Showing posts with label Monks OCSO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Monks OCSO. Show all posts

Monday 14 October 2013

Moray McLaren, The Cistercians of Sancta Maria Abbey in Nunraw



Moray McLaren
THE SHELL GUIDE TO SCOTLAND 1967
The Cistercians of Sancta Maria Abbey in Nunraw
Gazetteer page 233
GARVALD, East Lothian (Map 3, ref. 35967'), is a small intimate village of considerable architectural and natural charm lying on the northern slopes of the Lammerrnuir Hills, and situated in a steep valley on the Papana Water. The church dates partly from the 12th cent., and has a sundial dated 1633, and also ancient jougs attached to the W. gable. The church, the cottages, and the houses in the village are built of the attractive deep rose-coloured East Lothian stone. Of recent years, however, Garvald has been associated with a new venture, the roots of which nonetheless lie locally and deeply in the past.

Just above the village to the E. stands a 15th-cent. fortified mansion, restored in a typically Victorian style in 1864. It was established originally by Cistercian nuns. A magnificent painted ceiling dating from 1610 remains, part of which has been removed to the National Museum of Antiquities in EDINBURGH. 

The house now belongs once again to the Cistercian order, and the white-habited Trappists came in 1946 to establish their first monastery in Scotland since the Reformation. In 1952 on Easter Monday, and 814 years after the Easter Monday when the Cistercians began the building of their first monastery in Scotland at MELROSE, the first sod was cut, and the
thirty-five-year task of building the Abbey of Sancta Maria begun. The new Abbey, which is springing up fast, is just to the E. of the old house of Nunraw. The Cistercians of Sancta Maria Abbey in Nunraw sustain their order's custom of hospitality. They are farmers as well as builders, have reclaimed waste moorland, and are well liked in this predominantly Protestant farming district.


    
See the Map references in The Shell Guide to Scotland to the.
Cistercian Abbeys of Scotland
Deer, Cupar, Angus, Nunraw, Newbattle, Saddell, Culross, Balmerino, Sweetheart, Glenluce, Dundrennan, Melrose, Kinloss.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

DOM AMBROSE SOUTHEY funeral Mass

     http://www.ocso.org/net/drcty_m.htm
 

Funeral rites for Dom Ambrose

Funeral rites for DOM AMBROSE SOUTHEY
Abbot General of the Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance
from 1974 to 1990

We are advised that the funeral Mass for Dom Ambrose will be celebrated at the monastery of Mount Saint Bernard this Thursday, 29 August, at 11.00 a.m. The Mass will be presided by Mgr Malcolm McMahon, O.P., Bishop of the diocese of Nottingham (Great Britain), in the presence of Dom Eamon Fitzgerald, Abbot General of the Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance.

All Trappist communities are especially united in prayer with the brothers of Mount St Bernard, to bid a last adieu to one who devoted himself for so many years to the service of the brothers and sisters of the Order.

Saturday 24 November 2012

Nový Dvůr Abbey OCSO (Nový Dvůr means literally "the New Yard")



Novy Dvur OCSO - 99
Website: www.novydvur.cz  




File:Klášter Nový Dvůr - okres Karlovy Vary - Karlovarský kraj - Česká republika.jpg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   
Nový Dvůr Monastery
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Monastery of Nový Dvůr
The Monastery of Nový Dvůr is the only monastery of the Trappist Order in the Czech Republic, located near Toužim in the Karlovy Vary Region, close to the Premonstratensian monastery of Teplá.
The monastery originated from a dilapidated Baroque farm (Nový Dvůr means literally "the New Yard"), that was partially reconstructed and mostly replaced by a modern construction according to a project of British architect John Pawson. It was established in August 2002 as a daughter house of the Sept-Fons AbbeyFrance. In September 2004 the monastery church was dedicated to Our Lady.[1]
As of 2009, the monastery is a home of about twenty monks, who manufacture several products: face cream "Crème Réparatrice" with an extract of corn sprouts, linden and orange tree with ECOCERT certification; four sorts of mustard (two are produced via organic farming), which are sold next to Czech Republic also in France, Germany, Austria and Hungary. The recipes of both products were created by monks in Nový Dvůr and the other products of Nový Dvůr such as jam, coffee and dietary supplements originate from their home monastery Sept-Fons Abbey in France.[1]

