fbpx
Wikipedia

Congregation of Christian Brothers

The Congregation of Christian Brothers (Latin: Congregatio Fratrum Christianorum; abbreviated CFC) is a worldwide religious community within the Catholic Church, founded by Blessed Edmund Rice.[1]

Congregation of Christian Brothers
Latin: Congregatio Fratrum Christianorum
AbbreviationCFC
Formation1802; 221 years ago (1802)
FounderEdmund Ignatius Rice
Founded atWaterford, Ireland
TypeLay Religious Congregation of Pontifical Right (for Men)
Membership
926 members (2017)
motto
Latin: Facere et docere
(English: 'To do and to teach')
Hugh James O'Neill
General Motherhouse
Via Marcantonio Colonna 9, 00192 Rome, Italy

Their first school was opened in Waterford, Ireland, in 1802.[1] At the time of its foundation, though much relieved from the harshest of the Penal Laws by the Parliament's Relief Acts, UK Catholics faced much discrimination throughout the newly created United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland pending full Catholic emancipation in 1829.

This congregation is sometimes referred to as simply "the Christian Brothers",[2] leading to confusion with the De La Salle Brothers—also known as the Christian Brothers (sometimes by Lasallian organisations themselves[3]). As such, Rice's congregation is sometimes called the Irish Christian Brothers[2] or the Edmund Rice Christian Brothers.

History

Formation of The Christian brothers

At the turn of the nineteenth century, Waterford merchant Edmund Rice considered travelling to Rome to join a religious institute, possibly the Augustinians. Instead, with the support of Thomas Hussey, Bishop of Waterford and Lismore, he decided to found a religious community dedicated to teaching disadvantaged youth.[4]

The first school, on Waterford's New Street, was a converted stable and opened in 1802, with a second school opening in Stephen Street soon after to cater for increasing enrollment. Two men from his hometown of Callan, Thomas Grosvenor and Patrick Finn, soon arrived to aid Rice in his makeshift schools, with the intention of living the life of lay brothers. In the same year, Rice used proceeds from the sale of his victualling business to begin building a community house and school on land provided by the diocese. Bishop Hussey opened the new complex, christened “Mount Sion” on June 7, 1803, and pupils were transferred to the new school building the following year.[5] The reputation of the school spread and across the next few years several men sought to become “Michaels”.

On 15 August 1808 seven men, including Edmund Rice, took religious promises under Bishop John Power of Waterford. Following the example of Nano Nagle's Presentation Sisters, they were called "Presentation Brothers".[6] This was one of the first congregations of men to be founded in Ireland and one of the few founded in the Church by a layman.

Houses were soon opened in Carrick-on-Suir, Dungarvan, and in 1811, in Cork. In 1812 the Archbishop of Dublin established a community in the nation's capital and by 1907 there were ten communities in Dublin, with pupils in excess of 6,000. The schools included primary, secondary and technical schools, along with orphanages and a school for the deaf. A community was founded in Limerick in 1816, followed by establishments in several of Ireland's principal towns.

The Holy See formally established the congregation in 1820. This, too, was an unusual event, since the Christian Brothers were the first Irish congregation of men approved by a charter from Rome.

Some brothers in Cork chose to remain under the original Presentation rule and continued to be known as Presentation Brothers, a separate congregation but also recognising Edmund Rice as its Founder.

Expansion

The congregation of Irish Christian Brothers spread to Liverpool and other parts of England. These new ventures were not always immediately successful. Two brothers had been sent to Gibraltar to establish an institute in 1835. However, despite initial successes they left in August 1837 on account of disagreements with the local priests.[7] In 1878 the Brothers returned to the then Crown colony of Gibraltar. The school eventually flourished supplying education to the twentieth century. The "Line Wall College" was noted in 1930 for the education that it supplied to "well to do" children.[8]

Similarly, a mission to Sydney, Australia, in 1842 failed within a couple of years.[9] Brother Ambrose Treacy established a presence in Melbourne, Australia in 1868, in 1875 in Brisbane, Australia and, in 1876, a school was commenced in Dunedin, New Zealand. In 1875 a school was opened in St. John’s, Newfoundland. In 1886 the Pope requested that they consider setting up in India, and a province of the congregation was established there.

In 1900, there came the invitation to establish houses in Rome, and in 1906 schools were established in New York City.[4] In 1940 Iona College was founded in New York, as a Higher Education College,[10] facilitating poorer high school graduates to progress to a college education.

St. Joseph's Junior Novitiate, Baldoyle was where trainee brothers went to complete their second level studies, normally proceeding to St. Mary's in Marino to train as school teachers. To-day there is a nursing home there, and there are over 1000 brothers buried in the cemetery in St. Patrick's, Baldoyle.

In 1925 the brothers bought St. Helen's, Booterstown which became their administrative headquarters and novitiate. Around 1968, land to the South was used to build two new schools Coláiste Eoin and Coláiste Íosagáin. St. Helen's was sold in 1988.

In 1955 Stella Maris College in Uruguay was established. In 1972 the alumnus rugby team was travelling in Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 when it crashed in the Andes, stranding survivors in freezing conditions with little food and no heat for 72 days; 16 of the 45 people on the aircraft survived.

In the 1950s, due to the number of brothers in Ireland, it was split into two sections divided into North and South by a line from Dublin to Galway.[11]

In 1967 the Christian Brothers had a membership of about 5,000, teaching in around 600 schools.[12]

The Christian Brothers teacher training centre at St. Mary's/Colaiste Mhuire, has become the Marino Institute for Education which has trained lay teachers since 1972 and has offered degrees validated by the University of Dublin since 1974. In 2012 Trinity College Dublin became a co-trustee with the Brothers of the Institute.[13]

The Brothers' schools include primary, secondary and technical schools, orphanages and schools for the deaf. A number of these technical schools originally taught poor children trades, such as carpentry and building skills, after which they could progress to gain apprenticeships and employment. As the National School system and vocational schools developed in the Irish Republic, the Irish Christian Brothers became more concentrated on secondary education.

Contraction

As of 2018, there were 872 Christian Brothers and 172 houses.[14]

In 2008 it was reported that not more than ten Christian Brothers were teaching in Irish schools, with the expectation that there would soon be none. This was contrasted with the mid-1960s, when over 1,000 Brothers worked in schools, with no shortage of new recruits.[15]

Organizational structure of the Christian Brothers

 
Traditional crest of the Christian Brothers, incorporating the Latin motto Facere et docere ("To Do and To Teach"). Many schools run by the Brothers feature the cross in their school logo.

Geographically, the Christian Brothers are divided into several provinces that encompass every inhabited continent. The brothers within each province work under the direction of a Province Leadership Team. In turn, the entire Congregation operates under the leadership of a Congregation Leadership Team that is based in Rome (and led by the Congregation Leader). These provincial and congregational teams are elected on a six-year basis at Congregation chapters.

Restructuring has taken place in the congregation to account for the changing needs, in particular the declining number of brothers in the developed world. The three provinces of North America (Canada, Eastern American, and Western American Province) restructured into the Edmund Rice Christian Brothers North America on 1 July 2005.[16] The provinces that cover Ireland, Great Britain and the Congregational Leadership Team in Rome combined into a single European province on May 5, 2007,[17] while the five provinces covering Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea combined into one Oceania province on October 1, 2007,[18] The English Province is a registered charity.[19] The Dublin Headquarters are in the grounds of Marino Institute of Education, Claremont, Griffith Avenue, Dublin 9, Ireland.

A special community within this new European province will be based in Geneva, Switzerland, working to establish an NGO known as Edmund Rice International. The purpose of such an organisation is to gain what is known as a "general consultative status" with the United Nations. "This position allows groups the opportunity to challenge systemic injustice and to engage in advocacy work with policymakers on behalf of people who are made poor." As well as including Christian Brothers from provinces all over the world, members of the Presentation Brothers will also have a presence within this community.[20]

Edmund Rice Development is a faith-based non-governmental organisation with charity status in Ireland. Based in Dublin, Edmund Rice Development was established in 2009, to formalise the fundraising efforts of the developing world projects for the Christian Brothers globally and received its charitable status in 2009. Funding raised by the charity is directed mainly to nine countries in Africa, where The Christian Brothers work on mission in development: Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. In Kenya, they support the Ruben Centre [21] Additional funds are also raised for similar work in South America (Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay) and India.

