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'France's Mother Teresa' dead at 94; supported married men, women as priests

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By JOHN L. ALLEN JR.
New York

France’s most famous Catholic priest, a national icon of concern for the poor and homeless and the founder of the worldwide Catholic “Emmaus” movement, has died at 94. “L’Abbè Pierre,” whose full name was Fr. Henri-Antoine Groues, had been hospitalized since January 15 with a pulmonary infection.

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Read more from John Allen on “L’Abbè Pierre” at http://ncrcafe.org/node/865.
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A man often styled as France’s “Mother Teresa” for his selflessness and social commitment, Groues also caused a stir in the French church in 2005 when, at the age of 93, he published a set of reflections confessing that he had not always maintained his vow of celibacy, supporting the ordination of married priests and women as priests, and favoring the recognition of gay unions.

Henri-Antoine Groues, born in 1912, was the fifth of eight children of a wealthy silk manufacturer from Lyons. At 18, he signed over his inheritance and entered a friary of the Capuchin Franciscans. After a bout with tuberculosis, he left the Capuchins and became a priest of the Grenoble diocese.

After the fall of France during World War II, he joined the Resistance, helping Jewish refugees cross the Swiss border. He operated a laboratory for forging documents, and even took part in surprise raids against German and Italian barracks. He was captured by the Italians, but escaped to the mountains where he joined the famed Vercors Maquis and founded an underground newspaper. The Germans chased him to Lyons, where he took the pseudonym “L’Abbè Pierre” and went to work forging identity cards.

In 1946, “L’Abbè Pierre” became a member of the post-war National Assembly. He rented an apartment in a Paris suburb, and soon took in a young couple with a baby who had been evicted from their home and had nowhere else to go. Soon his apartment overflowed with poor and homeless Parisians, and Groues decided he had to find better quarters.

He bought a barracks building in an abandoned prisoner of war camp, charging the homeless 15¢ for a night’s lodging, and soon he was taking in some 5,000 people a year. On the suggestion of an ex-rag collector, Groues organized a system of collecting rubbish and refurbishing it to give the homeless a way to make enough money to get a fresh start.

In order to buy a truck for his expanding operation, Groues went on a new French game show called “Double or Nothing.” By virtue of being able to identify the initials “FAO” as representing the brand-new United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, he won the equivalent of $700.

He launched what became the Emmaus Movement in 1949.

Groues became etched in the French national consciousness in 1954, when Paris was struggling with a particularly bitter winter. The priest went on national radio to appeal for help for the homeless, eloquently insisting, “Empty your attics, Parisians! There may be venerable things in them, but they’re less venerable than the lives of babies.”

In Emmaus communities, residents work full time refurbishing donated furniture and household goods and then selling them in a common shop. Today, the movement numbers 327 such communities in 39 countries.

“It’s not enough to prevent miserable people from dying in the streets,” Groues once said. “They have to be helped so they can live like human beings.”

Groues remained active until the very end. Just last year, he spoke to the French parliament from his wheelchair, urging them not to roll back a law on low-income housing.

In overwhelmingly secular France, where more than 50 percent of the nation reports never attending religious services, Groues remained a strong point of pride for French Catholicism. Though the Emmaus movement accepts people of all backgrounds – “You’ll get your soup whether you believe or not,” Groues said – he had a brick chapel behind his house where he would celebrate daily Mass.

“L’Abbè Pierre” regularly topped polls as France’s most respected person, and was routinely compared to Mother Teresa of Calcutta. In 1992 he was inducted into the French Legion of Honor, and was repeatedly nominated for the Noble Peace Prize.

President Jacques Chirac said yesterday in a statement, “We have lost a great figure, a conscience, an incarnation of goodness.”

In October 2005, Groues released a set of reflections entitled Mon Dieu...pourquoi?, in which he frankly acknowledged that his vow of priestly celibacy had not insulated him from sexual temptation.

“It happened that every now and then, I fell,” he wrote.

“I never had regular relationships, because I never allowed sexual desire to put down roots. I’ve known the experience of sexual desire and its occasional fulfillment, but this fulfillment was in truth a source of dissatisfaction, because I never felt sincere. … I’ve understood that in order to be fully satisfied, sexual desire needs to express itself in a sentimental relationship, tender, trusting. That kind of relationship was denied to me by my choice of life. I would have only made both the woman and myself unhappy, tormented between two irreconcilable options for my life,” Groues wrote.

