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Clerics of Saint Viator

The Clerics of Saint Viator (French: Clercs de Saint-Viateur), abbreviated C.S.V. and also known as the Viatorians is a Roman Catholic clerical religious congregation of Pontifical Right for men (priest, brothers and lay associates) founded in Lyon, France, in 1831 by Father Louis Querbes. Its patron, Saint Viator, was a 4th-century catechist in Lyon. The institute spread from its origins in France to Canada and later to the United States; it now has provinces and missions all over the world. They are a teaching order and are involved in parish ministries and all levels of education, from grade school through university. Its members add the nominal letters C.S.V. after their names to indicate membership in the congregation.

Clerics of Saint Viator
Congregatio Clericorum Parochialium seu Catechistarum S. Viatoris[1] (Latin)
AbbreviationC.S.V. (post-nominal letters)[2]
NicknameViatorians[2]
FormationNovember 3, 1831; 192 years ago (1831-11-03)[3]
FounderFr.Louis Joseph Querbes, CSV CSV[4]
Founded atLyon, France
TypeClerical Religious Congregation of Pontifical Right (for Men)[2]
HeadquartersVia Padre Angelo Paoli 41, Rome, Italy[5]
Membership
407 members (includes 172 priests) as of 2020[2]
Patron
Saint Viator of Lyons[2]
Superior General
Fr. Robert M. Egan, C.S.V.[2]
Countries present
[6]
Ministry
Educational, parochial, mission, campus ministry and chaplaincy works
Parent organization
Catholic Church
Websitehttp://www.viatorians.com/

Louis Querbes edit

Louis Querbes was born in Lyon, France, on 21 August 1793, during the French Revolution.[7] He was baptized in Saint Nizier Parish near the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Fourvière. As a boy he participated in the choir and attended the clerical school in Saint Nizier Parish.

Querbes entered Saint Irenaeus Seminary and was ordained in 1816. He returned to Saint Nizier as a parochial vicar and became a skilled preacher. He became administrator of the clerical school at Saint Nizier.

In 1822, Louis Joseph Querbes was named pastor of Vourles,[8] a parish that had suffered during the Revolution. He took on the task of rebuilding the church and preaching to the faithful. He noted a lack of educational opportunities for the children there.

The Congregation of the Clerics of St. Viator edit

History edit

Father Querbes formed an association of catechists for rural schools: "The Catechists of Saint Viator". He chose as patron Viator of Lyon, a fourth-century local saint who was a lector serving Bishop Just of Lyon. The religious Congregation of the Clerics of Saint Viator, made up of parochial clerics and lay catechists, was approved in 1831 by Archbishop Gaston de Pins, Apostolic Administrator of Lyons.[9] Seven years later, he presented his society to the Pope but, counseled by advisors, he had dropped the inclusion of lay members, as it would not have been approved. Father Querbes was ahead of his time in wanting to form a community of lay and religious members. On 21 September 1838, he received pontifical approval for the religious institute of the Parochial Clerics or Catechists of Saint Viator.

The Viatorians opened schools and worked in parishes first in France, and later in Canada and the United States. Father Louis Querbes died in Vourles 1 September 1859, but his work and charity continued after his death. At the death of its founder, the Congregation numbered between 250 and 300 members, including some fifty in Canada. They constituted four provinces: Vourles, Saint-Flour, Rodez, and Canada.

19th century edit

After the death of Father Querbes and up until about 1880, the movement continued to grow. In France, the typical Cleric of Saint Viator served in small rural parishes, where he was, according to the wishes of the founder, "the cantor, sacristan, catechist, table-mate, and companion" of the priest and the principal of the school. Afterward, as the country entered an era of political turbulence, religious congregations that, up until that time, could direct public communal schools had to abandon them. They opened parish schools, which were free but poor. Members were obliged to do military service. The number entering novitiates declined. In 1900, there were approximately 500 French members of the 760 members in the entire Congregation.

Clerics of the Province of Canada went in a different direction, directing primary schools as well as secondary schools, accepting responsibility for a parish, and creating an Institution for the Deaf. The development of the Congregation proceeded based upon apostolic works. In 1897, a half-century after its founding, the Canadian chapter was composed of 215 members.

In 1865, three Canadian members founded a school in Bourbonnais, Illinois, in the United States; this school later developed as St. Viator College.[10][11] A novitiate was opened, and in 1882, the members of the United States formed the Province of Chicago. At the end of the century, the Chicago Province was composed of about forty members.