List of Superiors General

The following is a list of the Superiors General of the Congregation of Christian Brothers.[14] In recent times, "Congregational Leader" has been the title used.

  1. Edmund Ignatius Rice (1820 – 1838)
  2. Michael Paul Riordan (1838 – 1862)
  3. James Aloysius Hoare (1862 – 1880)
  4. Richard Anthony Maxwell (1880 - 1900)[22]
  5. Michael Titus Moylan (1900 - 1905)[23]
  6. Calasanctius Whitty(1905 - 1920)
  7. Jerome Hennessy (1920 - 1930)
  8. Joseph Pius Noonan (1930 - 1950)
  9. Edward Ferdinand Clancy (1950 - 1966)[24]
  10. Arthur Austin Loftus (1966 - 1972)
  11. Justin Linus Kelty (1972 – 1978)
  12. Gerald Gabriel McHugh (1978 – 1990)
  13. Jerome Colm Keating (1990 – 1997)
  14. Edmund Michael Garvey (1997 – 2002)
  15. Philip Pinto (2002 – 2014)
  16. Hugh O'Neill (2014 – 2019)
  17. Gabriel Cardillo (2019-present)

Irish nationalism

 
CBS Templemore, Co. Tipperary
April 2010

The Irish Christian Brothers were among the strongest supporters of Irish republicanism, the Irish language revival, the Gaelic Athletic Association, and Gaelic games. In most Christian Brothers' schools in Ireland, Gaelic football, hurling and handball were encouraged and there were even examples of boys being punished for playing "foreign games", like soccer. Many GAA clubs were founded by Christian Brothers, many developing from schools teams, with many GAA clubs using the playing fields of the brothers' schools. They also run and sponsor The Rice Cup which was set up in 1944, and named after the order's founder, for post-primary hurling. They also sponsor the Westcourt Cup and Rice Shield. Many of the first Irish language textbooks were produced by the Christian brothers for their schools. Conor Cruise O'Brien called them "the most indefatigable and explicit carriers" of the Catholic nation idea.[25]

Sexual abuse of children

In the late 20th and early 21st century many cases were exposed of emotional, physical and sexual abuse of children in the Christian Brothers' care over a number of decades. Cases emerged in Ireland, Canada, the United States, Australia and the United Kingdom.

Australia

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse documented Christian Brothers activities in Australia and in particular in Ballarat. 22% of Christian Brothers across Australia have been alleged sexual predators since 1950, according to the royal commission. The commissioners concluded that the Christian Brothers "completely failed... to protect the most vulnerable children in their care" and that senior brothers–including Brother Paul Nangle, Ballarat's highest Brother in the 1970s–had deliberately misled police in more recent statements about their knowledge of abuse.[26]

There were allegations that during the 1970s sexual abuses took place at the junior campus of St Patrick's College and St Alipius Primary School in Ballarat, Victoria. After investigation, Brothers Robert Best, Edward Dowlan and Stephen Francis Farrell were all convicted of sex crimes. Dowlan and Best were later transferred to the senior campus, and continued to offend.[27] Four of the school's brothers and their chaplain, Gerald Ridsdale, were accused of sexually assaulting children — all but one, who died before charges could be laid, have been convicted.[28][29]

In December 2014, a royal commission found that "Christian Brothers leaders knew of allegations of sexual abuse of children at four Western Australian orphanages and failed to manage the homes to prevent the systemic ill-treatment for decades."[30] During the 2016 Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Ballarat, it was found that 853 children, average age 13, had been sexually abused by one or more Christian Brothers.[31] Child abuse complaints had been made against 281 Christian Brothers, and the Congregation had paid A$37.3 million in compensation.[32]

The Royal Commissions final report of Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat was released on 6th. December.[33] The report found that 56 Christian Brothers had claims of sexual abuse made against them in Ballarat and that there “was a complete failure by the Christian Brothers to protect the most vulnerable children in their care”.[34]

The response to complaints of sexual abuse was "grossly inadequate": most often Christian Brothers were moved to new locations after an allegation had been made.[35]

The Report found: "Often, the Christian Brother in question was allowed to remain in the position he held where the allegations arose, with continuing access to children," and "On many occasions, the Brother was moved to a new location after a complaint or allegation was made about his conduct. In some cases, the reason given for the move was to conceal the true reason for it and to protect the reputation of the Christian Brothers and avoid scandal and embarrassment."[36][37]

In February 2020, Rex Francis Elmer pleaded guilty to two charges of indecently assaulting boys at St Vincent's Boys' Orphanage in South Melbourne. He was removed from St Vincent's in 1976 after a welfare officer who inspected the orphanage complained that he had “interfered with” boys who lived at the home. He was appointed headmaster of a Melbourne Catholic boys school a few years after the religious order became aware of his abuse.[38]

Ireland and the UK

England

In December 2012, the Christian Brothers school St Ambrose College, Altrincham, Greater Manchester, was implicated in a child sex abuse case. A former lay teacher was convicted of nineteen counts of sexual assault occurring between 1972 and 1991.[39]

Ireland

The Congregation of the Christian Brothers published full-page advertisements in newspapers in Ireland in March 1998, apologizing to former pupils who had been ill-treated whilst in their care. This advertising campaign expressed "deep regret" on behalf of the Christian Brothers and listed telephone lines which former pupils could ring if they needed help.[40] In 2003 the Congregation brought a case against the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse seeking to prevent the Commission from naming brothers accused of child abuse. Justice Sean Ryan declared that individual alleged perpetrators of abuse would not be named unless they had already been convicted [41]

In May 2009 a report was issued by the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse (CICA) on allegations of child abuse committed on thousands of children in residential care institutions run by various religious institutes for the Irish state.[42] This report found that sexual abuse of boys in institutions run by the Brothers was common. In response, the Irish ecclesiastical province issued a pledge to pay 161 million euros toward a fund set up to compensate male and female victims of such abuse both in their institutions and in those run by other religious institutes. As of 2013, the Christian Brothers in Ireland continued to seek out-of-court settlement for historical claims initiated by survivors of sexual assault by Brothers, committed in day schools managed by the order in Ireland. Towards Healing was set up by CORI to offer therapy to survivors of clerical abuse; it is a Catholic organisation about whose independence there has been controversy. The Christian brothers in Ireland used the services of the L&P group[43] to set up an education trust.

In late November 2009, the organization announced it would supply a €161 million (£145 million sterling) package as part of reparations for child abuse in Ireland.[44] This includes a donation of €30 million to a government trust and €4 million donated to provide counselling services.[45] Playing fields owned by the organisation and valued at €127 million would be transferred to joint ownership of the government and the trust that runs former Christian Brothers schools.[44]

In 2019 former Brother John Gibson was convicted and received a prison sentence for his role in abuse in Wexford CBS in the 1980s & 1990s. On 22 June 2020, he received an additional four years after pleading guilty to a number of assault and sexual assault charges.

