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Rosminians

The Rosminians, officially named the Institute of Charity (Latin: Institutum Caritatis), abbreviated I.C., are a Catholic clerical religious congregation of Pontifical Right for men founded by Antonio Rosmini and first organised in 1828.

Institute of Charity
Institutum Caritatis
AbbreviationI.C.
NicknameRosminians
FormationFebruary 2, 1828; 196 years ago (February 2, 1828)
FounderBlessed Fr. Antonio Rosmini, I.C.
TypeClerical Religious Congregation of Pontifical Right for men
HeadquartersVia di Porta Latina 17, Rome, Italy
Membership
266 members (includes 175 priests) as of 2020
Superior General
Fr. Vito Nardin, I.C.
Parent organization
Catholic Church
Websitehttp://www.rosmini.org/

The order was formally approved by the Holy See in 1838, and took its name from "charity" as the fullness of Christian virtue. Its members are commonly called Fathers of Charity and use the postnominal letters IC.

Foundation edit

Antonio Rosmini-Serbati (1797-1855), also known as Antonio Rosmini, an Italian from Rovereto in the Austrian Tyrol, ordained in 1821. His two life-principles, written down at this time were: First, to apply himself to correct his faults and purify his soul by prayer and living a life as close to the teaching of Christ as possible. Second, to accept any opportunity to do charitable work. This principle was soon put to the test when the Marchioness di Canossa asked him to establish an institute for the education of poor boys. Rosmini saw this as God's hand at work.[1]

In 1827 Rosmini was in Milan and met the Abbé Loewenbruck who informed him that he had been thinking about establishing a religious institute which would help to promote better education and spirituality in the clergy. Again, Rosmini saw the hand of God in this request. Still, as Rosmini believed that God would do the necessary prompting, he did not seek out anyone to join the new society he planned to establish. Two or three people who knew his thoughts joined him by their own request, and the three began to live according to the principles Rosmini had established.[1]

Pius VIII, who was elected pope in the following March, called him to an audience. "If you think", said Pius, "of beginning with something small, and leaving all the rest to God, we gladly approve; not so if you thought of starting on a large scale." Rosmini answered that he had always proposed a very humble beginning. In the autumn of 1830 he gave the institute something of its current form; and all the community began to pass through stages of religious training.[1]

Such was the state of affairs when on 2 February 1831, Rosmini's friend, Cardinal Cappellari, was chosen pope and took the name of Gregory XVI. Gregory was a supporter of the institute, and published a papal brief in March, calling the new society by its name and rejoicing in its progress under the approval of the bishops.

It was not until March 1837, that Rosmini submitted the constitutions of his religious society for papal approval. The matter was entrusted to the Congregation of Bishops and Regulars, which declared, on 16 June, its general commendation, but also its judgment that it was as yet too young to be approved as a regular congregation. There was also a problem with Rosmini's understanding of the religious vow of poverty. The normal practise was for members of a religious congregation to renounce all possessions, whereas the constitutions drawn up by Rosmini permitted members to hold personal property.

On 20 December 1838, the Vatican's congregation met again and gave its opinion that the society should have the status of a religious congregation; the pope immediately ratified this decision. On the following 25 March the vows were first made, by 20 in Italy and 5 in England. Five of these then went to Rome and on 22 August, in the Catacombs of St Sebastian made the fourth vow of special obedience to the pope. Apostolic letters embodying Rosmini's own summary of the constitutions were issued on 20 September, naming Rosmini as the first provost-general of the institute for life.

Spirit and organisation edit

The spirit of the Rosminian community is strongly characterised by the belief that God speaks to people in a variety of ways, and makes His will known according to the abilities of each person. For the Rosminian, the main ways God prompts people are:

- through the request of someone in need; - through someone speaking on behalf of a person in need; - through the needs themselves being seen.

Membership edit

There are two kinds of membership in the Institute of Charity. The first are those who take on themselves the discipline of the society and bind themselves by vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. The second is normally composed of people who are married, but may include those who are single but do not feel called to the religious life. These people strive to live according to the Rosminian charism, to pray daily and meet with others when possible.