Until the beginning of the twentieth century, the members of France formed the predominant group in the Congregation. Except for the Chicago Province, the other provinces were engaged in apostolic works that fit into the same framework: elementary schools, some of which were small boarding schools, which represented the principal commitment of the Congregation; several secondary schools, which involved a small number of members; social works (orphanages in France, the Montreal Institute for the Deaf); and sacristan duties in several parishes. Small or medium-sized local communities predominated and consisted for the most part of religious brothers.

1903-1908 edit

In May 1903, in France, the government decreed closing 11,000 schools and hospitals administered by religious congregations. Within the space of two months, the Clerics of Saint Viator of France saw their provincial houses, juniorates, novitiates, and residences for retired members closed and their personnel dispersed. All primary and secondary schools were affected; many of them disappeared. All properties of the Congregation were seized by the State; communities fell apart. Certain members went before tribunals and were sentenced to prison. Other members, especially those who were somewhat older, left for other countries.

Belgium became a possible place of refuge for the members of the Province of Vourles, while Spain played the same role for those of the Province of Rodez. The Province of Canada indicated that, in case of necessity, it would welcome French confreres; 31 accepted Canada's hospitality. The provinces tried to re-establish themselves gradually. All the schools were free and run by laypeople. To support themselves, the organization took part in gardening and farming operations, a tailor shop for religious garb, and sold objects of piety. In Brussels, Belgium, and Vitoria, Spain, new schools were opened. When World War I broke out, about half of the French members were drafted,; 29 of them were killed in battle.

This time period corresponded with the decline of the French influence upon the Congregation. By 1907–1908, the number of North American members was greater than the number of European members.

1920s-1960s edit

From the 1920s until the 1960s, the number of Canadian members grew steadily and eventually constituted two-thirds of the Congregation's membership (1,146 out of 1,760 in the year 1960). They set up several classical secondary schools, including in Joliette and Rigaud, as well as specialized institutions for the hearing impaired in Montreal and Quebec, and for the blind in Montreal. This resulted in members moving east toward the mouth of the Saint Lawrence River, north toward the regions of Abitibi and Témiscamingue, and west toward the Province of Manitoba. Several members, in 1931, went abroad to found a school in Manchuria. Also in 1931, the Brothers of Our Lady of the Fields was merged into the Clerics of Saint Viator.[12]

Because of its growth, the Canadian Province was divided into smaller provinces: in 1938 provinces of Montreal and Joliette were established; in 1955 Abitibi and Saint Lawrence were founded). Over the years, Canadian members introduced the Congregation to Japan (1948), Taiwan (1953),[13] Peru (1959), and Haiti (1965).

In 1928 members of the Chicago Province petitioned for beatification of the organization's founder, Louis Querbes.[14] The Great Depression took a toll on the Province; Viator College was unable meets its financial obligations and closed in 1938.[11]

Members of the Province of Chicago served in large educational institutions, universities, chaplaincies, and parishes. The Chicago Province founded a school in Bogotá, Colombia, in 1961. A church was set up in Las Vegas, Nevada in 1955, where the Clerics taught at a newly opened high school.[15]

The French provinces re-organized gradually; their apostolic commitments remained unchanged. They became involved with parishes and collaborated with the diocesan clergy. In 1955, French members founded a school in Bouaké, Ivory Coast.

The Clerics moved into Spain, slowly at first but more solidly after 1920. In spite of the interruptions caused by the Civil War (1936-1939), the local communities in Spain formed a vice-province in 1937; ten years later, they became a full-fledged province. Starting in 1957, Spain founded several establishments in Chile.

1960s-1970s edit

Vatican Council II brought renewed emphasis on the questions and challenges that were present everywhere in the late 1960s. Problems within institutions and communities led many members to leave the Clerics of Saint Viator. Reflections that began at the 1969 and 1972 General Chapters resulted in the drafting of a renewed Constitution (1978) that refocused the organization on its mission and the religious life of the Clerics of Saint Viator.

During the renewal process, the congregation decided to accept lay associates, both men and women, into the community. This had been part of Father Louis Querbes' original concept. The degree to which non-clerics participate varies among the local communities.

2000s edit

In 2010 and 2011, the Clerics organized and hosted a Youth Congress in Arlington Heights, Illinois.

