notes}}
Citations
{{reflist|30em}}
{{commons category|Augustin Hacquard}}
Sources
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{{refend}}
{{Subject bar |portal1= Biography |portal2= Catholicism |portal3= France}}
{{authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hacquard, Augustin}}
Category:White Fathers priests
Category:French Roman Catholic missionaries