As with all religious communities, a person who wishes to embrace the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience, goes through a period of intense discernment. After two years of noviceship, first profession is made which includes the temporary vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. He thus becomes a scholastic, but is not incorporated into the institute until he becomes a coadjutor after a further period of religious, spiritual and academic preparation. Coadjutors add the promise of not seeking any promotion either within the society or outside. Religious vows are renewed at this time, but now for life.

Vows edit

For Rosminians, poverty does not mean relinquishing all possessions, but rather in not being possessed by one's possessions; to this end, members of the congregation have always been permitted to own personal possessions. The vow of chastity is understood in the sense of not only remaining unmarried and abstaining from sexual activity, but also in how people are to be treated. The vow of obedience means listening to the requests of those in charge, taking into account the good of God's people, and prayerfully seeking to see the hand of God in what is being asked.

Further information edit

The institute is governed by a provost-general chosen by elected members. He has full powers except for a few exceptional cases. The institute is divided into provinces.[2] The Provincial Superior of the Gentili Province which covers England and Wales, Ireland, the United States and New Zealand is Father David Myers.

The main houses in Italy are Monte Calvario, which has long been both a novitiate and house of theological study; the college founded in 1839 for young boys at Stresa, and the large college for older ones at Domodossola built in 1873. The care of the Sanctuary of S. Michele della Chiusa, an ancient abbey on a steep mountain-peak near Turin, was accepted in 1835.

The founding of the English province is inseparably linked with the names of Luigi Gentili and Ambrose de Lisle. They were sent by Rosmini in 1835 with two companions to teach both lay and church students. Invited to the Midland district, the fathers taught for a while at Old Oscott, and in 1841 opened the mission of Loughborough at St Mary's Church. Many converts were made and some missions founded in the neighbourhood, and in 1843 the first public mission ever preached in England was given by Gentili. In the same year at Ratcliffe, near Leicester, the foundations were laid for a novitiate designed by Pugin, but it became a school.

The Rosminians serve in 15 parishes throughout England and Wales.

Irish Province edit

The Rosminians of the Irish Province were appointed by the Archbishop of Dublin to run services for the blind in St Joseph's, Drumcondra, Dublin in 1955, the School, originally called St Joseph's Asylum for the Male Blind was founded by the Carmelites in 1859, and moved in 1870 to the lands of Drumcondra Castle.[3] The School which became known as St Joseph's School for the Blind, and Visually Impaired, was residential for boys and was officially opened in 1960 by the Dept. of Education.

In 2012 St Joseph's became ChildVision[4] the national education centre for the blind children in Ireland. ChildVision run assessment, speech and language, education, garden, petting zoo, and an Equine Therapy facility in St Joseph's, there is also a centre in Cork. They run pre-school services, and vocational training, as well as assisting the on campus, primary and secondary school. In 2014 the Rosminian order sold the lands in St Joseph's, but took out a 25-year lease on the houses and buildings which it will use for ChildVision.[5]

St. Joseph's Primary School for Children with Visual Impairment, and works closely with ChildVision.[6] In 2003, visually impaired and blind girls, were first admitted to St Joseph's, when St Mary's School for Visually Impaired Girls closed in Mount Merrion.

In 1970 Rosmini College an all boys school was founded, which became PobalScoil Rosmini in 1982 in a new building, serving as a mainstream secondary school for the locality as well for the visually impaired students. In 2002 Rosmini Community College became co-educational, and in 2003 accepted in its first visually impaired girls.[7] The Rosmini Gaels GAA Club was set up by former staff of the school.

The Rosminians also ran Clonturk House, which closed in 2009 as a home for adult visually impaired men, where one of its former residents was the renowned Dublin character Thomas Dudley (known as Bang Bang), who is buried in the Cemetery on the St Joseph's lands.

