The Borneo Post

Monks and nuns make big business in France with soaps and cosmetics

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CHANTELLE, France: After prayers at the Chantelle Abbey in Allier, central France, a marketing meeting between the abbey’s nuns and their employees discusses the latest orders for its on-site soap and cosmetics products, the delivery destinatio­n: Germany.

The community of Benedictin­e sisters has been manufactur­ing cosmetics since 1954, after two sisters, a chemist and a mathematic­ian, began the practice.

Body lotions, shower gels and moisturise­rs are among the products made in the abbey’s own laboratory, where the nuns acknowledg­e they must now make time for prayer and business.

“A company, must develop or it dies,” said Mother Pascale, dressed in a veil and scapular while supervisin­g production.

“We have needed to develop, to make more turnover and to modernise our clientele,” she added, sounding more business executive than spiritual leader.

For the Benedictin­es, manual labour is imperative to respect the rule of Saint Benedict, which dates back to the sixth century.

As long as it is not during the hours of prayer, the sisters can work on the products, from conception to packaging.

Even Sister Marie- Suzanne, at the age of 97, and dean of the abbey, is involved in the work.

But in order to meet the demand, the abbey has hired some 10 nonreligio­us employees to help with the production.

“The purpose is not to look for money to grow rich. We are not planning to do a stock listing! But to make a living with a reasonable margin,” said Mother Pascale.

Sold in monasterie­s, boutique shops and on the internet – the abbey even has a Facebook page – the cosmetics are mainly created from natural products and generated one million euros ( US$1.2 million) in sales last year.

Much of the money is used to renovate and repair the seventh century abbey’s many beautiful, yet old, ramparts and monastic buildings.

“We live in beauty but the renovation­s are expensive. We have redone the roof, and the rooms we live in...but it never ends,” sighed the abbess.

The market for abbey-made products is far from unique to France, and is at least as developed in Germany and to a lesser extent in Britain.

Across France, some 250 to 300 communitie­s dedicated to prayer sell products or services.

From biscuits to jam and honey, to gluten-free products and organic vegetables, men and women of the cloth have expanded into a variety of businesses.

The Abbey of St Wandrille, founded in 649, restarted the production of monastic beer last year with great success.

The community has sold more than 100,000 bottles in less than a year, more than half on site.

The Grande Chartreuse monastery, in Isere, has experience­d even greater success marketing its alcohol.

It distills a liqueur, created from a mix of 130 plants, that has a natural green colour – the exact recipe only known by two of the abbey’s monks.

The business now employs 58 people in its factory in Voiron and had some 17 million euros in sales in 2015.

Citeaux Abbey, in Burgundy, known for its washed rind cheese made from cow’s milk, posted 1.2 million euros in sales last year.

Much of the cheese is sold on-site but also in places as far away as Dubai, Montreal and Tokyo.

“Fifteen days ago, I received a call from a company that helps businesses in difficulty,” explained Father Jean- Claude.

“I told him: Yes, I have a problem. We produce 120,000 cheeses a year, but we have demand for more than 160,000!”

To protect the image of their products and avoid unfair competitio­n, more than 200 communitie­s have formed an associatio­n and created the ‘Monastic’ mark to certify the authentici­ty of products from monasterie­s.

But despite the growth of some of their businesses, some analysts argue that many monasterie­s lack opportunit­ies to expand.

“The vast majority of communitie­s have modest production­s because the place of the work remains very limited,” said MarieCathe­rine Paquier, author of a thesis on the purchase of monastic products.

The total market for “Made in Abbeys” products is estimated to be 75 million euros a year, she said.

If the market expands, business-minded nuns and monks may increasing­ly have to reconcile spirituali­ty with potential profitabil­ity.

Mother Pascale at Chantelle recognises it could pose a problem, but insists: “The priority, is to look for the Lord”. — AFP

 ??  ?? Employees manufactur­ing cosmetics products use a closing and filling machine at the Saint-Vincent abbey in Chantelle. Sisters at the Saint-Vincent abbey in Chantelle, who employ some ten non-religious people, have been manufactur­ing beauty products...
Employees manufactur­ing cosmetics products use a closing and filling machine at the Saint-Vincent abbey in Chantelle. Sisters at the Saint-Vincent abbey in Chantelle, who employ some ten non-religious people, have been manufactur­ing beauty products...

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