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A story for our times: Blessed Charles de Foucauld

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  • A story for our times: Blessed Charles de Foucauld

    Spero News
    Jan 28 2007

    Commentary:
    A story for our times: Blessed Charles de Foucauld

    It was at that time that he came to admire the exotic Islam of the
    desert and, for a time, according to his early biographer, even
    considered converting to that religion

    by TCR

    Many Catholics today have heard---at least in outline--- the story of
    the "Universal Brother," Charles de Foucauld (1858-1916), the
    Frenchman who, after living the life of an aristocratic dandy as a
    youth, with all that that entails, at age 28 encountered Jesus Christ
    in a life-changing way and would eventually spend the rest of his
    life in imitation of Jesus in service to Muslims of the Touareg tribe
    in Tamanrasset, in the midst of the Sahara desert, southern Algeria.

    Charles had previously been acquainted with the austere beauty and
    mystery of the desert through French army life, and, after his first
    unsuccessful tour, he won a measure of fame by mapping uncharted
    territory in Morocco, being awarded a medal for the work by the
    French Geographic Society. It was at that time that he came to admire
    the exotic Islam of the desert and, for a time, according to his
    early biographer, even considered converting to that religion; but
    with more experience he was later glad he did not, even if his love
    for the people---not a few of whose ancestors were Christians before
    being conquered---- never wavered, but only increased in radically
    new ways.

    Dr.Marcellino D'Ambrosio in a brief sketch of Foucauld's life, writes
    at his website:

    His insistence that his mistress Mimi accompany him to social events
    for other officers and their wives earned him the contempt of his
    colleagues, leading to his defiant resignation from the military.
    While living among the Muslim population of North Africa, he had
    developed a fascination with Islam and the Koran, but nevertheless
    remained an agnostic.
    Once back in his native France, he embarked on a religious quest that
    led him frequently to stop in Catholic Churches to make this prayer:

    "God, if you exist, let me know it."

    Finally, in 1886, he experienced a profound conversion to Christ,
    went to confession, and began discerning a vocation to some sort of
    religious life. In 1888, he visited the Holy Land, and developed a
    profound love of Nazareth and devotion to the hidden, ordinary life
    of Mary, Joseph and Jesus. In 1890, he entered the French Trappist
    Abbey of Our Lady of the Snows. Not long after, he was assigned to a
    monastery in Syria where his work was to supervise a crew of Muslim
    manual laborers who worked for the monastery. He realized at this
    point that he was called not to be a boss, but a servant and laborer
    himself, to be last as Jesus was, not first."

    Missionary

    Brother Charles, as mentioned, tried to live the Trappist monastic
    life for some seven years but in time felt called to greater poverty
    and identification with Christ's poor. Like His Lord he wanted to
    serve the poorest and, imitating Christ's hidden years at Nazareth,
    to manual labor and suffer with them, offering them the incomparable
    Hope of One who was more than a mere prophet and Greater than Abraham
    (Jn 1:1, 8:58; cf Exo 3:14, & more). With permission, then, he chose
    a quasi-eremitical life (life as a hermit) amidst the Touareg in
    Tamanrasset during the French colonial period.

    Above all he wanted to be a witness to Jesus in serving the poor,
    imitating the Word made flesh (Jn 1:1), the God-man who therefore was
    the fulfillment of all the prophets; he wanted to ensure the
    salvation of the Muslims, who he was convinced must accept Jesus
    again in the biblical sense (Jn 1:12), and who had departed from the
    way of the prophets and the teachings of Christ.

    Brother Charles wanted this witness to be with his life more than
    with his words. And to that end he spent decades opening his door to
    the hungry, clothing the naked, giving drink to the thirsty, and,
    being a proficient linguist, painstakingly assembling a
    French-Touareg, Touareg-French dictionary.

    The Colonial Project

    While there is no question that Brother Charles was often critical of
    French colonial rule---the proto-globalization of his day---he by no
    means opposed it.

    In Ali Merad's book Christian Hermit in an Islamic World: A Muslim's
    View of Charles de Foucauld (Paulist Press, 1975) the translator, Zoe
    Hersov, says of Foucauld, "His devotion to the army and to the ideal
    of French supremacy never wavered". (P.82). That is because the
    Universal Brother widely observed the Islamic civilization in his day
    which he was acquainted with to be a brutal reality and came to
    believe its desert forms were especially "babarous" compared to
    Christianity at the roots. Some of his later followers, like Louis
    Massignon, tried to sanitize this conviction of the holy hermit by
    confusing their own changed politics with the spirituality of
    Foucauld, but as, Merad suggests, it is unconvincing.

    This is clear especially in the light of spiritual projects initiated
    by Brother Charles himself precisely for the conversion of Muslims
    which Massignon later suppressed. Projects like the Easter 1908
    Confraternity dedicated to the Sacred Heart called the Catholic
    Colonial Union (updated in 1914), which in its 9 planks explicitly
    asked Catholics to dedicate themselves through prayer, good works,
    and alms for the "conversion" of Muslim's who he saw as lost souls,
    strangers to the true God of biblical revevelation---people who had
    departed from the Way or never known it--- and who desperately needed
    conversion back to Jesus. Those who quote a few later secondary or
    Protestant sources to the contrary miss or are offended by the
    essence of Charles de Foucauld. He was a missionary, but knew that,
    especially with Muslims, education must come first.

