A monk of the diaspora -
Witness
New
Catholic Times, Jan 5, 2003, by M. Charles Brandt*.....Dom Jacques Winandy, a Benedictine
monk from Belgium, who spent seven years on Vancouver
Island in the 1960s founding a remote hermitage, died
recently at his home abbey in Clervaux, Luxembourg. He
was 96 years old.
.....A close friend of Trappist monk
Thomas Merton of Kentucky, who also sought more solitude
within the monastic life, Dom Winandy was an
internationally acclaimed Scripture scholar. In 1964,
already well-known in Europe as the elected abbot of his
community, Dom Winandy came to the small town of
Headquarters, Vancouver Island, at the invitation of the
Bishop of Victoria, Remi de Roo. Dora Winandy sought to
establish a tiny hermitage on the banks of the Tsolum
River, a few miles west of Merville. The colony of eight
hermits, which he led, was mostly unknown to local
residents and even to the Catholic Church in general. But
it became well-known to the worldwide monastic community,
offering a way of life known in the early church that had
all but disappeared in the last 500 years.
.....At Vatican II (1962-65), monks
worldwide were discovering their historical roots,
studying the life of St. Anthony (AD 250-350) in the
deserts of the Middle East. Many 20th-century monks felt
a call to return to this third century AD eremitic life
with its simplicity and monastic integrity, and to enter
into pure and constant prayer. Dom Winandy provided the
opportunity for aspiring monks to live the hermit life.
Merton said in 1968: "When you undertook this
project of offering to people a hermit group with a
minimum of structure, it was even before the council,
even before Bishop de Roo made an intervention in the
council, speaking of the need to recognize the hermit
life in the church and to permit some monks to fulfill
solitary vocations. Your work was epoch-making and it had
a decisive effect on the rest of us."
.....The desire for solitude came early
to Dom Winandy. When elected Abbot of Clervaux Abbey in
1946, he had applied for admission to the Carthusians, a
religious order with a strong eremitical bent. He
abandoned the idea of a Carthusian vocation and then took
it tip again in 1962. As a youth, Dora Winandy had
entered the Benedictine Abbey of Clervaux. He was a
brilliant student, earning two degrees from San Anselmo
in Rome. As the Second World War broke out, Dom Winandy
was master of novices and professor of philosophy at
Clervaux. Expelled from their abbey by the Nazis, the
monks spent the war years in exile in religious houses in
Belgium. Immediately after the war, Dom Winandy was
elected abbot. Somewhat reluctantly, he accepted the
office and presided over the reconstruction of the abbey,
which had been desecrated by the Nazis.
.....He stepped down 11 years later and
worked in Rome for a year for the Sacred Congregation of
Religious. From Rome, Dom Winandy went to lend a hand at
the new Benedictine monastery in Martinique. There, he
met Canadian Fr. Lionel Pare, who had studied with the
Augustinians in Quebec City. Fr. Pare spoke to Dora
Winandy of his strong calling to a life of solitude and,
at the end of that year, arrangements were made for Fr.
Pare to establish a hermitage for himself and one for Dom
Winandy under the wing of the Bishop of Martinique.
.....Before long, the word got out about
the hermits on Martinique. Many monks came to see for
themselves: Fr. Sylvanus de Aguiar and Gerald Groves, Fr.
Hughes Vandoorne, Fr. Dunstan Morrissey. In 1963, more
candidates sought acceptance. Some of the hermits were
asking themselves if it would be to their advantage to
become a group to safeguard the purity of the solitary
ideal and to remain subjects to an elder as monastic
tradition required.
.....Dom Winandy's superior general and
the Bishop of Martinique advised the monks to go to North
America to start a colony of hermits. Authorization was
given to Dora Winandy by the Sacred Congregation of
Religious to make the move. The Diocese of San Angelo,
Tex. was chosen and the hermits arrived in January, 1964.
But the property that would offer them the needed
solitude was too expensive and they turned to British
Columbia instead. Encouraged by Bishop de Roo, they found
a property at Headquarters, near Merville, B.C. There
were eight and then 13 hermits. Each man had to build his
own hermitage and provide a living for himself. This was
quite different from the usual monastic house where one
receives what is necessary and offers what he is able. In
1968, the colony became even more democratic, making the
life of each hermit more flexible.
.....Throughout the diocese, each hermit
lived on his own, in real and complete solitude. They
were not attempting to re-establish a unique and timeless
norm or to recover the security of a glorious past; they
were attempting to enter fully into that diaspora
(spreading out) of which Karl Rahner, SJ, spoke so
eloquently. The church will depend more and more,
he said, on the goodwill of its ordinary members. It
should be a qualitative approach, not a quantitative one;
not drawing strength from a massive ecclesiastical entity
organized on quasi-military lines, but on the openness,
the freedom and the total sincerity with which the
ordinary Christian is prepared to meet the non-Christian.
The earliest monks in Catholicism, Rahner had pointed
out, were simply laymen living in solitude or in small
informal communities of a somewhat charismatic nature,
grouped around a holy hermit - a spiritual father.
.....A few months before his death,
Merton wrote to Dom Winandy: "I would say
frankly that for some of us, as individuals, for you as
well, as for myself, there is a better way which is to be
a hermit without disciples, simply on one's own and
without any concern to promote the eremitical life for
others. At most, two or three like-minded individuals
could choose to live in proximity to one another, but
without any engagement of any kind. This would provide
the maximum flexibility."
.....In time, several of the hermits
found a solitary dwelling in the Canadian diocese: Fr.
Donal in Nanaimo, Fr. Aguiar on Hornby Island, Fr.
Charles Brandt on the Oyster River and Dora Winandy on
Mayne Island. He wrote the important article, "Priest
and Hermit," published in Monastic Studies.
Then, after much prayer and counsel, he decided to return
to his native country, Belgium. "It remains true
that I have found here, on Mayne Island, everything I
could wish as solitude and silence. But I had eventually
to admit that this ideal is too high for me. I feel the
need for more human contacts and for the possibility of
more intellectual activity, as well. I have decided to
leave for Europe and to settle in an old, 17th-century
hermitage which I have known for years."
.....Dom Winandy ultimately settled in
the Ermitage de Bernister, Malmedy, Belgium (not far from
Clervaux Abbey), where he remained for over 25 years,
praying and studying, giving advice and counsel on
request. His friend, Fr. Lionel Pare, came to the
Hermitage of Bernister and remained in constant
communication. At the end, Dom Winandy accepted his
abbot's invitation to return to Clervaux.
.....While the monks chanted the office
of Lauds on the morning of May 11, Dom Winandy peacefully
passed to the Lord, a true monk of the diaspora.
.....As
Merton had remarked: "The diaspora imagined by
Father Rahner may well call for the small, poor, isolated
and unknown monastery instead of the illustrious plants
of our great American communities. The monk will have an
important place in that diaspora, not as a pious
organization man, but as a true servant of God."
*Fr. M.
Charles Brandt is a monk and a hermit in Oyster River,
B.C.
COPYRIGHT
2003 Catholic New Times, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Gale Group

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