Child sexual abuse scandals edit

St Michael's Catholic Boarding School, Soni, Tanzania edit

A prominent United Kingdom member of the order, Kit Cunningham, together with three other Rosminian priests were exposed after Cunningham's death as paedophiles.[8][9] While at Soni, Cunningham perpetrated sexual abuse that made the school, according to one pupil, "a loveless, violent and sad hellhole". Other pupils recall being photographed naked, hauled out of bed at night to have their genitals fondled and other sexual abuse.[10] Although known about by the Rosminians before Cunningham's death in 2010, the abuse was only publicly revealed by the media in 2011.[11][12] Formal action was launched by 22 former pupils at the civil court in Leicester on 20 March 2013.[13]

Grace Dieu Manor Catholic School, UK edit

Victims of abuse by staff at Grace Dieu Manor School, England are suing the Rosminians. Their abuse was catalogued in the BBC documentary Abused: Breaking the Silence.[14][15][16]

Industrial schools in Ireland edit

The Rosminians ran St Joseph's Industrial School, Clonmel (known as Ferryhouse) and St Patrick's Industrial School, Upton. Both were investigated by the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse. Like many residential institutions in Ireland, following publication of the Ryan report in 2009, Ferryhouse and Upton were recognised as places of systematic physical and sexual abuse of children carried on over many years.[17] Sexual abuse by members of the religious order was a chronic problem and it was dealt with in a manner that put the interests of the order, the institution and even the abuser ahead of that of the children. Abusers were transferred to other institutions, putting children at those institutions at risk.[18] The Rosminian order was aware of the criminal nature of the abuse, but did not treat it as a crime.[18]

Apology for English abuse by the provincial of English Rosminians edit

According to an online news story, issued on 23 June 2011: "Following the U.K. broadcast of a documentary detailing the abuse of some 35 boys by four Rosminian priests in the 1960s, the order's provincial in England released an apology for the acts of abuse and for our "inadequate response.""[19]

Settlement edit

The audited financial statements for the year ending 5 April 2015 report under the heading “Legal and safeguarding related costs" that "Last year’s report referred to legal claims which had been brought against the Charity concerning the welfare of children between approximately 1940 and 1985. A settlement has now been reached in relation to these claims." The Charity was liable also for the claimants' legal fees. The matter has had a significant impact on the Charity's finances with payment of their legal and settlement costs amounting to a total GBP 1,746,523 for the year.[20]

Schools edit

Defunct

People edit

The elected provost-generals, since Rosmini's death were

Giambattista Pagani, who succeeded in 1855,
Bertetti (1860),
Cappa (1874),
Lanzoni (1877),
Bernardino Balsari (1901)
Giuseppe Bozzetti (1935)
Giovanni Gaddo (1956)
Giambattista Zantedeschi (1989)
James Flynn, an Irish priest (1997).

Other members of the order include:

