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Ireland 1802
Britain 1825
Gibraltar 1835
India 1841
Australia 1842
USA 1843
Canada 1876
New Zealand 1876
South Africa 1897
Rome 1900
Argentina 1948
Papua New Guinea 1950
Zimbabwe 1954
Uruguay 1955
Dominica 1956
Antigua 1958
Zambia 1964
Peru 1967
Liberia 1969
Sierra Leone 1969
Cook Islands 1976
Fiji 1981
Paraguay 1988
Tanzania 1988
The Gambia 1989
Kenya 1991
Sudan 1991
Namibia 1996
East Timor
Ghana 2001
Burma 2001 |
We were founded just over two
hundred years ago by a remarkable Irishman called Edmund Rice. Born
into a situation where his people had little share in their
country’s resources, Edmund was part of a minority who had the
advantage of a good education and everything needed in the way of
material goods. He became apprenticed to an uncle and proved to have
a real flair for business.
At age 23 he married Mary. Within two years, while Mary was
pregnant, something happened to her, and just after delivering their
child, she died. Edmund was devastated: at 25 he found himself a
widower and a single-parent. And soon it became apparent that his
daughter was seriously disabled and that she needed specialised and
constant care.
Though his business grew and thrived, his success felt hollow. In
his pain, he felt himself identifying more and more with those who
live on the margins of society. He became increasingly involved with
the needy and the neglected, especially the young. And in his
contact with the poor, he experienced a closeness to God and felt
drawn to follow Jesus more radically.
He saw that education and care of the young was the key to truly
liberating people. At the age of forty, with no training or
experience as a teacher, he made the decision to give his life to
God by educating the neglected boys and young men of his city. His
aim was to empower them to make something of their lives, leading
them away from the dangers of their day and towards God. He sold his
business and rented out his property to provide income to support
his mission—and, of course, his daughter. He started in an old
stable, turning the downstairs floor into a classroom and moving out
of his comfortable home to live upstairs. The teachers he hired to
assist him quickly gave up, for the boys were wild and rough. But
other helpers presented themselves, wanting to join him not just in
his work but in his dedication to God. And so the Christian
Brothers—and our close associates, the Presentation Brothers—came
into being.
Soon, in response to requests, Edmund’s brothers spread all over
Ireland and then beyond the sea. Edmund and his brothers were known
for their very practical and all-round response to the needs of the
young people they served—they fed those who were hungry, clothed
those who were in rags, prepared them for the world of work,
educated them to think, nurtured their faith, and encouraged them to
love God and respond to those in need. For over 200 years, the
Christian Brothers have continued to be brothers to the young and
also to others out on the margins of society.
In 1996, all those inspired by Edmund Rice were greatly encouraged
when the Church named him “Blessed”, and we are confident that the
process will soon lead to his being publicly recognized as a Saint,
a model disciple of Jesus.
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