Fraternité Notre-Dame

Fraternité Notre-Dame is a traditionalist Catholic order of priests and nuns that is not in union with the Pope.

Fraternité Notre-Dame
Formation1977
FounderJean Marie Kozik
HeadquartersChicago, Illinois

Origins

The origins of Fraternité Notre-Dame are in the reported apparitions of the Virgin Mary in Fréchou, France. They were allegedly received in 1977 by Jean Marie Kozik, a Frenchman of Polish origin, who was consecrated as a bishop in 1978 by the dissident and excommunicated Vietnamese Archbishop Ngô Đình Thục.[1]

Today

Fraternité Notre-Dame operates religious and humanitarian missions on four continents. The order operates soup kitchens and weekly food pantries in Paris, New York City, Ulan Bator, Chicago, and San Francisco.[2][3] Additionally, a hospital for the poor has been opened in Mongolia, and it has also operated humanitarian convoys to benefit those victimized by war in Croatia, Bosnia, Kosovo, and Rwanda.[1]

Chicago

Since then Fraternité Notre-Dame nuns have become a fixture at numerous Chicago area farmer's markets selling traditional French pastries to raise funds for the group.[4]

References

  1. "History of Fraternite Notre Dame". Fraternitenotredame.com. Retrieved 2010-05-19.
  2. "Self-Help Guru Tony Robbins Saves Small Soup Kitchen Run by 3 Nuns". 1 March 2016.
  3. "SF nuns win new spot for soup kitchen in the Mission". SF Chronicle. Jan 2017.
  4. Pierri, Vince. "Sales of French pastries aid nuns' mission work". Daily Herald. Retrieved 2010-05-19.
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