Scotland

In 2016 Fr. John Farrell, retired priest of the Diocese of Motherwell, the last Head teacher at St Ninian's Falkland, Fife, was sentenced to five years' imprisonment. His colleague Paul Kelly, a retired teacher from Portsmouth, was given ten years; both were convicted of the physical and sexual abuse of boys between the years 1979 and 1983. More than 100 charges involving 35 boys were made. The school closed in 1983.[46]

In 2021 The Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry issued a report on the St. Ninians residential school which had been run by the Christian Brothers between 1953 and 1983.[47] The report concluded that the school was a "a place of abuse and deprivation" particularly from 1969 until the school closed in 1983. The Christian Brothers were able to "pursue their abusive practices with impunity" and the evidence against them was "shocking and distressing." Children in care suffered sexual, physical and emotional abuse.[

Michael Madigan, a representative for the Christian Brothers, said the congregation acknowledged with ‘deepest regret’ that children had been abused.[48]

Canada

A pattern of physical and sexual abuse of more than 300 Mount Cashel Orphanage residents in St. John's, Newfoundland perpetrated by staff members, specifically members of the Christian Brothers of Ireland in Canada (CBIC), was uncovered during the late 1980s and early 1990s.[49][50][51][52]

Multiple criminal investigations, a provincial Royal Commission of Inquiry (the Hughes Inquiry) and an Archdiocese of St. John's inquiry (the Winter Commission) resulted in criminal convictions and millions of dollars in court-imposed financial settlements. Compensation was provided by the Government of Newfoundland for orphanage residents who were wards of the state and several properties owned by the CBIC in Newfoundland and Labrador and other provinces were seized and liquidated.[53][54][55]

Throughout 1989-1993 nine Christian Brothers were charged and prosecuted for various criminal offences, including sex offences against the boys of Mount Cashel orphanage.[56][57][58][59]

Both the St. John's Archdiocese through the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops as well as the Congregation of Christian Brothers have since enacted policies aimed at the prevention of child sexual abuse.[60][61]

In Ontario in January 1993 the Christian Brothers reached a financial settlement totaling $23 million with 700 former students who alleged abuse.[62]

In February 2021, a British Columbia man alleged that he was sexually abused by one of the Christian Brothers, who confessed to the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary of molesting children at the Mount Cashel Orphanage in 1975.[63]

United States

Christian Brother Robert Brouillette, who had taught at St. Laurence High School, was arrested in April 1998 in Joliet, Illinois, for indecent solicitation of a child.[64] He was convicted in March 2000 of 10 charges related to child pornography, fined $2,000 and sentenced to four years probation.[65] In 2002 a civil lawsuit was filed in Cook County, Illinois, against Brouillette for sexual assault against a 21-year-old man.[66]

In 2013 the Edmund Rice Christian Brothers' North American Province, known as Irish Christian Brothers, paid US$16.5 million to 400 victims of child sexual abuse across the US, and agreed to enforce a zero-tolerance policy for brothers accused of abuse. This followed the Brothers' filing for bankruptcy in April 2011 following rising legal costs, and leading to a reorganization settlement between creditors and the order according to the US Chapter 11 bankruptcy code.[67]

Publications

The Christian brothers composed and published a number of text books on several subjects, many in the Irish language, which were used by their schools.

Textbooks

  • Irish History Reader, Christian Brothers, M. H. Gill & Son, Dublin, 1905.
  • Graiméar na Gaeidhilge, Na Bráithre Críostaí, M. H. Gill, Dublin, 1901.[68]
  • Graiméar Gaeilge na mBráithre Críosta, M.H. Mac an Ghoill agus a Mhac Teo, Baile Átha Cliath, 1960.[69]
  • Matamaitic na hArdteistiméireachta, by Tomás Ó Catháin, Na Bráithre Críostaí, 1967.
  • Leaving Certificate Chemistry, Christian Brothers Congregation, Folens, Dublin, 1970?.[70]
  • Leaving Certificate Physics [translated from the Irish], Christian Brothers Congregation, Folens, Dublin, 1973.
  • New Irish Grammer, Christian Brothers, published by C. J. Fallon, Dublin, 1990.
  • AIDS to Irish Composition by Christian Brothers (Jerome Fitzpatrick), 1902.
  • Second Book of Modern Geography, The Christian Brothers, M. H. Gill & Son, Dublin, 1904.
  • Cóir ṁúinte na Gaeḋilge, leis Na Bráiṫre Críostaí, M.H. mac an Goill, Baile áṫa cliaṫ, 1910.
  • First Steps in Irish: A classic, succinct, book for learning to read, write and speak the Irish language, by L. Cinneide, The Christian Brothers.

Our Boys

Our Boys was a magazine for boys by Christian Brothers and the Educational Company of Ireland, published from September 1914 until the 1990s. It was based on British Boys Own adventure comics, with illustrated strips and adventure stories in English and Irish. It had an overt Catholic and Irish Nationalist outlook, featuring Irish Legends, GAA figures, the Missions and Catholic juvenile organisations. Illustrator Gerrit van Gelderen contributed to the magazine.[71]

The Educational Record

The Educational record was an annual collection of articles from Christian brother schools around the world published by them from their offices in Rome. Editors of the record include Liam Ó hAnluain and Richard Healy.

