top of page

MARKING 100 YEARS SINCE THE END OF THE GREAT WAR - THE STORY OF FR WILLIE DOYLE SJ

A Champion at the Front

This Sunday, 11th November 2018 marks the centenary of the end of the First World War. On this special remembrance Sunday we remember and pray for the 102 soldiers from the Enniscorthy town and District and 850 soldiers from Wexford who lost their lives in this terrible conflict. At one of the darkest times in human history, one light of hope shone as a beacon of hope. His name was Fr Willie Doyle, a Jesuit priest and army chaplain who was killed in the Battle of Passchendaele, Flanders, 100 years ago last year. He was one of thirty-two Irish Jesuit chaplains in the First World War.

To us today the First World War can only be seen as an indescribable waste of life, a cause which served no purpose other than the decimation of an entire generation. Willie Doyle served and died in the Great War; he willingly put himself forward again and again to help those with him, and in the end it cost him his life.

Willie Doyle was born in Dalkey, just outside of Dublin, in 1873, the youngest of seven children. His education took place both in Ireland and at Ratcliffe College, in Leicester. At eighteen he joined the noviciate for the Society of Jesus, a decision he reached after reading Instructions and Consideration on the Religious State by St Alphonsus. In 1907 he was ordained as a priest, and spent several years following as a missionary, travelling from parish to parish all across the British Isles.

With the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, Doyle volunteered, knowing that many would be in need of guidance and assistance in the time to come. He landed in France in 1915 with the Royal Irish Fusiliers, serving as chaplain. He went to the front, serving in many major battles, including the Battle of the Somme. Out on the battlefield Doyle risked his life countless times, seeking out men where they fell dying in the mud to be with them in their last moment and to offer absolution; those who served with him described him as fearless. His selflessness was not just given to those who shared his faith; Doyle was a champion too among the Protestant Ulstermen in his battalion.

In August 1917 he was killed by a German shell while out helping fallen soldiers in no man’s land. Three other Irish Jesuits were killed in the war along with two who died from illness. Doyle was awarded the Military Cross, and he was put forward for the Victoria Cross posthumously but did not receive it. According to the National Museum of Ireland, this was arguably due to the “triple disqualification of being an Irishman, a Catholic and a Jesuit”.

bottom of page