Groues wrote that in his opinion, both married and celibate priests are able to consecrate themselves completely to their vocations, and that priests should therefore have the option to marry.

Groues also supported the ordination of women to the Catholic priesthood, writing that the ban “presupposes that this practice is not in conformity with the very substance of the Christian faith.”

“The principal argument given in support of this view,” he wrote, “is that Jesus did not choose women among his apostles. But for me this argument is not at all theological. Instead, [that choice] has sociological roots.”

On the subject of homosexuality, Groues said he was not in favor of using the term “marriage,” which, he said, “has roots too deep in the collective consciousness as a union between a man and a woman.” He supported recognition of same-sex “pacts.” Groues said the question of adoption rights for gay couples was “complex,” and could not be approached “lightly.”

Groues had earlier stirred controversy in 1996, when he refused to disavow a friend, Roger Garaudy, a French convert to Islam, who published a book casting doubt on the Holocaust and arguing against the existence of Israel.

L' Abbe' Pierre sounds like

L' Abbe' Pierre sounds like he was a Holy Man.... I never heard of him but will read any books he has written....

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mp Just a comment that

mp Just a comment that priests are referred to as l'Abbé (ah-bay)in French and would be better translated as "Father" than "abbot" which is a monastic title.

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I am hoping you will comment

I am hoping you will comment on the ceremonies honoring the death of L’Abbè Pierre. He appears to have been a very holy man and worthy of honor. And it would appear the Holy See is objective and perhaps necessarily pragmatic in his honor. It appears to be in contrast the severe punishment the Holy See has given to other individuals who found it not possible to live up to a vow of celibacy and who found it necessary to take issue with the Holy See regarding policies concerning women priests, gay priests, and married priests.

Chuck S.

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It would have been nice to

It would have been nice to have learned about Henri-Antoine Groues years ago and been able to send him a note of gratitude for what he was accomplishing. There are probably others somewhere doing exemplary Christ like work. I hope they will be found and brought to our attention. I have had the good fortune to participate in a Mass celebrated by a woman priest. The official church is not comfortable with such but the nine hundred or so faithful Church present surely were.

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Calling her France's version

Calling her France's version of Mother Teresa is a slander against Mother Teresa who was totally faithful to the Church. Preferential love of the poor is an important part of Catholic teaching, but faithfulness means you don't pick and choose what you are faithful for. Blessed Mother Teresa never liked being categorized as just a social worker and a disobedient Catholic who did praiseworthy work, but is otherwise a dissident becomes just a social worker.

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The 'slander'may more

The 'slander'may more rightly be against Groues rather than Mother Theresa. Groues was really 'Father", a man and more importantly a 'priest' something above and beyond what Mother Theresa was or could have been called to by none other than God, Himself (at least according to the 'obedient').

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dennis: According to this

dennis:

According to this article, he advocated for women's ordination and same sex unions. These are contrary to Church teaching, therefore he is not faithful to Church teaching. No one is discounting any good works he may have done among the poor, but if people are gonna be Catholic, ya gotta take the whole package: the Spiritual works of mercy as well as the corporal works of mercy; all of the doctrine as well as helping the poor. This is exactly what Mother Theresa did, but poor Fr. Groues did not.

Hermeneutic of Continuity

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Who says ya gotta? Paul

Who says ya gotta? Paul didn't buy the circumcision thing.

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Guess that makes him a holy

Guess that makes him a holy heretic. There are worse things.

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Some say that Mother T was

Some say that Mother T was quite a grouch. That didn't take anything from her holiness either.
A "good" priest commented to me some time ago that he hoped that the late Pope would be followed by an Italian. Incredulous I asked why he would say that. He has a history of familiarity with things vatican, he replied (with a somewhat stereotypical tone, I admit) that the Italian clergy love to make rules with no intention of obeying them.
While overstated,I would bet that his view of church reality is a lot closer to that of the hierarchy among themselves than your view, which they love to promote among the lambs.

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What a wonderful person Fr.

What a wonderful person Fr. Henri-Antoine Groues seems to have been. What a joy to read about his view regarding married and woman priests. May He pass into the joy of his spiritual life with God, and share in the blessings that will be revealed to him in his next life.

Thank You John Allen for another wonderful and uplifting story of a person truly dedicated to God and gracious in his understanding of and love for humanity. I hope we can recognize and follow the example he has set for us in all the loving views and service to humanity that he represents.

The more we discover how much we are Loved by God, the more we want to do God's Will

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