Notable Christian Brothers

In popular culture

  • The play The Christian Brothers, first performed in 1975 and written by Ron Blair, is a one-man show depicting a Christian Brother teaching at a Catholic school in Australia in the 1950s, focusing much on the Brother's use of corporal punishment.[78]
  • In the 1985 film Lamb, Liam Neeson plays a Christian brother
  • The Moving Hearts 1985 song All I Remember written by Mick Hanley, mentions Christian brothers
  • The Saw Doctors 1991 single N17, refers to "when I left the Christian brother school"
  • The television miniseries The Boys of St. Vincent is a fictional story based on real events of sexual abuse that took place at Mount Cashel Orphanage in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, an orphanage run by the Christian Brothers.[79]
  • The 1993 film Alive!, based Alive: The Story of the Andes Survivors the 1974 book documenting the events of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571, which contained rugby players from the Christian brother school Stella Maris College, Montevideo
  • In 1994, the CBC released "The unforgiven: Mount Cashel, five years later," a documentary that profiled several of Mount Cashel's victims.[80]
  • The 2016 film Sing Street, is about a coming of age drama where a boy moves from a private fee-paying school to a Christian brother school "Synge Street"
  • In 2022, an episode of the CBC television series Son of a Critch discussed the real-time impact that the initial revelations of the Mount Cashel Orphanage scandal had on Newfoundland society in the 1980s.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "The Life of Blessed Edmund Rice (1762–1844" (PDF). Christian Brothers Foundation, New York U.S.A. 2005.
  2. ^ a b "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Christian Brothers of Ireland". The Advent. Retrieved 29 September 2020. The schools of the Irish Christian Brothers are of many types ... the Christian Brothers' schools ...
  3. ^ "The Christian Brothers at La Salle University". La Salle University. Retrieved 29 September 2020. The Christian Brothers are at the heart of everything
  4. ^ a b . www.cfcvocations.org. Archived from the original on 2016-01-29. Retrieved 2014-03-26.
  5. ^ Normoyle, M.C. (1976). A Tree is Planted: The Life and Times of Edmund Rice. Congregation of Christian Brothers. pp. 45–50.
  6. ^ Normoyle, M.C. (1976). A Tree is Planted: The Life and Times of Edmund Rice. Congregation of Christian Brothers. p. 71.
  7. ^ Normoyle, M.C. (1976). A Tree is Planted: The Life and Times of Edmund Rice. Congregation of Christian Brothers. pp. 289–296.
  8. ^ Gibraltar Directory for 1930, accessed 8 May 2013
  9. ^ Normoyle, M.C. (1976). A Tree is Planted: The Life and Times of Edmund Rice. Congregation of Christian Brothers. pp. 405–406.
  10. ^ About Iona College Iona College Website.
  11. ^ 'Secondary School Education in Ireland: History, Memories and Life Stories (1922 - 1967)' By Tom O'Donoghue, Judith Harford.
  12. ^ "Scotus Academy". www.scotusacademy.net. Retrieved 2016-05-07.
  13. ^ Trinity College Dublin Enters into a Co-Trusteeship of the Marino Institute of Education June 12, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Communications Office TCD, January 30, 2012.
  14. ^ a b "Christian Brothers, C.F.C." www.gcatholic.org. Retrieved 2016-01-27.
  15. ^ John Walshe (19 June 2008). "End of era for Christian Brothers". Independent.ie. Retrieved 7 October 2016.
  16. ^ Embracing a Common Future 2007-10-31 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ Restructuring/ New_European_Province/ edmundrice.org.au - New European Province 2007-08-29 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original on 2007-07-03. Retrieved 2007-02-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  19. ^ "Trust property held in connection with the English Province of the Congregation of Christian Brothers, registered charity no. 254312". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
  20. ^ "Presence, Compassion, Liberation" (PDF).[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ "Ruben Centre".
  22. ^ The Irish Catholic Directory and Almanac. J. Duffy and Company, Limited. 1900-01-01.
  23. ^ The Irish Catholic Directory and Almanac. J. Duffy and Company, Limited. 1904-01-01.
  24. ^ "RTE apologises to wife of Dingle Senator - Independent.ie". Independent.ie. Retrieved 2016-01-27.
  25. ^ Portrait of a Christian crusader - Reviewed by Dermot Bolger[permanent dead link], Sunday Business Post, August 31, 2008.
  26. ^ "Violent and sexually 'defective': A long history of abuse at the hands of the Christian Brothers". ABC News. 2017-12-21. Retrieved 2017-12-22.
  27. ^ Ellingsen, Peter. Ballarat's good men of the cloth. The Age Newspaper, June 14, 2002.
  28. ^ "Catholic Church's 'failure' in Ballarat led to 'suffering, irreparable harm'". ABC News. 2017-12-06. Retrieved 2017-12-16.
  29. ^ "Ballarat Christian Brothers 'misled police' over abuse, royal commission lawyers say". ABC News. 2016-10-31. Retrieved 2017-12-24.
  30. ^ Banks, Amanda, Legal Affairs Editor. "Christian Brothers cop blast", The Weekend West, 20–21 December 2014, p.11
  31. ^ Chris Johnston (22 February 2016). "Christian Brother 'gyrated' against me: Catholic sexual abuse victim". The Age, Victoria. Retrieved 17 March 2016.
  32. ^ "Christian Brothers 'abused 850 children'". Skynews.com. 22 February 2016. Retrieved 17 March 2016.
  33. ^ Gemma.Choy (2017-12-06). "Report into Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat released | Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse". Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. Retrieved 2017-12-16.
  34. ^ Deery, Shannon (December 6, 2017). "Royal Commission finds abuse of children a 'catastrophic institutional failure' of the Catholic Church". Herald Sun.
  35. ^ Neil, Wrigley, Megan, Brendan (12 December 2017). "Royal Commission finds 'inexcusable failures' in Ballarat Catholic Church's treatment of abuse victims". The Age.
  36. ^ Gemma.Choy (2017-12-06). "Report into Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat released | Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse". Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. Retrieved 2017-12-17.
  37. ^ Commonwealth of Australia (November 2017). "Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse's report into Case Study 28 – Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat" (PDF). p. 32.
  38. ^ Known sex abuse priest was appointed headmaster of Catholic junior school
  39. ^ "Deacon Alan Morris jailed for school sex abuse", BBC News, 28 August 2014
  40. ^ "Catholic order apologises publicly for abuse". BBC News. 1998-03-30. Retrieved 2009-04-08.
  41. ^ "New information about abuse is divulged". RTÉ News. 2004-06-16.
  42. ^ Report of the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse (Ireland) 2017-08-28 at the Wayback Machine, 2009. Chapter 6 of Volume 1 covers the Christian Brothers
  43. ^ L&P (financial and management services) Official website. Accessed 15 October 2015
  44. ^ a b Catholic order pays out for abuse, BBC News, 25 November 2009
  45. ^ "Christian Brothers donate €34m in reparation". RTÉ News. 2009-11-25. Retrieved 2009-11-25.
  46. ^ "Former teachers guilty of abusing boys at Fife residential school". BBC News. 22 July 2016. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  47. ^ "Case Study no. 4: The provision of residential care for children in Scotland by The Christian Brothers between 1953 and 1983 at St Ninian's Residential Care Home, Falkland, Fife" (PDF). Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry. February 2021. (PDF) from the original on 2021-02-17. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  48. ^ Chree, Gordon (14 February 2020). "Christian Brothers apologise for abuse of boys at Fife school". Fife Today. from the original on 2020-04-22. Retrieved 2021-05-18.
  49. ^ Gullage, Peter (February 17, 2019). "Mount Cashel: After 30 years, the pain still has not gone away". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved February 19, 2022.
  50. ^ Bartlett, Jeff (January 13, 2018). "Abuse settlement brings dark memories — and hope — for journalist who covered Mount Cashel scandal". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved February 19, 2022.
  51. ^ CBC News, NL (September 19, 2007). "Whistleblower in Elizabeth Towers scandal dies at 69". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved February 18, 2022.
  52. ^ Hughes, Samuel (1992). "Mount Cashel Hughes Commission" (PDF). Report on Mount Cashel. One: 149.
  53. ^ Government, NL (December 13, 2002). "Government forgoes claim in favour of Mount Cashel victims". Press Release. Retrieved February 18, 2022.
  54. ^ Government, NL (December 2, 1996). "Government makes settlement offers to Mount Cashel claimants". Press Release. Retrieved February 18, 2022.
  55. ^ CBC News, NL (August 23, 2012). "422 sex abuse claims filed against Christian Brothers". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved February 19, 2022.
  56. ^ Government, NL (1997). "Mount Cashel Orphanage Abuse Scandal Timeline". Heritage Newfoundland and Labrdor. Retrieved February 18, 2022.
  57. ^ Government, NL (1997). "Mount Cashel Orphanage Abuse Scandal". Heritage Newfoundland and Labrador. Retrieved February 18, 2022.
  58. ^ 15 years later, Mount Cashel cases appear to end. CBC News, Friday, May 28, 2004. Retrieved January 31, 2008. February 15, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  59. ^ Bill, Roger (February 23, 2019). "The pedestals were washed away: The sex abuse scandals that rocked the church in N.L." Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved February 19, 2022.
  60. ^ "Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops".
  61. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-31. Retrieved 2016-04-03.
  62. ^ "Child and youth sexual abuse by clergy: The Canadian Situation". Religioustolerance.org. 2001-02-28. Retrieved 2009-04-08.
  63. ^ Cooke, Ryan (February 9, 2021). "Christian Brother continued abusing boys after Mount Cashel coverup, B.C. lawsuit alleges". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved February 19, 2022.
  64. ^ . Chicago Sun Times. 1998-04-21. Archived from the original on 2012-11-03. Retrieved 2010-01-09.
  65. ^ . The Joliet Daily News. 14 March 2000. Archived from the original on 11 September 2016. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
  66. ^ "Statement Regarding Judge's Ruling on Parole Violation of St. Louis Sex Offender". The Joliet Daily News. 2004-03-26. Retrieved 2010-01-09.
  67. ^ Manya A. Brachear (23 May 2013). "Christian Brothers settle suit with 400 sex abuse victims". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
  68. ^ Christian Brothers: Irish Grammar Ask About Ireland.
  69. ^ GRAIMÉAR GAEILGE na mBRÁITHRE CRÍOSTAÍ, An Gúm, M.H. Mac an Ghoill agus a Mhac Teo, Baile Átha Cliath, 1960.
  70. ^ "Leaving certificate chemistry /by the Christian Brothers". National Collection of Children's Books. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
  71. ^ True Sons of Erin:Catholic/Nationalist Ideology and the Politics of Adventure in Our Boys 1914-32 by Michael Flannagan, PhD Thesis, DIT.
  72. ^ Celebrating 125 Years in the Education System - St. Joseph's 125 Anniversary Book (1888-2013)[, St. Josephs CBS Fairview, 2015.
  73. ^ 'Matamaitic na hÁrd Teistiméireachta' (Leaving Certificate Mathematics)', An Bráthair Tomás Maincín Ó Catháin, BA, H.Dip, MA., Na Bráithre Críostaí, 1967.
  74. ^ "Brother Laurence (Larry) Ennis RIP – A tribute from Ulster Schools". 17 September 2021.
  75. ^ Br. Jerome Fitzpatrick (1878-1910 Waterford County Council
  76. ^ Brother Jerome Fitzpatrick by Barry Coldrey, The Old Limerick Journal, P. 28., http://www.limerickcity.ie
  77. ^ Mentor and Manager former Kilkenny All-Ireland Hurling winning minor coach and last teaching Christian brother in Ireland passes away Kilkenny Now, September 3, 2019.
  78. ^ Zimmer, Erika. "Remembered horrors of a religious education - World Socialist Web Site". www.wsws.org. Retrieved 2016-04-27.
  79. ^ "5 most damning films about Catholic child abuse". theweek.com. 2010-04-14. Retrieved 2016-05-09.
  80. ^ Bill, Roger (February 23, 2019). "The pedestals were washed away: The sex abuse scandals that rocked the church in N.L." Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved February 19, 2022.