In 2012, a number of former students of the Montreal Institute for the Deaf operated by the Viatorians in Montreal, Canada made public their claims of sexual abuse by priests at the institute.[16] In 2016, the Clerics of St Viateur, who operated the institute, agreed to a $30 million (CAD) payment to settle the claims.[17] The settlement was the largest ever awarded in Quebec for a sexual abuse case.[17][18]

As of 2018 the Clerics of St. Viator continue to provide education and shelter for youth.[19]

Viatorian schools edit

Canada edit

Chile edit

  • Colegio San Viator de Ovalle (Ovalle)
  • Colegio San Viator de Macul (Macul)

Colombia edit

Haïti edit

  • L'institution Saint-François d'Assise de Grand-Goave (ISFAGG) (Grand-Goâve)

Japan edit

Spain edit

Taiwan edit

United States edit

Superior Generals edit

The following have served as head of the institute as is its superior general:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ http://www. gcatholic.org/orders/118.htm
  2. ^ a b c d e f http://www.gcatholic. org/orders/118.htm
  3. ^ "Clerics of Saint Viator (Institute of Consecrated Life - Men) [Catholic-Hierarchy]". www.catholic-hierarchy.org.
  4. ^ "Our Founder | The Viatorian Community".
  5. ^ http://www.gcatholic.org/ orders/118.htm
  6. ^ "International Locations | the Viatorian Community".
  7. ^ McCarthy, Thomas. Forever a Priest, CMJ Publishers and Distrib., 2004 ISBN 9781891280573
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 May 2015. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  9. ^ Quebec. Michelin Travel Publications. January 2003. p. 119. ISBN 978-2-06-101123-2.
  10. ^ Claude Bélanger, Chapter 3: "The Growth of French America During the Civil War", in Franco-American History, 2001. Marianopolis
  11. ^ a b Jack Klasey, "The College of St. Viator". The Journal, 23 Jun 2018
  12. ^ "Biography – BROUSSEAU, JOSEPH-ONÉSIME – Volume XIV (1911-1920) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography". Retrieved 8 August 2017.
  13. ^ R. G. Tiedemann (1 July 2016). Reference Guide to Christian Missionary Societies in China: From the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Century: From the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Century. Routledge. pp. 9, 287. ISBN 978-1-315-49732-7.
  14. ^ [nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/np00020005/1928-09-28/ed-1/seq-1.pdf "Clerics of St. Viator seek beatification of Fr. Querbes, founder"]. The Catholic Journal, 28 September 1928.
  15. ^ "Viatorians celebrate 50 years in valley". Las Vegas Sun, 17 Sept. 2005
  16. ^ John Cornwell (4 March 2014). The Dark Box: A Secret History of Confession. Basic Books. pp. 85–. ISBN 978-0-465-08049-6.
  17. ^ a b Solyom, Catherine. "Deaf students abused by priests at Clerics de St. Viateur win record $30-million settlement". Montreal Gazette. Retrieved 24 June 2016.
  18. ^ "Historic $30M settlement reached in Montreal deaf school sex abuse suit". CBC. Retrieved 24 June 2016.
  19. ^ Michelle Martin, "Homes offer safety for young asylum seekers". Chicago Catholic, 7 February 2018
  20. ^ South Dakota Historical Collections. Vol. 5. State Publishing Company. 1910. p. 59.
  21. ^ "The Future of Columbus". Argus Leader. Sioux Falls, South Dakota. 10 August 1929. p. 6. Retrieved 15 November 2020 – via Newspapers.com  .
  22. ^ "St.Edward Parish History" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2 February 2020.
  23. ^ a b "Clerics of Saint Viator (C.S.V.)". GCatholic. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  24. ^ "Mark Francis". Catholic Theological Union. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  25. ^ "Fr. Alain Ambeault, CSV, Installed as 15th Superior General". The Viatorian Community. 7 September 2012. Retrieved 26 June 2020.

Additional sources edit

  • The Canadian Encyclopedia - Clerics of Saint Viator
  • The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference.. by Charles George Herbermann, Edward Aloysius Pace, Condé Bénoist Pallen, Thomas Joseph Shahan, John Joseph Wynne. Published 1913, Robert Appleton Co., p. 400
  • Santerre, David (29 June 2013). "Trois Clercs de Saint-Viateur accusés d'agressions sexuelles". La Presse. Retrieved 26 August 2013.