 ----- Forwarded Message -----



From: Klášter Nový Dvůr <email@novydvur.cz>
To: nunrawdonald@yahoo.com
Sent: Friday, 23 November 2012, 12:34
Subject: News from the Abbey of Nový Dvůr

News from the Abbey of Nový Dvůr
A few weeks before Christmas 2012
Dear Friends,


Christmas can be the time of widening our horizons, instead of closing them in as we usually do. There is the story of a Russian Christian, who complained that the number of believers had greatly diminished. Someone asked him, “How many are there?” The other person responded – with a small number – and his interlocutor said, “That’s enough!” How many monks and Christians are we? During the course of the last century, the world changed. Christendom, from which missionaries went to carry the Good News, disappeared. From now on, we are in the midst of the mission land. The two Cities, Christian and non-Christian, are entangled, one with the other. It is a new situation that requires new attitudes and a new faithfulness. Today, like yesterday, Christians and monks serve the Lord through those who live around them. And since the world is small, since it is enough to just get in an airplane to catch up to the path of the sun, who are those who are the closest to us? All of humanity. When we pray, the Lord leans over everyone. Without this conviction of faith, would there really be young people to commit themselves to the monastic life today?

This Christmas and the New Year, you will not receive a calendar. The newsletter that celebrated the tenth anniversary of the foundation of Novy Dvur will have to take its place. We do not let events such as this one break the banal rhythm and the ordinary rhythm of our lives. For that very banality can hide a precious fidelity. Isn’t it pretty much the same among our families? That said, let us try to gather some special events. First of all, the construction work.

At Novy Dvur, the construction on the workshop buildings is progressing normally. Since the number and the volume of our monastic products are increasing, these new areas will be welcome, theoretically in spring 2014 . And so it is time to start thinking about the construction of the Stella Matutina chapel, which we have been talking about for such a long time. It will be an easily accessible place where our visitors will be able to pray during the day.

At Sept-Fons, we have been talking for a long time about restoring the common areas (washroom, cloister, dormitory). If God wills it… Let us avoid making any estimates of the date of the beginning of the works, however necessary they may be. As you know, Sept-Fons also helps other monastic communities.

Recently, I had the chance, for a few days, to share the daily life of one of these communities that possessed nothing that it should have been able to legitimately claim: neither liberty of movement, nor comfort, nor sufficient resources, nor any of the necessary means of giving a solid formation to its young members, nor personalities powerful enough to confront this exceptional situation, nor out-of-the ordinary virtues! And yet, in that community, which is to all appearances very poor, the brothers pray, develop, persevere, and welcome younger members who join. The work of divine grace is perceptible. Upon my return, a brother asked me: “Did this visit change the way you look at Novy Dvur?” – “Yes,” I said, “I understand better the role of grace; I am less afraid of my own shortcomings and the shortcomings of the brothers.”

We will finish this letter with an anecdote. Last spring, one of our brothers whose family came to visit told me, in the evening, what he had heard: a comet was going to smash into planet Earth and destroy it. There wasn’t anybody who wasn’t talking about it… The end of the world would be set for this autumn! I had a good laugh. A brother of Sept-Fons, to whom I told that tale over the telephone, said to me, “What luck!” Autumn has passed, with neither comet nor end of the world on the horizon… Should we say “alas”? Some competent friends, professionals in several domains, help our community with their advice. One of them, in Prague, organised a symposium in Japan last October on the subject: Putting an end to catastrophism. No one from our ranks participated, obviously. But I promised myself to offer to our two cellarers, that of Sept-Fons and that of Novy Dvur, the results of that meeting: The world is not going as badly as we might think!

With these optimistic reflections, I wish you a joyful Christmas and a Happy New Year 2013.


 
P.S. To avoid overloading my e-mail mailbox, please do not acknowledge receipt of this message. However, please do not hesitate to forward it to your friends.

