The Father Willie Doyle Association

Father Willie Doyle Association

Official site for the canonisation cause of the Servant of God Fr Willie Doyle SJ

14 August 1917: Fr Willie’s last letter to his father

I have told you all my escapes, dearest Father, because I think what I have written will give you the same confidence which I feel, that my old arm chair up in Heaven is not ready yet, and I do not want you to be uneasy about me. I am all the better for these couple of days rest, and am quite on my fighting legs again. Leave will be possible very shortly, I think, so I shall only say au revoir in view of an early meeting. Heaps of love to every dear one. As ever, dearest Father, your loving son, Willie. 14/8/17.

COMMENT: This letter was written 108 years ago today, just two days before his death. As ever, Fr Doyle was thinking of others, even amongst the mess and strain of the trenches. Could we honestly say that we would have a similar concern for others if we found ourselves in the same situation that Fr Doyle was in?

Today is also the feast of St Maximilian Kolbe, one of the shining examples of holiness and apostolic zeal of the twentieth century. It is interesting that St Maximilian, who was so devoted to Mary, was given the grace of martyrdom on the eve of the feast of the Assumption, while Fr Doyle, who always reported receiving special graces from Mary on this particular feast, received his long desired wish for “martyrdom” immediately after this feast. Their “martyrdoms” are also quite similar. St Maximilian volunteered to take the place of a husband and father who was to be killed in the concentration camp as an act of revenge by the Nazis for the escape of a prisoner. Fr Doyle was blown up while trying to rescue some wounded soldiers. Both St Maximilian and Fr Doyle laid down their lives to save others. 

 

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August 14, 2025

1 Comment

on 14 August 1917: Fr Willie’s last letter to his father.
  1. Sister M. Michele S.C.M.C.
    -

    Regarding the above letter of Father Doyle to his father- it just happened that the kind of “leave” Father Doyle was to receive was one that no one had expected, or at least they hoped would not be. The “leave” was not to his home in this world, but his Eternal home. How sad Mr. Doyle must have been to receive the news so shortly after reading his son’s letter. Yes, saints give their lives for others for the love of God, often to the point of sacrificing their own lives, as we read above in the account of St. Maximilian Kolbe and Father Doyle. May they intercede for us, helping us to endure and accept our own sufferings in our daily lives.

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