Aloysius Gentili (1801-1848), missionary in England and Ireland;
Vincenzo de Vit (1810-1892), known principally for two works of vast labour and research, the Lexicon totius Latinitatis, a new and greatly enlarged edition of Forcellini, and the Onomasticon, a dictionary of proper names;
Paolo Perez, formerly professor at Padua, and master of a singularly delicate Italian style;
Lorenzo Gastaldi (1815-1883), bishop of Saluzzo, Archbishop of Turin;
Peter Hutton, headmaster of Ratcliffe
William Lockhart (1820–1892), an English convert
Francisco Cardozo Ayres (1821-1870), Bishop of Pernambuco (Suriname), who died at Rome during the First Vatican Council, and whose incorrupt body was transported with great veneration to his see;
Giuseppe Calza (1821-1898), philosopher;
Richard Richardson, organizer of a temperance campaign who enrolled 70,000 names;
Joseph Hirst, member of the Royal Archaeological Institute;
Clemente Rebora (1885-1957), poet;
Eugene Arthurs (1916-1978), Irishman, first bishop of Tanga (Tanzania);
Antonio Riboldi (1923- ), Rebora's pupil, Bishop emeritus of Acerra.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Pollard, William Henry. "Rosminians." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 13. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1912. 28 June 2019  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. ^ "Provinces", Istituto della Carità
  3. ^ The Missionary College of All Hallows (1842-1891) by Kevin Condon CM, All Hallows College, Dublin.
  4. ^ ChildVision Official Website
  5. ^ Religious Order to sell 17 acre campus in Drumcondra by Jack Fagan, Commercial Property, Irish Times, 17 September 2014.
  6. ^ St Joseph's Primary School for Visually Impaired Children Official website
  7. ^ About Us www.pobailscoil.ie
  8. ^ "Devastation and disbelief when abuse case hits close to home". The Irish Independent. 20 June 2011.
  9. ^ Harvey, Chris (22 June 2011). "TV review: Abused: Breaking the Silence". London: The Telegraph.
  10. ^ Stanford, Peter (19 June 2011). "He was my priest and my friend. Then I found out he was a paedophile". The Guardian. London.
  11. ^ . London: The Telegraph. 21 June 2011. Archived from the original on 24 June 2011.
  12. ^ "Why didn't the Rosminian order tell us the truth about Fr Kit?". Catholic Herald. 20 June 2011.
  13. ^ . Leicester Mercury. 21 March 2013. Archived from the original on 22 March 2013.
  14. ^ "Abused: Breaking the Silence". BBC. 20 June 2011.
  15. ^ Crace, John (21 June 2011). "TV review: Abused: Breaking the Silence". The Guardian. London.
  16. ^ "Ex-pupils in legal bid 'after years of abuse'" Leicester Mercury 21 June 2011 26 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ Justice Ryan (June 2009). "St Joseph's Industrial School, ('Ferryhouse'), 1885–1999 extract from Ryan Report" (PDF). pp. 3.140 & 3.325. Retrieved 2009-06-13.
  18. ^ a b Chapter 2, St. Patrick’s Industrial School, Upton (‘Upton’), 1889–1966, section 2.216, Report of the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse
  19. ^ statement at ZENIT (Innovative Media) 2011-09-04 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ "Institute of Charity English Province; Annual Report and Accounts 5 April 2015" (PDF). Retrieved 21 September 2016.

External links edit

  • Rosminians official site
  • Rosminian Fathers; Institute of Charity new site
  • "Why didn’t the Rosminian order tell us the truth about Fr Kit?" Catholic Herald Monday, 20 June 2011
  • Have the Rosminians learned nothing?

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Rosminians". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