If this is the first time you are receiving a mailing from us, and this information interests you, write tofr.frederic@novydvur.cz, and give us your postal address. This will allow us to mail you a brochure (in English) about Nový Dvur and Sept-Fons.



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Sunday 2 September 2012

Caldey Monks Broadcast




----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Albert - - -
To: - - -
Sent: Sunday, 2 September 2012, 12:03
Subject: Caldey

Greetings! Happy Sunday!
A suggestion: Tune in to "Listen again" on Radio 4, this morning at 8.10
for a broadcast from the Caldey Island Cistercians
(whom I visited a few times every year while I was based in London)
presented by Anglican bishop Stephen Oliver.
 
PAX vobis
Albert

+ + + Thanks and adding the Link here   
Don.   


Friday 27 July 2012

Abbot Malachy Brasil Memorial



 MEMORIAL

July 28
Dom Malachy Brasil - born 2 February 1883, entered 15 August 1905, professed 28 December 1910, ordained 23 June 1911, Abbot Mount Saint Bernard 1933 –1959, died, Nunraw, 28 July 1965.



PRESS NOTICE found at back of an old table drawer.
Leicestershire Local Newspaper, 1959
Dom Malachi Brasil
Abbot of Mount St. Bernard Resigns

The RIGHT REVEREND DOM MALACHI BRASIL, Abbot of the Cistercian monastery of Mount St. Bernard, Charn­wood Forest, has resigned his charge after more than 25 years in office.

   Owing to his age - he is 76 - he feels this step is called for.  
Born in County Limerick, in 1883, and educated at Mount Melleray. He joined the Cistercians at Mount St. Joseph Abbey, Roscrea, in 1907.
   After teaching in the College, there he was made father master of novices. , then Sub-Prior and Prior.
   In 1933, the monks of Mount St. Bernard Abbey chose him as their abbot.
   Dom Malachi brought to completion the magnificent abbey church in the heart of Charnwood Forest.
   In August 1945, the church was consecrated.
   The community now number 83, including 43 priests.
                   Election Procedure
   For the past three weeks' Dom Malachi has been in St. Francis "Nursing Home, London Road, Leicester, suffering from bron­chial trouble and although his
condition is now somewhat improved, he is still far from. Well.
   The, abbey is now considered to be "widowed", following the resignation' of the abbot. Crosiers, in the church and in the chapter house have been removed and will not be put back until a new abbot is 'Blessed’.
   During the next six or seven weeks the professed monks will elect a new abbot and the procedure, will be similar to that carried out in the election of a pope.
   A member of the Mount St. Bernard community at the abbey will be chosen as the next abbot, although any member of the Cistercian Order could be elected.



Saturday 23 July 2011

Comments



Thank you.
The Atlas Monks PPs, Subject: TIBHIRINE.fr.pps, has reached through the Emails. I am glad you found it show.
Unfortunately, only some succeed to down loading the slideshow on the Blog.
Yours,
D.

---- Forwarded Message ----
From: Sr. Peter
To: DONALD . . .
Sent: Mon, 18 July, 2011 18:55:04
Subject
: Our Monks

Dear D.D.
What a beautiful presentation...I have played it twice
and hope to get the tech wizard here to download
it so we can play it for all the sisters....it really is
lovely and gave me a better idea of what the
monastery really looked like...in that respect, the
film, although impressive, gave a false impression.
A thousand thanks for thinking to forward it....so
much appreciated.

….
. . . yours in the Lord
Peter
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

----- Forwarded Message ----
From: WILLIAM
To: Donald . . . .
Sent: Mon, 18 July, 2011 9:15:51
Subject: Re: TIBHIRINE.fr.pps
Dear Father Donald,
Thank you so very much for copying the PPpresentation to me.
I find it very moving and I will always treasure it.
. . . in Our Lord,
William


Subject: TIBHIRINE.fr.pps

Sunday 17 July 2011

Atlas Monks PPs

Many Links appreciated, amount to strong Chain of this Presentation of the Account of the Monks of Our Lady of Atlas, Tibhirine.
Thank you.
Donald
July 2011 entrance Nunraw Church
+ + +



[PPT] 

TIBHIRINE

 - [ Translate this page ]
www.parroquiadelcarmenfuengirola.com/thibirine.pps
File Format: Microsoft Powerpoint - Quick View
(Tibhirine). La noche del 26 al 27 de marzo de 1996. siete de los nueve ... Fr. Luc Dochier. “¿Qué nos puede pasar? Que caminemos hacia el Señor y nos ...