External links edit

  • Clerics of Saint Viator

clerics, saint, viator, french, clercs, saint, viateur, abbreviated, also, known, viatorians, roman, catholic, clerical, religious, congregation, pontifical, right, priest, brothers, associates, founded, lyon, france, 1831, father, louis, querbes, patron, sain. The Clerics of Saint Viator French Clercs de Saint Viateur abbreviated C S V and also known as the Viatorians is a Roman Catholic clerical religious congregation of Pontifical Right for men priest brothers and lay associates founded in Lyon France in 1831 by Father Louis Querbes Its patron Saint Viator was a 4th century catechist in Lyon The institute spread from its origins in France to Canada and later to the United States it now has provinces and missions all over the world They are a teaching order and are involved in parish ministries and all levels of education from grade school through university Its members add the nominal letters C S V after their names to indicate membership in the congregation Clerics of Saint ViatorCongregatio Clericorum Parochialium seu Catechistarum S Viatoris 1 Latin AbbreviationC S V post nominal letters 2 NicknameViatorians 2 FormationNovember 3 1831 192 years ago 1831 11 03 3 FounderFr Louis Joseph Querbes CSV CSV 4 Founded atLyon FranceTypeClerical Religious Congregation of Pontifical Right for Men 2 HeadquartersVia Padre Angelo Paoli 41 Rome Italy 5 Membership407 members includes 172 priests as of 2020 2 PatronSaint Viator of Lyons 2 Superior GeneralFr Robert M Egan C S V 2 Countries presentBurkina Faso Canada Chile Colombia France Haiti Honduras Ivory Coast Japan Peru Spain United States 6 MinistryEducational parochial mission campus ministry and chaplaincy worksParent organizationCatholic ChurchWebsitehttp www viatorians com Contents 1 Louis Querbes 2 The Congregation of the Clerics of St Viator 2 1 History 2 2 19th century 2 3 1903 1908 2 4 1920s 1960s 2 5 1960s 1970s 2 6 2000s 3 Viatorian schools 3 1 Canada 3 2 Chile 3 3 Colombia 3 4 Haiti 3 5 Japan 3 6 Spain 3 7 Taiwan 3 8 United States 4 Superior Generals 5 See also 6 References 7 Additional sources 8 External linksLouis Querbes editMain article Louis Querbes Louis Querbes was born in Lyon France on 21 August 1793 during the French Revolution 7 He was baptized in Saint Nizier Parish near the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Fourviere As a boy he participated in the choir and attended the clerical school in Saint Nizier Parish Querbes entered Saint Irenaeus Seminary and was ordained in 1816 He returned to Saint Nizier as a parochial vicar and became a skilled preacher He became administrator of the clerical school at Saint Nizier In 1822 Louis Joseph Querbes was named pastor of Vourles 8 a parish that had suffered during the Revolution He took on the task of rebuilding the church and preaching to the faithful He noted a lack of educational opportunities for the children there The Congregation of the Clerics of St Viator 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 June 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message History edit Father Querbes formed an association of catechists for rural schools The Catechists of Saint Viator He chose as patron Viator of Lyon a fourth century local saint who was a lector serving Bishop Just of Lyon The religious Congregation of the Clerics of Saint Viator made up of parochial clerics and lay catechists was approved in 1831 by Archbishop Gaston de Pins Apostolic Administrator of Lyons 9 Seven years later he presented his society to the Pope but counseled by advisors he had dropped the inclusion of lay members as it would not have been approved Father Querbes was ahead of his time in wanting to form a community of lay and religious members On 21 September 1838 he received pontifical approval for the religious institute of the Parochial Clerics or Catechists of Saint Viator The Viatorians opened schools and worked in parishes first in France and later in Canada and the United States Father Louis Querbes died in Vourles 1 September 1859 but his work and charity continued after his death At the death of its founder the Congregation numbered between 250 and 300 members including some fifty in Canada They constituted four provinces Vourles Saint Flour Rodez and Canada 19th century edit After the death of Father Querbes and up until about 1880 the movement continued to grow In France the typical Cleric of Saint Viator served in small rural parishes where he was according to the wishes of the founder the cantor sacristan catechist table mate and companion of the priest and the principal of the school Afterward as the country entered an era of political turbulence religious congregations that up until that time could direct public communal schools had to abandon them They opened parish schools which were free but poor Members were obliged to do military service The number entering novitiates declined In 1900 there were approximately 500 French members of the 760 members in the entire Congregation Clerics of the Province of Canada went in a different direction directing primary schools as well as secondary schools accepting responsibility for a parish and creating an Institution for the Deaf The development of the Congregation