Monastery of Tazert
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| Monastery information | |
|---|---|
| Other names | Maison de la Visitation |
| Order | Sisters of St. Francis of Assisi |
| Established | 1931 |
| Mother house | Montpellier |
| Diocese | Rabat |
| People | |
| Founder | Charles-André Poissonnier |
| Site | |
| Location | Tazert, El Kelâa des Sraghna Province, Morocco |
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| Public access | Yes |
The monastery of Tazert is a Roman Catholic monastery in Tazert, Morocco. Originally founded by André Poissonnier, it is a priory of the Sisters of St. Francis of Assisi since 2019.
History
[edit | edit source]The monastery was founded in 1931 by André Poissonnier who, inspired by the life of Charles de Foucauld and the Franciscan missionaries in Morocco, decided to live as a hermit in Tazert. For this, he set up a dispensary and a chapel where he lived as a hermit until his death due to typhus in 1938.[1]
Poissonnier left the monastery to the Franciscans who continued to live in the monastery until the 1970s when a community of Poor Clares moved in. In order to be closer to the local population, they adopted the Melkite rite which is celebrated in Arabic.[2] In 2013, these nuns under their hegumenia Mère Assunta retired to the Monastery of the Burning Bush in Carcassone as there were no longer enough sisters to ensure a presence.[3]
The monastery then went over into the possession of the diocese of Rabat which started to search for a new monastic community to settle in Tazert. Finally, in late 2019, the Sisters of St. Francis of Assisi, a congregation whose motherhouse is located in Montpellier and who have also a presence in Mohammedia, sent a group of African nuns to Tazert.[4] The inauguration took place on 8 December 2019 under participation of the archbishop of Rabat, Cristóbal López Romero.[5]
Today the monastery serves as a place of prayer, offering spiritual retreat facilities with a guest house and educational opportunities for the surrounding Berber village of 3,500. As such, the nuns offer training in embroidery techniques as well as teaching literacy and computer science courses.[4]
The monastery hosts interreligious dialogue sessions.[6][4]
See also
[edit | edit source]References
[edit | edit source]- ^ Henning 2019.
- ^ López 2020.
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- ^ a b c Zappa 2022.
- ^ Zengarini 2019.
- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
Sources
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