Further reading

  • Davies, K. (1994) When Innocence Trembles: The Christian Brothers Orphanage Tragedy. (Angus & Robertson: Sydney) ISBN 0-207-18419-4
  • Normoyle, M. C. A Tree is Planted: The Life and Times of Edmund Rice (Congregation of Christian Brothers: n.l., 1976)
  • Humphreys, Margaret. Empty Cradles. Corgi, 1996. ISBN 0-552-14164-X

External links

  • Catholic Encyclopædia
  • Edmund Rice Christian Brothers North America
  • Edmund Rice Education Beyond Borders
  • Edmund Rice Foundation Australia

congregation, christian, brothers, latin, congregatio, fratrum, christianorum, abbreviated, worldwide, religious, community, within, catholic, church, founded, blessed, edmund, rice, latin, congregatio, fratrum, christianorumabbreviationcfcformation1802, years. The Congregation of Christian Brothers Latin Congregatio Fratrum Christianorum abbreviated CFC is a worldwide religious community within the Catholic Church founded by Blessed Edmund Rice 1 Congregation of Christian BrothersLatin Congregatio Fratrum ChristianorumAbbreviationCFCFormation1802 221 years ago 1802 FounderEdmund Ignatius RiceFounded atWaterford IrelandTypeLay Religious Congregation of Pontifical Right for Men Membership926 members 2017 mottoLatin Facere et docere English To do and to teach Superior GeneralHugh James O NeillGeneral MotherhouseVia Marcantonio Colonna 9 00192 Rome ItalyTheir first school was opened in Waterford Ireland in 1802 1 At the time of its foundation though much relieved from the harshest of the Penal Laws by the Parliament s Relief Acts UK Catholics faced much discrimination throughout the newly created United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland pending full Catholic emancipation in 1829 This congregation is sometimes referred to as simply the Christian Brothers 2 leading to confusion with the De La Salle Brothers also known as the Christian Brothers sometimes by Lasallian organisations themselves 3 As such Rice s congregation is sometimes called the Irish Christian Brothers 2 or the Edmund Rice Christian Brothers Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation of The Christian brothers 1 2 Expansion 1 3 Contraction 2 Organizational structure of the Christian Brothers 2 1 List of Superiors General 3 Irish nationalism 4 Sexual abuse of children 4 1 Australia 4 2 Ireland and the UK 4 2 1 England 4 2 2 Ireland 4 2 3 Scotland 4 3 Canada 4 4 United States 5 Publications 5 1 Textbooks 5 2 Our Boys 5 3 The Educational Record 6 Notable Christian Brothers 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory EditFormation of The Christian brothers Edit Edmund Rice At the turn of the nineteenth century Waterford merchant Edmund Rice considered travelling to Rome to join a religious institute possibly the Augustinians Instead with the support of Thomas Hussey Bishop of Waterford and Lismore he decided to found a religious community dedicated to teaching disadvantaged youth 4 The first school on Waterford s New Street was a converted stable and opened in 1802 with a second school opening in Stephen Street soon after to cater for increasing enrollment Two men from his hometown of Callan Thomas Grosvenor and Patrick Finn soon arrived to aid Rice in his makeshift schools with the intention of living the life of lay brothers In the same year Rice used proceeds from the sale of his victualling business to begin building a community house and school on land provided by the diocese Bishop Hussey opened the new complex christened Mount Sion on June 7 1803 and pupils were transferred to the new school building the following year 5 The reputation of the school spread and across the next few years several men sought to become Michaels On 15 August 1808 seven men including Edmund Rice took religious promises under Bishop John Power of Waterford Following the example of Nano Nagle s Presentation Sisters they were called Presentation Brothers 6 This was one of the first congregations of men to be founded in Ireland and one of the few founded in the Church by a layman Houses were soon opened in Carrick on Suir Dungarvan and in 1811 in Cork In 1812 the Archbishop of Dublin established a community in the nation s capital and by 1907 there were ten communities in Dublin with pupils in excess of 6 000 The schools included primary secondary and technical schools along with orphanages and a school for the deaf A community was founded in Limerick in 1816 followed by establishments in several of Ireland s principal towns The Holy See formally established the congregation in 1820 This too was an unusual event since the Christian Brothers were the first Irish congregation of men approved by a charter from Rome Some brothers in Cork chose to remain under the original Presentation rule and continued to be known as Presentation Brothers a separate congregation but also recognising Edmund Rice as its Founder Expansion Edit See also List of Christian Brothers schools The congregation of Irish Christian Brothers spread to Liverpool and other parts of England These new ventures were not always immediately successful Two brothers had been sent to Gibraltar to establish an institute in 1835 However despite initial successes they left in August 1837 on account of disagreements with the local priests 7 In 1878 the Brothers returned to the then Crown colony of Gibraltar The school eventually flourished supplying education to the twentieth century The Line Wall College was noted in 1930 for the education that it supplied to well to do children 8 Similarly a mission to Sydney Australia in 1842 failed within a couple of years 9 Brother Ambrose Treacy established a presence in Melbourne Australia in 1868 in 1875 in Brisbane Australia and in 1876 a school was commenced in Dunedin New Zealand In 1875 a school was opened in St John s Newfoundland In 1886 the Pope requested that they consider setting up in India and a province of the congregation was established there In 1900 there came the invitation to establish houses in Rome and in 1906 schools were established in New York City 4 In 1940 Iona College was founded in New York as a Higher Education College 10 facilitating poorer high school graduates to progress to a college education St Joseph s Junior Novitiate Baldoyle was where trainee brothers went to complete their second level studies normally proceeding to St Mary s in Marino to train as school teachers To day there is a nursing home there and there are over 1000 brothers buried in the cemetery in St Patrick s Baldoyle In 1925 the brothers bought St Helen s Booterstown which became their administrative headquarters and novitiate Around 1968 land to the South was used to build two new schools Colaiste Eoin and Colaiste Iosagain St Helen s was sold in 1988 In 1955 Stella Maris College in Uruguay was established In 1972 the alumnus rugby team was travelling in Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 when it crashed in the Andes stranding survivors in freezing conditions with little food and no heat for 72 days 16 of the 45 people on the aircraft survived In the 1950s due to the number of brothers in Ireland it was split into two sections divided into North and South by a line from Dublin to Galway 11 In 1967 the Christian Brothers had a membership of about 5 000 teaching in around 600 schools 12 The Christian Brothers teacher training centre at St Mary s Colaiste Mhuire has become the Marino Institute for Education which has trained lay teachers since 1972 and has offered degrees validated by the University of Dublin since 1974 In 2012 Trinity College Dublin became a co trustee with the Brothers of the Institute 13 The Brothers schools include primary secondary and technical schools orphanages and schools for the deaf A number of these technical schools originally taught poor children trades such as carpentry and building skills after which they could progress to gain apprenticeships and employment As the National School system and vocational schools developed in the Irish Republic the Irish Christian Brothers became more concentrated on secondary education Contraction Edit As of 2018 there were 872 Christian Brothers and 172 houses 14 In 2008 it was reported that not more than ten Christian Brothers were teaching in Irish schools with the expectation that there would soon be none This was contrasted with the mid 1960s when over 1 000 Brothers worked in schools with no shortage of new recruits 15 Organizational structure of the Christian Brothers Edit Traditional crest of the Christian Brothers incorporating the Latin motto Facere et docere To Do and To Teach Many schools run by the Brothers feature the cross in their school logo Geographically the Christian Brothers are divided into several provinces that encompass every inhabited continent The brothers within each province work under the direction of a Province Leadership Team In turn the entire Congregation operates under the leadership of a Congregation Leadership Team that is based in Rome and led by the Congregation Leader These provincial and congregational teams are elected on a six year basis at Congregation chapters Restructuring has taken place in the congregation to account for the changing needs in particular the declining number of brothers in the developed world The three provinces of North America Canada Eastern American and Western American Province restructured into the Edmund Rice Christian Brothers North America on 1 July 2005 16 The provinces that cover Ireland Great Britain