THE CONTROVERSIAL Legionaries of Christ religious congregation is to close its novitiate in Dublin due to falling vocations.
Founded 70 years ago in Mexico by the disgraced Fr Marcial Maciel, the legionaries have been in Ireland since 1960.
Its novitiate has been on Leopardstown Road in Dublin’s Foxrock since 1968.
The congregation is present in over 22 countries.
Fr
Maciel, a close friend of the late Pope John Paul II, was removed from
ministry by Pope Benedict XVI in 2006 after years of allegations he had
abused seminarians. He died in 2008 aged 87.
In 2009, the Vatican
ordered an apostolic visitation of the congregation.
On May 1st, 2010,
the Vatican issued a statement saying Fr Maciel lived a life “deprived
of scruple and authentic religious sentiment”.
It said “the
majority of the legionaries were unaware of this life, above all because
of the network of relations created by Fr Maciel who was very clever in
creating alibis for himself, inspiring the confidence, trust and
silence of those around him whilst at the same time reinforcing his role
as charismatic founder”.
The statement added that Fr Maciel created a “defence mechanism” that, for a long time, made him “untouchable”.
In
a letter last Friday “to the Legionaries of Christ and the consecrated
members of Regnum Christi in the western and central European”, area
director general Fr Alvaro Corcuera wrote “the legion will not be able
to assign novices to the Dublin novitiate after September of this year.
“This novitiate will be closed and the brothers there will be transferred to other novitiates.”
He
continued, “the reasons which have brought about this painful decision
are the scarcity of Irish vocations in recent decades, combined with the
current difficulty of maintaining the novitiate with vocations from
other countries, as well as the consolidation of efforts and resources
that we are implementing throughout the world”.
Legionaries will
continue to reside at Leopardstown, however, and their Dublin Oak and
Woodlands academies, the Clonlost retreat centre and the Faith and
Family Centre in Blackrock will stay open.
Fr Anthony Bannon has
been named superior of the Dublin community with effect from Monday of
this week, and the director is Fr Sergio Rosiles.