rosminians, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2022, learn, wh. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rosminians news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message The Rosminians officially named the Institute of Charity Latin Institutum Caritatis abbreviated I C are a Catholic clerical religious congregation of Pontifical Right for men founded by Antonio Rosmini and first organised in 1828 Institute of CharityInstitutum CaritatisAbbreviationI C NicknameRosminiansFormationFebruary 2 1828 196 years ago February 2 1828 FounderBlessed Fr Antonio Rosmini I C TypeClerical Religious Congregation of Pontifical Right for menHeadquartersVia di Porta Latina 17 Rome ItalyMembership266 members includes 175 priests as of 2020Superior GeneralFr Vito Nardin I C Parent organizationCatholic ChurchWebsitehttp www rosmini org The order was formally approved by the Holy See in 1838 and took its name from charity as the fullness of Christian virtue Its members are commonly called Fathers of Charity and use the postnominal letters IC Contents 1 Foundation 2 Spirit and organisation 3 Membership 4 Vows 5 Further information 6 Irish Province 7 Child sexual abuse scandals 7 1 St Michael s Catholic Boarding School Soni Tanzania 7 2 Grace Dieu Manor Catholic School UK 7 3 Industrial schools in Ireland 7 4 Apology for English abuse by the provincial of English Rosminians 7 5 Settlement 8 Schools 9 People 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksFoundation editAntonio Rosmini Serbati 1797 1855 also known as Antonio Rosmini an Italian from Rovereto in the Austrian Tyrol ordained in 1821 His two life principles written down at this time were First to apply himself to correct his faults and purify his soul by prayer and living a life as close to the teaching of Christ as possible Second to accept any opportunity to do charitable work This principle was soon put to the test when the Marchioness di Canossa asked him to establish an institute for the education of poor boys Rosmini saw this as God s hand at work 1 In 1827 Rosmini was in Milan and met the Abbe Loewenbruck who informed him that he had been thinking about establishing a religious institute which would help to promote better education and spirituality in the clergy Again Rosmini saw the hand of God in this request Still as Rosmini believed that God would do the necessary prompting he did not seek out anyone to join the new society he planned to establish Two or three people who knew his thoughts joined him by their own request and the three began to live according to the principles Rosmini had established 1 Pius VIII who was elected pope in the following March called him to an audience If you think said Pius of beginning with something small and leaving all the rest to God we gladly approve not so if you thought of starting on a large scale Rosmini answered that he had always proposed a very humble beginning In the autumn of 1830 he gave the institute something of its current form and all the community began to pass through stages of religious training 1 Such was the state of affairs when on 2 February 1831 Rosmini s friend Cardinal Cappellari was chosen pope and took the name of Gregory XVI Gregory was a supporter of the institute and published a papal brief in March calling the new society by its name and rejoicing in its progress under the approval of the bishops It was not until March 1837 that Rosmini submitted the constitutions of his religious society for papal approval The matter was entrusted to the Congregation of Bishops and Regulars which declared on 16 June its general commendation but also its judgment that it was as yet too young to be approved as a regular congregation There was also a problem with Rosmini s understanding of the religious vow of poverty The normal practise was for members of a religious congregation to renounce all possessions whereas the constitutions drawn up by Rosmini permitted members to hold personal property On 20 December 1838 the Vatican s congregation met again and gave its opinion that the society should have the status of a religious congregation the pope immediately ratified this decision On the following 25 March the vows were first made by 20 in Italy and 5 in England Five of these then went to Rome and on 22 August in the Catacombs of St Sebastian made the fourth vow of special obedience to the pope Apostolic letters embodying Rosmini s own summary of the constitutions were issued on 20 September naming Rosmini as the first provost general of the institute for life Spirit and organisation editThe spirit of the Rosminian community is strongly characterised by the belief that God speaks to people in a variety of ways and makes His will known according to the abilities of each person For the Rosminian the main ways God prompts people are through the request of someone in need through someone speaking on behalf of a person in need through the needs themselves being seen Membership editThere are two kinds of membership in the Institute of Charity The first are those who take on themselves the discipline of the society and bind themselves by vows of poverty chastity and obedience The second is normally composed of people who are married but may include those who are single but do not feel called to the religious life These people strive to live according to the Rosminian charism to pray daily and meet with others when possible As with all religious communities a person who wishes to embrace the vows of poverty chastity and obedience goes through a period of intense discernment After two years of noviceship first profession is made which includes the temporary vows of poverty chastity and obedience He thus becomes a scholastic but is