and the Congregational Leadership Team in Rome combined into a single European province on May 5 2007 17 while the five provinces covering Australia New Zealand and Papua New Guinea combined into one Oceania province on October 1 2007 18 The English Province is a registered charity 19 The Dublin Headquarters are in the grounds of Marino Institute of Education Claremont Griffith Avenue Dublin 9 Ireland A special community within this new European province will be based in Geneva Switzerland working to establish an NGO known as Edmund Rice International The purpose of such an organisation is to gain what is known as a general consultative status with the United Nations This position allows groups the opportunity to challenge systemic injustice and to engage in advocacy work with policymakers on behalf of people who are made poor As well as including Christian Brothers from provinces all over the world members of the Presentation Brothers will also have a presence within this community 20 Edmund Rice Development is a faith based non governmental organisation with charity status in Ireland Based in Dublin Edmund Rice Development was established in 2009 to formalise the fundraising efforts of the developing world projects for the Christian Brothers globally and received its charitable status in 2009 Funding raised by the charity is directed mainly to nine countries in Africa where The Christian Brothers work on mission in development Ghana Kenya Liberia Sierra Leone South Africa Sudan Tanzania Zambia and Zimbabwe In Kenya they support the Ruben Centre 21 Additional funds are also raised for similar work in South America Argentina Bolivia Paraguay Peru and Uruguay and India List of Superiors General Edit The following is a list of the Superiors General of the Congregation of Christian Brothers 14 In recent times Congregational Leader has been the title used Edmund Ignatius Rice 1820 1838 Michael Paul Riordan 1838 1862 James Aloysius Hoare 1862 1880 Richard Anthony Maxwell 1880 1900 22 Michael Titus Moylan 1900 1905 23 Calasanctius Whitty 1905 1920 Jerome Hennessy 1920 1930 Joseph Pius Noonan 1930 1950 Edward Ferdinand Clancy 1950 1966 24 Arthur Austin Loftus 1966 1972 Justin Linus Kelty 1972 1978 Gerald Gabriel McHugh 1978 1990 Jerome Colm Keating 1990 1997 Edmund Michael Garvey 1997 2002 Philip Pinto 2002 2014 Hugh O Neill 2014 2019 Gabriel Cardillo 2019 present Irish nationalism Edit CBS Templemore Co TipperaryApril 2010 The Irish Christian Brothers were among the strongest supporters of Irish republicanism the Irish language revival the Gaelic Athletic Association and Gaelic games In most Christian Brothers schools in Ireland Gaelic football hurling and handball were encouraged and there were even examples of boys being punished for playing foreign games like soccer Many GAA clubs were founded by Christian Brothers many developing from schools teams with many GAA clubs using the playing fields of the brothers schools They also run and sponsor The Rice Cup which was set up in 1944 and named after the order s founder for post primary hurling They also sponsor the Westcourt Cup and Rice Shield Many of the first Irish language textbooks were produced by the Christian brothers for their schools Conor Cruise O Brien called them the most indefatigable and explicit carriers of the Catholic nation idea 25 Sexual abuse of children EditMain article Sexual abuse scandal in the Congregation of Christian Brothers In the late 20th and early 21st century many cases were exposed of emotional physical and sexual abuse of children in the Christian Brothers care over a number of decades Cases emerged in Ireland Canada the United States Australia and the United Kingdom Australia Edit The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse documented Christian Brothers activities in Australia and in particular in Ballarat 22 of Christian Brothers across Australia have been alleged sexual predators since 1950 according to the royal commission The commissioners concluded that the Christian Brothers completely failed to protect the most vulnerable children in their care and that senior brothers including Brother Paul Nangle Ballarat s highest Brother in the 1970s had deliberately misled police in more recent statements about their knowledge of abuse 26 There were allegations that during the 1970s sexual abuses took place at the junior campus of St Patrick s College and St Alipius Primary School in Ballarat Victoria After investigation Brothers Robert Best Edward Dowlan and Stephen Francis Farrell were all convicted of sex crimes Dowlan and Best were later transferred to the senior campus and continued to offend 27 Four of the school s brothers and their chaplain Gerald Ridsdale were accused of sexually assaulting children all but one who died before charges could be laid have been convicted 28 29 In December 2014 a royal commission found that Christian Brothers leaders knew of allegations of sexual abuse of children at four Western Australian orphanages and failed to manage the homes to prevent the systemic ill treatment for decades 30 During the 2016 Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Ballarat it was found that 853 children average age 13 had been sexually abused by one or more Christian Brothers 31 Child abuse complaints had been made against 281 Christian Brothers and the Congregation had paid A 37 3 million in compensation 32 The Royal Commissions final report of Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat was released on 6th December 33 The report found that 56 Christian Brothers had claims of sexual abuse made against them in Ballarat and that there was a complete failure by the Christian Brothers to protect the most vulnerable children in their care 34 The response to complaints of sexual abuse was grossly inadequate most often Christian Brothers were moved to new locations after an allegation had been made 35 The Report found Often the Christian Brother in question was allowed to remain in the position he held where the allegations arose with continuing access to children and On many occasions the Brother was moved to a new location after a complaint or allegation was made about his conduct In some cases the reason given for the move was to conceal the true reason for it and to protect the reputation of the Christian Brothers and avoid scandal and embarrassment 36 37 In February 2020 Rex Francis Elmer pleaded guilty to two charges of indecently assaulting boys at St Vincent s Boys Orphanage in South Melbourne He was removed from St Vincent s in 1976 after a welfare officer who inspected the orphanage complained that he had interfered with boys who lived at the home He was appointed headmaster of a Melbourne Catholic boys school a few years after the religious order became aware of his abuse 38 Ireland and the UK Edit England Edit In December 2012 the Christian Brothers school St Ambrose College Altrincham Greater Manchester was implicated in a child sex abuse case A former lay teacher was convicted of nineteen counts of sexual assault occurring between 1972 and 1991 39 Ireland Edit The Congregation of the Christian Brothers published full page advertisements in newspapers in Ireland in March 1998 apologizing to former pupils who had been ill treated whilst in their care This advertising campaign expressed deep regret on behalf of the Christian Brothers and listed telephone lines which former pupils could ring if they needed help 40 In 2003 the Congregation brought a case against the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse seeking to prevent the Commission from naming brothers accused of child abuse Justice Sean Ryan declared that individual alleged perpetrators of abuse would not be named unless they had already been convicted 41 In May 2009 a report was issued by the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse CICA on allegations of child abuse committed on thousands of children in residential care institutions run by various religious institutes for the Irish state 42 This report found that sexual abuse of boys in institutions run by the Brothers was common In response the Irish ecclesiastical province issued a pledge to pay 161 million euros toward a fund set up to compensate male and female victims of such abuse both in their institutions and in those run by other religious institutes As of 2013 update the Christian Brothers in Ireland continued to seek out of court settlement for historical claims initiated by survivors of sexual assault by Brothers committed in day schools managed by the order in Ireland Towards Healing was set up by CORI to offer therapy to survivors of clerical abuse it is a Catholic organisation about whose independence there has been controversy The Christian brothers in Ireland used the services of the L amp P group 43 to set up an education trust In late November 2009 the organization announced it would supply a 161 million 145 million sterling package as part of reparations for child abuse in Ireland 44 This includes a donation of 30 million to a government trust and 4 million donated to provide counselling services 45 Playing fields owned by the organisation and valued at 127 million would be transferred to joint ownership of the government and the trust that runs former Christian Brothers schools 44 In 2019 former Brother John Gibson was convicted and received a prison sentence for his role in abuse in Wexford CBS in the 1980s amp 1990s On 22 June 2020 he received