The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Tiny order of French nuns takes on Vatican

- By Nicole Winfield The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY >> The Vatican has an unusual dilemma on its hands after nearly all the nuns in a tiny French religious order threatened to renounce their vows rather than accept the Holy See’s decision to remove their superior.

The sisters argue that the Vatican commission­ers sent to replace their superior general, who is also the niece of the order’s founder, have no understand­ing of their way of life or spirituali­ty. The church’s conclusion — contained in a summary of its investigat­ion provided this week to The Associated Press — is that the Little Sisters of Marie, Mother of the Redeemer are living “under the tight grip” of an “authoritar­ian” superior and feel a “serious conflict of loyalty” toward her.

The standoff marks an extraordin­ary battle of wills between the Vatican hierarchy and the group of 39 nuns, most in their 60s and 70s, who run homes for the aged in rural western and southern France. Their threat to leave comes at a time when the Catholic Church can hardly spare them, with the number of sisters plummeting in Europe and the Americas.

The unlikely revolt had been brewing for years but erupted in 2017, when the Vatican suspended the Little Sisters’ government and ordered the superior, Mother Marie de Saint Michel, removed. The Vatican says it took action after local church investigat­ions in 2010 and 2016 found an excessive authoritar­ianism in her rule and serious problems of governance.

Details of her alleged abuses of authority haven’t been revealed. But within two years of her election as superior in 2000, six sisters had left, church officials say.

“The grave acts posed by Mother Marie de Saint Michel are denounced and the sisters are called to religious and responsibl­e behavior,” the prefect of the Vatican’s congregati­on for religious, Cardinal Joao Braz di Aviz, wrote the nuns in July.

By then, Braz had already appointed a commission­er and two deputies to run the order. But the Little Sisters refused to accept them and kept Saint Michel in place in the mother house.

As the standoff escalated, 34 of the 39 nuns issued an extraordin­ary public declaratio­n last month saying they had no other choice but to ask to be relieved of their religious vows.

“We are not making this sacrifice lightly,” they wrote. “We wish to remain in total communion with the church but we cannot signify more clearly, or more painfully either, our incapacity in conscience to obey what we are commanded to do.”

Their plight has garnered sympathy. A French support group, the Support Associatio­n of the Little Sisters of Marie, claims to have gotten 3,900 signatures for an online petition demanding the immediate restoratio­n of the central government of the order and removal of the commission­ers.

“We are in a situation of blockage,” said Marcel Mignot, president of the support associatio­n.

The sisters downplay problems with their superior and say the real dispute is over their local bishop’s decision to split up management of their eldercare homes that had been merged in recent years. They say the bishop used his authority to impose an unjust decision on them without taking their views or the financial implicatio­ns into account.

“This is about power,” Mignot said, referring to the bishop’s authority over diocesan orders.

The sisters have appealed his decision to the Vatican’s high court “so that the truth can be re-establishe­d, but Roman justice takes its time,” the sisters wrote their supporters earlier this year.

Their cherished community was founded in 1954 in Toulouse by Marie Nault, a woman who, according to legend, stopped her formal education at age 11 to work on the family farm but possessed such spirituali­ty that she developed the stigmata — the bleeding wounds that imitate those of Christ on the cross.

Nault took the name Mere Marie de la Croix — Mother Mary of the Cross — and opened four communitie­s in western and southern France which, in 1989, won approval from the bishop to become a diocesan institute of consecrate­d life.

Born in 1901, Mother Marie died in 1999 and her niece, the current ousted superior, took over Nuns are silhouette­d Sunday in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican. The Vatican is facing a dilemma after nearly all the nuns in a tiny French religious order threatened to renounce their vows rather than accept the removal of their superior. The standoff marks an extraordin­ary battle of wills between the Vatican and the group of 39 nuns who run homes for the aged in rural France.

a year later. She remains at the mother house in Saint-Aignan sur Roë, in

 ?? ANDREW MEDICHINI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ??
ANDREW MEDICHINI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE

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