Try again via Google step. 
It is complex and only through the usual Email
 
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Sr. Christina     
To: Donald . . .
Cc: Nivard Mc. Glynn
Sent: Sun, 17 July, 2011 1:18:51
Subject: Fw: Fw : Tr : tr: TIBHIRINE.fr.pps

Dear Donald,
Another very moving presentation of the Martyrs of Tibherine.  

Sr. Bridget Pereira sent it to me.

. . ., lots of love and prayer.

Xris



PS. An inspiring true Story. Bridget

Friday 15 July 2011

Abbot of Cistercian Latroun Abbey, Israel


The election of
Dom Rene Hascoët OCSO
on June 30th as the 5th Abbot of the Trappist Abbey of Latrun, located between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv



http://www.lpj.org/   Habemus Abbatem!

Habemus Abbatem!


The Abbot of the Mother Abbey of Sept-Fons, Dom Patrick Olive came to the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem to announce with great joy the election of Dom Rene Hascoët on June 30th as the 5th Abbot of the Trappist Abbey of Latrun, located between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv
Left. Dom René Hascoët, Abbot
Latroun Abbey, Israel
Born in Brittany in 1949, he studied horticulture and worked for several years before entering the Abbey of Timadeuc at the age of 25. He made solemn profession on November 11, 1979. In September 1992, Dom Paul Saouma, the former abbot of Latrun asked him to take care of the cellar of the monastery, which was famous throughout the region. He spent some time as master of novices at the St. Savior monastery in Monastery in Ghazir, Lebanon. He went back to Latrun as Prior in 2003. Following the resignation of Dom Paul Saouma, he was appointed superior of the community on June 15, 2008 until his recent election as Abbot. He will receive blessings from His Beatitude Fouad Twal, Latin Patriach of Jerusalem in November.
Abbot Rene

Thursday 14 July 2011

Latroun New Abbot Dom Rene Hascoët


htp://www.ocso.org 
Thursday, 14 July 2011 16:34

July 7, 2011 : Brother Malachy Mallon. Born in 1921 in Lisson, Co. Tyron (Ireland). He entered Mellifont in 1949 and made his solemn profession in 1955. Brother was 90 years old and had been in monastic vows for 59 years when the Lord called him

Election at Latroun

On June 30, 2011, the Community of  Latroun (Israel) elected as Abbot for an undetermined term Dom René Hascoët, who has been the Superior ad nutum since June 15, 2008.  

From:

http://www.jerusalem-religions.net/images/barouge.gif

New Abbot for the Trappist Abbey of Latrun in Jerusalem
The Abbot of the Mother Abbey of Sept-Fons, Dom Patrick Olive came to the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem to announce with great joy the election of Dom Rene Hascoët on June 30th as the 5th Abbot of the Trappist Abbey of Latrun, located between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv

Born in Britain in 1949, he studied horticulture and worked for several years before entering the Abbey of Timadeuc at the age of 25. He made solemn profession on November 11, 1979. In September 1992, Dom Paul Saouma, the former abbot of Latrun asked him to take care of the cellar of the monastery, which was famous throughout the region. He spent some time as master of novices at the St. Savior monastery in Monastery in Ghazir, Lebanon. He went back to Latrun as Prior in 2003. Following the resignation of Dom Paul Saouma, he was appointed superior of the community on June 15, 2008 until his recent election as Abbot. He will receive blessings from His Beatitude Fouad Twal, Latin Patriach of Jerusalem in October.

Source : Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, July 1, 2011.



see: 

Dom René Hascoët, nouvel abbé deLatroun | La-Croix.com