an additional four years after pleading guilty to a number of assault and sexual assault charges Scotland Edit In 2016 Fr John Farrell retired priest of the Diocese of Motherwell the last Head teacher at St Ninian s Falkland Fife was sentenced to five years imprisonment His colleague Paul Kelly a retired teacher from Portsmouth was given ten years both were convicted of the physical and sexual abuse of boys between the years 1979 and 1983 More than 100 charges involving 35 boys were made The school closed in 1983 46 In 2021 The Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry issued a report on the St Ninians residential school which had been run by the Christian Brothers between 1953 and 1983 47 The report concluded that the school was a a place of abuse and deprivation particularly from 1969 until the school closed in 1983 The Christian Brothers were able to pursue their abusive practices with impunity and the evidence against them was shocking and distressing Children in care suffered sexual physical and emotional abuse Michael Madigan a representative for the Christian Brothers said the congregation acknowledged with deepest regret that children had been abused 48 Canada Edit A pattern of physical and sexual abuse of more than 300 Mount Cashel Orphanage residents in St John s Newfoundland perpetrated by staff members specifically members of the Christian Brothers of Ireland in Canada CBIC was uncovered during the late 1980s and early 1990s 49 50 51 52 Multiple criminal investigations a provincial Royal Commission of Inquiry the Hughes Inquiry and an Archdiocese of St John s inquiry the Winter Commission resulted in criminal convictions and millions of dollars in court imposed financial settlements Compensation was provided by the Government of Newfoundland for orphanage residents who were wards of the state and several properties owned by the CBIC in Newfoundland and Labrador and other provinces were seized and liquidated 53 54 55 Throughout 1989 1993 nine Christian Brothers were charged and prosecuted for various criminal offences including sex offences against the boys of Mount Cashel orphanage 56 57 58 59 Both the St John s Archdiocese through the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops as well as the Congregation of Christian Brothers have since enacted policies aimed at the prevention of child sexual abuse 60 61 In Ontario in January 1993 the Christian Brothers reached a financial settlement totaling 23 million with 700 former students who alleged abuse 62 In February 2021 a British Columbia man alleged that he was sexually abused by one of the Christian Brothers who confessed to the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary of molesting children at the Mount Cashel Orphanage in 1975 63 United States Edit Christian Brother Robert Brouillette who had taught at St Laurence High School was arrested in April 1998 in Joliet Illinois for indecent solicitation of a child 64 He was convicted in March 2000 of 10 charges related to child pornography fined 2 000 and sentenced to four years probation 65 In 2002 a civil lawsuit was filed in Cook County Illinois against Brouillette for sexual assault against a 21 year old man 66 In 2013 the Edmund Rice Christian Brothers North American Province known as Irish Christian Brothers paid US 16 5 million to 400 victims of child sexual abuse across the US and agreed to enforce a zero tolerance policy for brothers accused of abuse This followed the Brothers filing for bankruptcy in April 2011 following rising legal costs and leading to a reorganization settlement between creditors and the order according to the US Chapter 11 bankruptcy code 67 Publications EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Christian brothers composed and published a number of text books on several subjects many in the Irish language which were used by their schools Textbooks Edit Irish History Reader Christian Brothers M H Gill amp Son Dublin 1905 Graimear na Gaeidhilge Na Braithre Criostai M H Gill Dublin 1901 68 Graimear Gaeilge na mBraithre Criosta M H Mac an Ghoill agus a Mhac Teo Baile Atha Cliath 1960 69 Matamaitic na hArdteistimeireachta by Tomas o Cathain Na Braithre Criostai 1967 Leaving Certificate Chemistry Christian Brothers Congregation Folens Dublin 1970 70 Leaving Certificate Physics translated from the Irish Christian Brothers Congregation Folens Dublin 1973 New Irish Grammer Christian Brothers published by C J Fallon Dublin 1990 AIDS to Irish Composition by Christian Brothers Jerome Fitzpatrick 1902 Second Book of Modern Geography The Christian Brothers M H Gill amp Son Dublin 1904 Coir ṁuinte na Gaeḋilge leis Na Braiṫre Criostai M H mac an Goill Baile aṫa cliaṫ 1910 First Steps in Irish A classic succinct book for learning to read write and speak the Irish language by L Cinneide The Christian Brothers Our Boys Edit Our Boys was a magazine for boys by Christian Brothers and the Educational Company of Ireland published from September 1914 until the 1990s It was based on British Boys Own adventure comics with illustrated strips and adventure stories in English and Irish It had an overt Catholic and Irish Nationalist outlook featuring Irish Legends GAA figures the Missions and Catholic juvenile organisations Illustrator Gerrit van Gelderen contributed to the magazine 71 The Educational Record Edit The Educational record was an annual collection of articles from Christian brother schools around the world published by them from their offices in Rome Editors of the record include Liam o hAnluain and Richard Healy Notable Christian Brothers EditGerald Griffin 1803 1840 Irish novelist poet and playwright John Philip Holland inventor of the motor powered submarine Paul Francis Keaney Australian educator Joseph G McKenna American educator Paul Nunan Australian educator Liam o hAnluain 1910 1992 Irish language scholar contributed major contribution to a standard for Irish Grammer he also served as provincial of the order Blessed Edmund Ignatius Rice founder of the Christian Brothers and the Presentation Brothers Thomas Munchin Keane 1908 1989 teacher 72 and mathematician wrote the first textbook for the new leaving certificate mathematics in Irish in the 1960s 73 Michael Paul Riordan Irish early Christian Brother and second Superior General of the congregation Patrick Ambrose Treacy Australian educator and leader of the first Australian community of Christian Brothers Godfrey Reggio became a film director of Koyaanisqatsi after being a brother in the US Laurence Larry Ennis 1933 2021 served as Antrim Gaelic football team manager from 1979 to 1981 74 Jerome Fitzpatrick 1878 1910 teacher and Irish Language enthusiast and compiled and published many early aids to teaching the Irish language 75 76 Seamus Damien Brennan teacher principal Hurling Manager last teaching Christian brother in Ireland 77 In popular culture EditThe play The Christian Brothers first performed in 1975 and written by Ron Blair is a one man show depicting a Christian Brother teaching at a Catholic school in Australia in the 1950s focusing much on the Brother s use of corporal punishment 78 In the 1985 film Lamb Liam Neeson plays a Christian brother The Moving Hearts 1985 song All I Remember written by Mick Hanley mentions Christian brothers The Saw Doctors 1991 single N17 refers to when I left the Christian brother school The television miniseries The Boys of St Vincent is a fictional story based on real events of sexual abuse that took place at Mount Cashel Orphanage in St John s Newfoundland and Labrador an orphanage run by the Christian Brothers 79 The 1993 film Alive based Alive The Story of the Andes Survivors the 1974 book documenting the events of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 which contained rugby players from the Christian brother school Stella Maris College Montevideo In 1994 the CBC released The unforgiven Mount Cashel five years later a documentary that profiled several of Mount Cashel s victims 80 The 2016 film Sing Street is about a coming of age drama where a boy moves from a private fee paying school to a Christian brother school Synge Street In 2022 an episode of the CBC television series Son of a Critch discussed the real time impact that the initial revelations of the Mount Cashel Orphanage scandal had on Newfoundland society in the 1980s See also Edit Catholicism portalCatholic religious order Catholic spirituality Presentation Brothers Congregation of Christian Brothers in New Zealand Consecrated life List of Christian Brothers schools Margaret Humphreys and The Child Migrant s Trust Roman Catholic sex abuse cases Abuse by priests in Roman Catholic ordersReferences Edit a b The Life of Blessed Edmund Rice 1762 1844 PDF Christian Brothers Foundation New York U S A 2005 a b CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Christian Brothers of Ireland The Advent Retrieved 29 September 2020 The schools of the Irish Christian Brothers are of many types the Christian Brothers schools The Christian Brothers at La Salle University La Salle University Retrieved 29 September 2020 The Christian Brothers are at the heart of everything a b Edmund Rice Christian Brothers North America Vocations PRESENCE COMPASSION LIBERATION www cfcvocations org Archived from the original on 2016 01 29 Retrieved 2014 03 26 Normoyle M C 1976 A Tree is Planted The Life and Times of Edmund Rice Congregation of Christian Brothers pp 45 50 Normoyle M C 1976 A Tree is Planted The Life and