proceeded based upon apostolic works In 1897 a half century after its founding the Canadian chapter was composed of 215 members In 1865 three Canadian members founded a school in Bourbonnais Illinois in the United States this school later developed as St Viator College 10 11 A novitiate was opened and in 1882 the members of the United States formed the Province of Chicago At the end of the century the Chicago Province was composed of about forty members Until the beginning of the twentieth century the members of France formed the predominant group in the Congregation Except for the Chicago Province the other provinces were engaged in apostolic works that fit into the same framework elementary schools some of which were small boarding schools which represented the principal commitment of the Congregation several secondary schools which involved a small number of members social works orphanages in France the Montreal Institute for the Deaf and sacristan duties in several parishes Small or medium sized local communities predominated and consisted for the most part of religious brothers 1903 1908 edit In May 1903 in France the government decreed closing 11 000 schools and hospitals administered by religious congregations Within the space of two months the Clerics of Saint Viator of France saw their provincial houses juniorates novitiates and residences for retired members closed and their personnel dispersed All primary and secondary schools were affected many of them disappeared All properties of the Congregation were seized by the State communities fell apart Certain members went before tribunals and were sentenced to prison Other members especially those who were somewhat older left for other countries Belgium became a possible place of refuge for the members of the Province of Vourles while Spain played the same role for those of the Province of Rodez The Province of Canada indicated that in case of necessity it would welcome French confreres 31 accepted Canada s hospitality The provinces tried to re establish themselves gradually All the schools were free and run by laypeople To support themselves the organization took part in gardening and farming operations a tailor shop for religious garb and sold objects of piety In Brussels Belgium and Vitoria Spain new schools were opened When World War I broke out about half of the French members were drafted 29 of them were killed in battle This time period corresponded with the decline of the French influence upon the Congregation By 1907 1908 the number of North American members was greater than the number of European members 1920s 1960s edit From the 1920s until the 1960s the number of Canadian members grew steadily and eventually constituted two thirds of the Congregation s membership 1 146 out of 1 760 in the year 1960 They set up several classical secondary schools including in Joliette and Rigaud as well as specialized institutions for the hearing impaired in Montreal and Quebec and for the blind in Montreal This resulted in members moving east toward the mouth of the Saint Lawrence River north toward the regions of Abitibi and Temiscamingue and west toward the Province of Manitoba Several members in 1931 went abroad to found a school in Manchuria Also in 1931 the Brothers of Our Lady of the Fields was merged into the Clerics of Saint Viator 12 Because of its growth the Canadian Province was divided into smaller provinces in 1938 provinces of Montreal and Joliette were established in 1955 Abitibi and Saint Lawrence were founded Over the years Canadian members introduced the Congregation to Japan 1948 Taiwan 1953 13 Peru 1959 and Haiti 1965 In 1928 members of the Chicago Province petitioned for beatification of the organization s founder Louis Querbes 14 The Great Depression took a toll on the Province Viator College was unable meets its financial obligations and closed in 1938 11 Members of the Province of Chicago served in large educational institutions universities chaplaincies and parishes The Chicago Province founded a school in Bogota Colombia in 1961 A church was set up in Las Vegas Nevada in 1955 where the Clerics taught at a newly opened high school 15 The French provinces re organized gradually their apostolic commitments remained unchanged They became involved with parishes and collaborated with the diocesan clergy In 1955 French members founded a school in Bouake Ivory Coast The Clerics moved into Spain slowly at first but more solidly after 1920 In spite of the interruptions caused by the Civil War 1936 1939 the local communities in Spain formed a vice province in 1937 ten years later they became a full fledged province Starting in 1957 Spain founded several establishments in Chile 1960s 1970s edit Vatican Council II brought renewed emphasis on the questions and challenges that were present everywhere in the late 1960s Problems within institutions and communities led many members to leave the Clerics of Saint Viator Reflections that began at the 1969 and 1972 General Chapters resulted in the drafting of a renewed Constitution 1978 that refocused the organization on its mission and the religious life of the Clerics of Saint Viator During the renewal process the congregation decided to accept lay associates both men and