not incorporated into the institute until he becomes a coadjutor after a further period of religious spiritual and academic preparation Coadjutors add the promise of not seeking any promotion either within the society or outside Religious vows are renewed at this time but now for life Vows editFor Rosminians poverty does not mean relinquishing all possessions but rather in not being possessed by one s possessions to this end members of the congregation have always been permitted to own personal possessions The vow of chastity is understood in the sense of not only remaining unmarried and abstaining from sexual activity but also in how people are to be treated The vow of obedience means listening to the requests of those in charge taking into account the good of God s people and prayerfully seeking to see the hand of God in what is being asked Further information editThe institute is governed by a provost general chosen by elected members He has full powers except for a few exceptional cases The institute is divided into provinces 2 The Provincial Superior of the Gentili Province which covers England and Wales Ireland the United States and New Zealand is Father David Myers The main houses in Italy are Monte Calvario which has long been both a novitiate and house of theological study the college founded in 1839 for young boys at Stresa and the large college for older ones at Domodossola built in 1873 The care of the Sanctuary of S Michele della Chiusa an ancient abbey on a steep mountain peak near Turin was accepted in 1835 The founding of the English province is inseparably linked with the names of Luigi Gentili and Ambrose de Lisle They were sent by Rosmini in 1835 with two companions to teach both lay and church students Invited to the Midland district the fathers taught for a while at Old Oscott and in 1841 opened the mission of Loughborough at St Mary s Church Many converts were made and some missions founded in the neighbourhood and in 1843 the first public mission ever preached in England was given by Gentili In the same year at Ratcliffe near Leicester the foundations were laid for a novitiate designed by Pugin but it became a school The Rosminians serve in 15 parishes throughout England and Wales Irish Province editThe Rosminians of the Irish Province were appointed by the Archbishop of Dublin to run services for the blind in St Joseph s Drumcondra Dublin in 1955 the School originally called St Joseph s Asylum for the Male Blind was founded by the Carmelites in 1859 and moved in 1870 to the lands of Drumcondra Castle 3 The School which became known as St Joseph s School for the Blind and Visually Impaired was residential for boys and was officially opened in 1960 by the Dept of Education In 2012 St Joseph s became ChildVision 4 the national education centre for the blind children in Ireland ChildVision run assessment speech and language education garden petting zoo and an Equine Therapy facility in St Joseph s there is also a centre in Cork They run pre school services and vocational training as well as assisting the on campus primary and secondary school In 2014 the Rosminian order sold the lands in St Joseph s but took out a 25 year lease on the houses and buildings which it will use for ChildVision 5 St Joseph s Primary School for Children with Visual Impairment and works closely with ChildVision 6 In 2003 visually impaired and blind girls were first admitted to St Joseph s when St Mary s School for Visually Impaired Girls closed in Mount Merrion In 1970 Rosmini College an all boys school was founded which became PobalScoil Rosmini in 1982 in a new building serving as a mainstream secondary school for the locality as well for the visually impaired students In 2002 Rosmini Community College became co educational and in 2003 accepted in its first visually impaired girls 7 The Rosmini Gaels GAA Club was set up by former staff of the school The Rosminians also ran Clonturk House which closed in 2009 as a home for adult visually impaired men where one of its former residents was the renowned Dublin character Thomas Dudley known as Bang Bang who is buried in the Cemetery on the St Joseph s lands Child sexual abuse scandals editSt Michael s Catholic Boarding School Soni Tanzania editA prominent United Kingdom member of the order Kit Cunningham together with three other Rosminian priests were exposed after Cunningham s death as paedophiles 8 9 While at Soni Cunningham perpetrated sexual abuse that made the school according to one pupil a loveless violent and sad hellhole Other pupils recall being photographed naked hauled out of bed at night to have their genitals fondled and other sexual abuse 10 Although known about by the Rosminians before Cunningham s death in 2010 the abuse was only publicly revealed by the media in 2011 11 12 Formal action was launched by 22 former pupils at the civil court in Leicester on 20 March 2013 13 This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information August 2023 Grace Dieu Manor Catholic School UK editVictims of abuse by staff at Grace Dieu Manor School England are suing the Rosminians Their abuse was catalogued in the BBC documentary Abused Breaking the Silence 14 15 16 This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information August 2023 Industrial schools in Ireland edit The Rosminians ran St Joseph s Industrial School Clonmel known as Ferryhouse and St Patrick s Industrial School Upton Both were investigated by the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse Like many residential institutions in Ireland following publication of the Ryan report in 2009 Ferryhouse and Upton were recognised as places of systematic physical and sexual abuse of children carried on over many years 17 Sexual