Times of Edmund Rice Congregation of Christian Brothers p 71 Normoyle M C 1976 A Tree is Planted The Life and Times of Edmund Rice Congregation of Christian Brothers pp 289 296 Gibraltar Directory for 1930 accessed 8 May 2013 Normoyle M C 1976 A Tree is Planted The Life and Times of Edmund Rice Congregation of Christian Brothers pp 405 406 About Iona College Iona College Website Secondary School Education in Ireland History Memories and Life Stories 1922 1967 By Tom O Donoghue Judith Harford Scotus Academy www scotusacademy net Retrieved 2016 05 07 Trinity College Dublin Enters into a Co Trusteeship of the Marino Institute of Education Archived June 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine Communications Office TCD January 30 2012 a b Christian Brothers C F C www gcatholic org Retrieved 2016 01 27 John Walshe 19 June 2008 End of era for Christian Brothers Independent ie Retrieved 7 October 2016 Embracing a Common Future Archived 2007 10 31 at the Wayback Machine Restructuring New European Province edmundrice org au New European Province Archived 2007 08 29 at the Wayback Machine Shaping Our Future PDF Archived from the original on 2007 07 03 Retrieved 2007 02 07 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Trust property held in connection with the English Province of the Congregation of Christian Brothers registered charity no 254312 Charity Commission for England and Wales Presence Compassion Liberation PDF permanent dead link Ruben Centre The Irish Catholic Directory and Almanac J Duffy and Company Limited 1900 01 01 The Irish Catholic Directory and Almanac J Duffy and Company Limited 1904 01 01 RTE apologises to wife of Dingle Senator Independent ie Independent ie Retrieved 2016 01 27 Portrait of a Christian crusader Reviewed by Dermot Bolger permanent dead link Sunday Business Post August 31 2008 Violent and sexually defective A long history of abuse at the hands of the Christian Brothers ABC News 2017 12 21 Retrieved 2017 12 22 Ellingsen Peter Ballarat s good men of the cloth The Age Newspaper June 14 2002 Catholic Church s failure in Ballarat led to suffering irreparable harm ABC News 2017 12 06 Retrieved 2017 12 16 Ballarat Christian Brothers misled police over abuse royal commission lawyers say ABC News 2016 10 31 Retrieved 2017 12 24 Banks Amanda Legal Affairs Editor Christian Brothers cop blast The Weekend West 20 21 December 2014 p 11 Chris Johnston 22 February 2016 Christian Brother gyrated against me Catholic sexual abuse victim The Age Victoria Retrieved 17 March 2016 Christian Brothers abused 850 children Skynews com 22 February 2016 Retrieved 17 March 2016 Gemma Choy 2017 12 06 Report into Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat released Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse Retrieved 2017 12 16 Deery Shannon December 6 2017 Royal Commission finds abuse of children a catastrophic institutional failure of the Catholic Church Herald Sun Neil Wrigley Megan Brendan 12 December 2017 Royal Commission finds inexcusable failures in Ballarat Catholic Church s treatment of abuse victims The Age Gemma Choy 2017 12 06 Report into Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat released Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse Retrieved 2017 12 17 Commonwealth of Australia November 2017 Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse s report into Case Study 28 Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat PDF p 32 Known sex abuse priest was appointed headmaster of Catholic junior school Deacon Alan Morris jailed for school sex abuse BBC News 28 August 2014 Catholic order apologises publicly for abuse BBC News 1998 03 30 Retrieved 2009 04 08 New information about abuse is divulged RTE News 2004 06 16 Report of the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse Ireland Archived 2017 08 28 at the Wayback Machine 2009 Chapter 6 of Volume 1 covers the Christian Brothers L amp P financial and management services Official website Accessed 15 October 2015 a b Catholic order pays out for abuse BBC News 25 November 2009 Christian Brothers donate 34m in reparation RTE News 2009 11 25 Retrieved 2009 11 25 Former teachers guilty of abusing boys at Fife residential school BBC News 22 July 2016 Retrieved 22 July 2016 Case Study no 4 The provision of residential care for children in Scotland by The Christian Brothers between 1953 and 1983 at St Ninian s Residential Care Home Falkland Fife PDF Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry February 2021 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 02 17 Retrieved 18 May 2021 Chree Gordon 14 February 2020 Christian Brothers apologise for abuse of boys at Fife school Fife Today Archived from the original on 2020 04 22 Retrieved 2021 05 18 Gullage Peter February 17 2019 Mount Cashel After 30 years the pain still has not gone away Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved February 19 2022 Bartlett Jeff January 13 2018 Abuse settlement brings dark memories and hope for journalist who covered Mount Cashel scandal Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved February 19 2022 CBC News NL September 19 2007 Whistleblower in Elizabeth Towers scandal dies at 69 Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved February 18 2022 Hughes Samuel 1992 Mount Cashel Hughes Commission PDF Report on Mount Cashel One 149 Government NL December 13 2002 Government forgoes claim in favour of Mount Cashel victims Press Release Retrieved February 18 2022 Government NL December 2 1996 Government makes settlement offers to Mount Cashel claimants Press Release Retrieved February 18 2022 CBC News NL August 23 2012 422 sex abuse claims filed against Christian Brothers Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved February 19 2022 Government NL 1997 Mount Cashel Orphanage Abuse Scandal Timeline Heritage Newfoundland and Labrdor Retrieved February 18 2022 Government NL 1997 Mount Cashel Orphanage Abuse Scandal Heritage Newfoundland and Labrador Retrieved February 18 2022 15 years later Mount Cashel cases appear to end CBC News Friday May 28 2004 Retrieved January 31 2008 Archived February 15 2008 at the Wayback Machine Bill Roger February 23 2019 The pedestals were washed away The sex abuse scandals that rocked the church in N L Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved February 19 2022 Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops Edmund Rice Christian Brothers North America Archived from the original on 2016 03 31 Retrieved 2016 04 03 Child and youth sexual abuse by clergy The Canadian Situation Religioustolerance org 2001 02 28 Retrieved 2009 04 08 Cooke Ryan February 9 2021 Christian Brother continued abusing boys after Mount Cashel coverup B C lawsuit alleges Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved February 19 2022 Christian Brother caught in Net sex sting Chicago Sun Times 1998 04 21 Archived from the original on 2012 11 03 Retrieved 2010 01 09 CATHOLIC BROTHER WHO LIVED IN JOLIET SENTENCED The Joliet Daily News 14 March 2000 Archived from the original on 11 September 2016 Retrieved 25 July 2016 Statement Regarding Judge s Ruling on Parole Violation of St Louis Sex Offender The Joliet Daily News 2004 03 26 Retrieved 2010 01 09 Manya A Brachear 23 May 2013 Christian Brothers settle suit with 400 sex abuse victims Chicago Tribune Retrieved 25 July 2016 Christian Brothers Irish Grammar Ask About Ireland GRAIMEAR GAEILGE na mBRAITHRE CRIOSTAI An Gum M H Mac an Ghoill agus a Mhac Teo Baile Atha Cliath 1960 Leaving certificate chemistry by the Christian Brothers National Collection of Children s Books Retrieved 25 July 2016 True Sons of Erin Catholic Nationalist Ideology and the Politics of Adventure in Our Boys 1914 32 by Michael Flannagan PhD Thesis DIT Celebrating 125 Years in the Education System St Joseph s 125 Anniversary Book 1888 2013 St Josephs CBS Fairview 2015 Matamaitic na hArd Teistimeireachta Leaving Certificate Mathematics An Brathair Tomas Maincin o Cathain BA H Dip MA Na Braithre Criostai 1967 Brother Laurence Larry Ennis RIP A tribute from Ulster Schools 17 September 2021 Br Jerome Fitzpatrick 1878 1910 Waterford County Council Brother Jerome Fitzpatrick by Barry Coldrey The Old Limerick Journal P 28 http www limerickcity ie Mentor and Manager former Kilkenny All Ireland Hurling winning minor coach and last teaching Christian brother in Ireland passes away Kilkenny Now September 3 2019 Zimmer Erika Remembered horrors of a religious education World Socialist Web Site www wsws org Retrieved 2016 04 27 5 most damning films about Catholic child abuse theweek com 2010 04 14 Retrieved 2016 05 09 Bill Roger February 23 2019 The pedestals were washed away The sex abuse scandals that rocked the church in N L Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved February 19 2022 Further reading EditDavies K 1994 When Innocence Trembles The Christian Brothers Orphanage Tragedy Angus amp Robertson Sydney ISBN 0 207 18419 4 Normoyle M C A Tree is Planted The Life and Times of Edmund Rice Congregation of Christian Brothers n l 1976 Humphreys Margaret Empty Cradles Corgi 1996 ISBN 0 552 14164 XExternal links EditCatholic Encyclopaedia Christian Brothers on Edmund Rice Edmund Rice Christian Brothers North America Edmund Rice Education Beyond Borders Edmund Rice Foundation Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Congregation of Christian Brothers amp oldid 1146192016, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.