Henriette
Céré was born in Longueuil on August 20, 1804,
to François-Xavier Céré and Ursule Brun
whose ancestor had survived the deportation of the Acadians.
She was the third in a family of 17 children. Mr. Jean-Marie
Cherrier, a future lawyer, provided her basic education. She
then attended the convent of the Sisters of the Congregation
of Notre Dame in Boucherville.
At
the age of 19, she was admitted to the Congregation of the Sisters
at Hotel Dieu Hospital. When she caught typhoid fever, she had
to return home. At 22 years of age, she was the appointed teacher
of all the children on “Rang de la Savane” (a country
road). She asked her father to build a little school on the
family property. Her renown reached the village of Longueuil,
where the pastor, Father Antoine Manseau invited her to teach
at the parish school where she was very successful.
She
had always dreamed of becoming a religious. On October 28, 1843,
she welcomed into her school two companions: Eulalie Durocher
and Mélodie Dufresne. This would be the beginning of
the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary.
Mistress
of the boarding school, Henriette took care of the older girls
and had the responsibility of a class of day pupils. Although
she was a severe disciplinarian, she respected the children.
Drawing on her talent for story-telling, she always knew how
to amuse and interest them creatively. She was a marvellous
reading teacher. Every day, she taught reading to the professed
sisters and the novices. She was partial to the poor, the orphans,
the sick, and the underprivileged who lacked either money or
intelligence. The vast experience of this woman, so concerned
about the scholastic success and moral formation of her pupils,
reassured the parents.
On
August 17, 1848 with three companions, she participated in the
foundation of Saint-Timothée Convent. She organized the
house and classes, and took care of embellishing the large convent
grounds. She also contributed to the expansion of the convents
of Saint-Roch-de-l’Achigan and Verchères.
Sister
Marie Madeleine (her religious name) suffered grievously at
the time of Mother Marie Rose’s premature death in 1849.
She venerated her and considered her to be a saint. In 1881,
she would know the pain of the death of her other companion
of the first days, Sister Marie Agnes, (Mélodie Dufresne).
Periodically,
she was afflicted with inflammatory rheumatism. When she retired
in Longueuil, she rendered various service. She liked to talk
about her past, the pranks of her youth, the beginnings of the
community. The sisters showed consideration for her. She died
on January 9, 1885, at the age of 80.
On
Chambly Street in Saint Hubert, the Henriette Céré
Nursing Home, a residence for the elderly, commemorates this
compassionate woman. The geographical area corresponds approximately
to the “Rang de la Savane” where she once taught.