women into the community This had been part of Father Louis Querbes original concept The degree to which non clerics participate varies among the local communities 2000s edit In 2010 and 2011 the Clerics organized and hosted a Youth Congress in Arlington Heights Illinois In 2012 a number of former students of the Montreal Institute for the Deaf operated by the Viatorians in Montreal Canada made public their claims of sexual abuse by priests at the institute 16 In 2016 the Clerics of St Viateur who operated the institute agreed to a 30 million CAD payment to settle the claims 17 The settlement was the largest ever awarded in Quebec for a sexual abuse case 17 18 As of 2018 the Clerics of St Viator continue to provide education and shelter for youth 19 Viatorian schools editCanada edit College Bourget Rigaud Quebec College Champagneur Rawdon Quebec Montreal Institute for the Deaf Montreal Quebec closed Chile edit Colegio San Viator de Ovalle Ovalle Colegio San Viator de Macul Macul Colombia edit Colegio San Viator Bogota Parroquia San Basilio Magno Roman Catholic Diocese of Engativa Bogota Parroquia San Juan Maria Vianney Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Bogota Bogota Haiti edit L institution Saint Francois d Assise de Grand Goave ISFAGG Grand Goave Japan edit St Viator Rakusei Junior and Senior High School Kyoto Spain edit Colegio San Viator de Madrid Madrid Colegio San Jose Basauri Biscay Taiwan edit Viator Catholic High School Taichung City United States edit Columbus College Chamberlain South Dakota and Sioux Falls operated 1909 1929 20 21 St Edward Grammar School Chicago Illinois 22 Bishop Gorman High School Summerlin Nevada St Viator College Bourbonnais Illinois closed St Viator Elementary School Chicago Illinois Saint Viator High School Arlington Heights Illinois adjacent to its American provincialate St Viator School Paradise Nevada Superior Generals editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items June 2020 The following have served as head of the institute as is its superior general 1984 1986 Fr Jacques Berthelet 23 2000 2012 Fr Mark R Francis 24 2012 2018 Fr Alain Ambeault 25 2018 present Fr Robert M Egan 23 See also editCyrille BeaudryReferences edit http www gcatholic org orders 118 htm a b c d e f http www gcatholic org orders 118 htm Clerics of Saint Viator Institute of Consecrated Life Men Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Our Founder The Viatorian Community http www gcatholic org orders 118 htm International Locations the Viatorian Community McCarthy Thomas Forever a Priest CMJ Publishers and Distrib 2004 ISBN 9781891280573 Louis Querbes Fonds D Action Saint Viateur Archived from the original on 4 May 2015 Retrieved 18 April 2015 Quebec Michelin Travel Publications January 2003 p 119 ISBN 978 2 06 101123 2 Claude Belanger Chapter 3 The Growth of French America During the Civil War in Franco American History 2001 Marianopolis a b Jack Klasey The College of St Viator The Journal 23 Jun 2018 Biography BROUSSEAU JOSEPH ONESIME Volume XIV 1911 1920 Dictionary of Canadian Biography Retrieved 8 August 2017 R G Tiedemann 1 July 2016 Reference Guide to Christian Missionary Societies in China From the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Century From the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Century Routledge pp 9 287 ISBN 978 1 315 49732 7 nyshistoricnewspapers org lccn np00020005 1928 09 28 ed 1 seq 1 pdf Clerics of St Viator seek beatification of Fr Querbes founder The Catholic Journal 28 September 1928 Viatorians celebrate 50 years in valley Las Vegas Sun 17 Sept 2005 John Cornwell 4 March 2014 The Dark Box A Secret History of Confession Basic Books pp 85 ISBN 978 0 465 08049 6 a b Solyom Catherine Deaf students abused by priests at Clerics de St Viateur win record 30 million settlement Montreal Gazette Retrieved 24 June 2016 Historic 30M settlement reached in Montreal deaf school sex abuse suit CBC Retrieved 24 June 2016 Michelle Martin Homes offer safety for young asylum seekers Chicago Catholic 7 February 2018 South Dakota Historical Collections Vol 5 State Publishing Company 1910 p 59 The Future of Columbus Argus Leader Sioux Falls South Dakota 10 August 1929 p 6 Retrieved 15 November 2020 via Newspapers com nbsp St Edward Parish History PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2 February 2020 a b Clerics of Saint Viator C S V GCatholic Retrieved 26 June 2020 Mark Francis Catholic Theological Union Retrieved 26 June 2020 Fr Alain Ambeault CSV Installed as 15th Superior General The Viatorian Community 7 September 2012 Retrieved 26 June 2020 Additional sources editThe Canadian Encyclopedia Clerics of Saint Viator The Catholic Encyclopedia An International Work of Reference by Charles George Herbermann Edward Aloysius Pace Conde Benoist Pallen Thomas Joseph Shahan John Joseph Wynne Published 1913 Robert Appleton Co p 400 Santerre David 29 June 2013 Trois Clercs de Saint Viateur accuses d agressions sexuelles La Presse Retrieved 26 August 2013 External links editClerics of Saint Viator Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clerics of Saint Viator amp oldid 1157573497, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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