    "It is necessary," he told a friend, on June 4, 1908, "for the whole
    continent to be covered with monks, nuns, and good Christians
    remaining in the world to make contact with these poor Muslims, to
    draw them in gently, to educate and civilize them, and finally, to
    make them Christians. With Muslims you cannot make them Christians
    first and then civilize them; the only possible way is the other,
    very much slower one: to educate and civilize first, and then
    covert..." (ECR. Spir. quoted by Merad, ibid P.61)
    Merad says "Like other liberal and idealistic minds of his
    generation, Charles de Foucauld identified the colonial enterprise
    with a mission of human emancipation and civilization" (ibid). He
    also writes, "...he had a preference for a "democratic" policy
    conceived in the interest of the common people, the working classes,
    rather than the privileged class of nobles and ajwad, that Muslim
    chivalry who were more in love with glory than fortune, and for whom
    the code of honor took the place of moral and political law" (P.62).

    When Brother Charles looked around him he saw, besides deep piety,
    warring tribes, "addicted to raiding and feuding, [who] were known to
    the French for their cunning and treachery" (ibid. Translator's
    forward p. 5). All the more reason for these peoples to see Jesus in
    the French and not corruption or sheer dominance. There was no end to
    Charles de Foucauld's urging that Christian virtues be seen in the
    colonial forces in order to attract the Muslims he was patient to
    convert, rather than to stir up their natural desert wrath. He was
    often disappointed in this.

    It was a burning love and desire for the salvation of souls which
    supremely motivated Foucauld; the colonial project was useful as a
    "civilizing influence" on desert dwelling peoples. But salvation came
    through Jesus Christ, the Sacred Heart, His teachings and Church,
    without which all would come to nothing. He was convinced Muslims
    were steeped in grave errors which gave rise to barbarity too often.
    It was the salvation of the people---and not just political peace---
    for which he lived, prayed, suffered. He knew that the work of
    conversion might take "centuries" but it would be necessary for
    Christians to show Jesus Christ if it were ever to happen at all.

    A Difficult Matter

    Colonialism is a difficult matter today and charged with controversy,
    however one looks at it. But whatever its faults, and even at times
    crimes, it gave as much as it took. This is not acnowledged often
    enough in our time, however wrongheaded colonialism may have been. It
    was its "taming" influence that Merad says made it a valuable
    preparation for the Gospel in Charles' eyes. He saw Armenian
    Christians massacred by the Turks, and in Beni Abbes he saw outright
    slavery practiced by Muslims, according to Charles Lepeitt.

    Yet Foucauld knew Christians must enter into the self-emptying love
    of Jesus for sinners if Muslims were to see Him in them. To see, more
    than hear. He wrote in a letter:

    With goodness and kindness, brotherly affection, a virtuous example,
    with humility and tenderness which are always impressive and
    Christian...To some without ever saying to them a word about God or
    religion, being patient as God is patient, being good as God is
    good...speaking of God as much as they are able to take; Above all to
    see in every human being a son of God, a person redeemed by the blood
    of Jesus...We have to get rid of a domineering spirit...What a
    difference there is between Jesus' way of acting and talking and the
    domineering attitude of those who are not Christians, or who are bad
    Christians..." (ibid. Lepetit, 103)
    This is what it meant to be Universal Brother. Adoration of the
    Blessed Sacrament, Liturgy, prayer, the works of mercy, that was the
    way men are converted, according to Charles de Foucauld, "without
    books and without words".

    Danger

    In Tamanrasset Brother Charles lived amidst many dangers always. He
    was considered an "infidel" and "savage" by many of the Muslims
    there, except for those he directly helped and who experienced his
    Christic way, and they were not a few. Moreover he was loyal to the
    French army and to the colonial project which to many Muslims meant
    he was a spy. That, of course, could mean death---even a horrible
    death---at any minute. Charles Lepitetit said Brother Charles knew
    well those Muslims whose idea of glory "was to die with one's weapons
    in one's hand against the enemies of God," those "who wanted no mercy
    for infidels". Some of these cases were extreme, even for the
    Universal Brother who was used to the desert. There were those whom
    he considered outright pirates and demanded the French army summarily
    shoot upon locating, "without any kind of trial," and not take
    prisoner. Charles was a peacemaker but not a pacifist. (ibid,
    Lepetit, p.93).

    Ever since his conversion he prayed for the grace of martyrdom for
    the sake of the people he loved. In the end he seems to have been
    killed by a Muslim bandit's gun. That would have been good enough for
    Charles de Foucauld who, like His Lord, prayed to offer His blood for
    those souls who opposed him.

    http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?id=76 48
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