Regina Leader-Post

L’Arche founder wins Templeton Prize

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LONDON — Jean Vanier, the son of a former Canadian governor general, has joined previous winners such as Mother Teresa, Alexander Solzhenits­yn and the Dalai Lama in being awarded the prestigiou­s Templeton Prize.

It comes with about the equivalent of $2 million. The prize honours a living person who has made exceptiona­l contributi­ons to affirming life’s spiritual dimension, whether through insight, discovery or practical works.

Vanier, 8 6 , founded L’Arche in France in 1964. It’s described as a groundbrea­king internatio­nal network where people with and without intellectu­al disabiliti­es work together as peers.

L’Arche got its start when Vanier invited two intellectu­ally disabled men to come and live with him as friends in a small house.

Henamed the house L’Arche , which is French for “ark” and “arch,” to symbolize Noah’s Ark and an arch or bridge connecting heaven and Earth.

The first Canadian community, L’Arche Daybreak, was founded in Richmond Hill, Ont., and 29 communitie­s are spread across Canada from Comox Valley, B.C., to Cape Breton, N.S.

Worldwide, there are 147 residentia­l communitie­s in 35 countries on five continents.

In remarks prepared for the announceme­nt in England, the son of ex-governor general Georges P. Vanier made a plea for global peace.

“Before being Christians or Jews or Muslims, before being Americans or Russians or Africans, before being generals or priests, rabbis or imams, before having visible or invisible disabiliti­es, we are all human beings with hearts capable of loving,” he said.

Vanier still lives in the original L’Arche community north of Paris.

Another Canadian, Charles Taylor, a Quebec philosophe­r, was awarded the Templeton Prize in 2007.

 ??  ?? Jean Vanier
Jean Vanier

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