abuse by members of the religious order was a chronic problem and it was dealt with in a manner that put the interests of the order the institution and even the abuser ahead of that of the children Abusers were transferred to other institutions putting children at those institutions at risk 18 The Rosminian order was aware of the criminal nature of the abuse but did not treat it as a crime 18 Apology for English abuse by the provincial of English Rosminians edit According to an online news story issued on 23 June 2011 Following the U K broadcast of a documentary detailing the abuse of some 35 boys by four Rosminian priests in the 1960s the order s provincial in England released an apology for the acts of abuse and for our inadequate response 19 Settlement edit The audited financial statements for the year ending 5 April 2015 report under the heading Legal and safeguarding related costs that Last year s report referred to legal claims which had been brought against the Charity concerning the welfare of children between approximately 1940 and 1985 A settlement has now been reached in relation to these claims The Charity was liable also for the claimants legal fees The matter has had a significant impact on the Charity s finances with payment of their legal and settlement costs amounting to a total GBP 1 746 523 for the year 20 Schools editColegio Antonio Rosmini Maracaibo Venezuela Ratcliffe College Ratcliffe on the Wreake Leicestershire Rosmini High School Tanga Tanzania Rosmini College Auckland New Zealand ChildVision Drumcondra Ireland St Joseph s Primary School for Children with Visual Impairment Drumcondra Ireland Rosmini Community School Drumcondra Ireland St Peter s College Gore New Zealand Defunct Grace Dieu Manor School near Thringstone Leicestershire United Kingdom St Michael s School Soni in the Usambara Mountains TanzaniaPeople editThe elected provost generals since Rosmini s death were Giambattista Pagani who succeeded in 1855 Bertetti 1860 Cappa 1874 Lanzoni 1877 Bernardino Balsari 1901 Giuseppe Bozzetti 1935 Giovanni Gaddo 1956 Giambattista Zantedeschi 1989 James Flynn an Irish priest 1997 Other members of the order include Aloysius Gentili 1801 1848 missionary in England and Ireland Vincenzo de Vit 1810 1892 known principally for two works of vast labour and research the Lexicon totius Latinitatis a new and greatly enlarged edition of Forcellini and the Onomasticon a dictionary of proper names Paolo Perez formerly professor at Padua and master of a singularly delicate Italian style Lorenzo Gastaldi 1815 1883 bishop of Saluzzo Archbishop of Turin Peter Hutton headmaster of Ratcliffe William Lockhart 1820 1892 an English convert Francisco Cardozo Ayres 1821 1870 Bishop of Pernambuco Suriname who died at Rome during the First Vatican Council and whose incorrupt body was transported with great veneration to his see Giuseppe Calza 1821 1898 philosopher Richard Richardson organizer of a temperance campaign who enrolled 70 000 names Joseph Hirst member of the Royal Archaeological Institute Clemente Rebora 1885 1957 poet Eugene Arthurs 1916 1978 Irishman first bishop of Tanga Tanzania Antonio Riboldi 1923 Rebora s pupil Bishop emeritus of Acerra See also editSisters of Providence of the Institute of CharityReferences edit a b c Pollard William Henry Rosminians The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 13 New York Robert Appleton Company 1912 28 June 2019 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Provinces Istituto della Carita The Missionary College of All Hallows 1842 1891 by Kevin Condon CM All Hallows College Dublin ChildVision Official Website Religious Order to sell 17 acre campus in Drumcondra by Jack Fagan Commercial Property Irish Times 17 September 2014 St Joseph s Primary School for Visually Impaired Children Official website About Us www pobailscoil ie Devastation and disbelief when abuse case hits close to home The Irish Independent 20 June 2011 Harvey Chris 22 June 2011 TV review Abused Breaking the Silence London The Telegraph Stanford Peter 19 June 2011 He was my priest and my friend Then I found out he was a paedophile The Guardian London Fr Kit Cunningham s paedophile past heads should roll after the Rosminian order s disgraceful cover up London The Telegraph 21 June 2011 Archived from the original on 24 June 2011 Why didn t the Rosminian order tell us the truth about Fr Kit Catholic Herald 20 June 2011 Ex pupils seek abuse pay out Leicester Mercury 21 March 2013 Archived from the original on 22 March 2013 Abused Breaking the Silence BBC 20 June 2011 Crace John 21 June 2011 TV review Abused Breaking the Silence The Guardian London Ex pupils in legal bid after years of abuse Leicester Mercury 21 June 2011 Archived 26 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Justice Ryan June 2009 St Joseph s Industrial School Ferryhouse 1885 1999 extract from Ryan Report PDF pp 3 140 amp 3 325 Retrieved 2009 06 13 a b Chapter 2 St Patrick s Industrial School Upton Upton 1889 1966 section 2 216 Report of the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse statement at ZENIT Innovative Media Archived 2011 09 04 at the Wayback Machine Institute of Charity English Province Annual Report and Accounts 5 April 2015 PDF Retrieved 21 September 2016 External links editRosminians official site Rosminian Fathers Institute of Charity new site Why didn t the Rosminian order tell us the truth about Fr Kit Catholic Herald Monday 20 June 2011 Have the Rosminians learned nothing nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Rosminians Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rosminians amp oldid 1220661492, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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