Matthew
Farfan
"In
a civilization more and more mobile, loud-sounding and speaking,
zones of silence become a vital necessity. So monasteries more
than ever are called to be haunts of peace and interiority. Never
let internal or external pressures affect your traditions and
your means of recollection. Rather do what you can to educate
your guests and retreatants to observe the virtue of silence.
Cherish your separation from the world so comparable to the biblical
desert. Paradoxically, this desert is not emptiness; that is where
the Lord speaks to your heart and associates you closely to his
work of salvation."
Pope
John-Paul II, 1980
An
imposing structure overlooks the western shore of Lake Memphremagog
near the village of Austin. It is the Benedictine monastery, St-Benoît-du-Lac.
Viewed from across the lake, St-Benoît calls to mind a French
chateau. With its turrets, green copper roofs, and walls of stone,
it sits in striking contrast to the green hillside that slopes gently
down to the water. Mount Owl's Head looms majestically in the distance.
Surely the monks could not have chosen a more stunning setting!
St-Benoît-du-Lac.
(Photo: Matthew Farfan)
PERSEVERENCE
The history of St-Benoît-du-Lac is one of perseverance. The
monastery dates back to 1912 when a handful of exiled French monks
arrived in Canada from Belgium. Their leader, Dom Paul Vannier,
had found an ideal spot in the Eastern Townships. With the blessing
of the Bishop of Sherbrooke, he purchased an old farm on the shore
of Lake Memphremagog. Ironically, the spot he chose was on the very
site chosen by the Quaker pioneer of Bolton Township, Nicholas Austin,
120 years before. Great men think alike.
For
the first years of its existence, the tiny monastic community struggled.
Poverty, isolation, and hard work took their toll. Making things
even worse, Dom Vannier drowned in a boating accident on the lake.
At one point, the monastery (then a mere "cella" occupying
a simple farmhouse) was nearly closed. When two Canadian monks went
to Europe to plead for support, the group was granted a reprieve.
The
view from the abbey. (Photo: Matthew Farfan)
In the years that followed, the situation improved and the community
began to grow. In 1935, St-Benoît was granted the status of
an autonomous monastery. St-Benoît was by then a sprawling
three-storey wooden building, but in 1938 the monks decided to construct
a more substantial, more ambitious monastery. They enlisted the
help of a French Benedictine architect, Dom Paul Bellot. The new
buildings were inaugurated in 1941. In 1952, St-Benoît became
an abbey, and since then several additions have been made, including
a hostel for visitors and in 1994 a splendid new church.
TRANQUILITY
Today, St-Benoit-du-Lac is famous not only for its spectacular architecture
and surroundings, but for being a place of respite for pilgrims
from around the world. Visitors can either come for the day, or
(if they have a reservation) stay over night at one of the abbey's
two hostels, which accommodate up to 50 men and 15 women. Reflection,
prayer, and tranquility are the rule.
Inside the new
abbey church.
(Photo: Matthew Farfan)
TOURISM
St-Benoît is a major tourist site, attracting between 100
and 200,000 visitors per year, according to Dom Jacques Bolduc.
Dom Bolduc, whose official title is "cellarer", is responsible
for all things administrative. He says that the abbey is an enormous
benefit to the region's tourism industry. He estimates that between
1000 and 2000 people visit each week in the peak summer months.
Some of these people stay at the hostels, he says, but many come
just for the masses that are celebrated daily at 11 a.m. with Gregorian
chants in the abbey church, which seats 500 and which is usually
full on Sundays. Other visitors come to sample the famous St-Benoît
cheese, which the monks produce on the premises. Others come for
the apple cider, produced from apples grown in the Abbey's orchards.
A boutique boasts a selection of produce as well as musical recordings,
books, and religious articles.
Miraculously the Abbey is able to maintain its primary vocation
of meditation and prayer, while at the same time welcoming large
numbers of people. This is due in part to the fact that while certain
areas are open to the public, others are strictly off-limits. The
population of St-Benoît-du-Lac varies between fifty and sixty,
depending on the number of novices in residence at any given time.
Monks divide their time between religious and agricultural duties,
explains Dom Bolduc.
MUNICIPAL
CURIOSITY
St-Benoît is something of curiosity. The Abbey, along with
its 225 hectares (560 acres) of land, is actually a municipality
unto itself, a kind of Vatican City in miniature. "Yes, you
could say that," laughs one official at the Quebec Federation
of Municipalities. "It's certainly the only one in the province
we know of."
Dom Bolduc and colleague Dom Langlois sharing a joke.
Bolduc, 74, has been at St-Benoît for 53 years.
(Photo: Matthew Farfan)
Carved out of the municipality of Austin in 1939, St-Benoît
was created in part because Austin, itself carved out of Bolton
East the year before, was worried about having to provide the monks
with the usual services (water, electricity and so on), while the
monks would legally be required to pay no municipal taxes. The people
of Austin and the monks agreed that it would be in everyone's interest
for the monastery to form its own town. Dom Bolduc says that this
sort of thing was rare in Quebec at that time, but not unheard of.
There were, he says, other institutions that were municipalities.
One example was a hospital in Quebec City.
Today
St-Benoît still maintains its independence. Dom Bolduc, in
the role of pro-mayor, attends regular meetings of the Memphremagog
MRC (regional county). St-Benoît, however, forgoes the traditional
municipal organization and is administered by a corporation composed
of Benedictine monks.
St-Benoît in 1913: a simple farmhouse. (Photo:
Courtesy of St-Benoît-du-Lac)
Asked if the monks are worried about the government's forced municipal
mergers, Dom Bolduc explains that since its creation, the little
enclave has rarely if ever asked the province for anything. "In
1958, we were the first ones in the area to build a water treatment
plant. We had to because, with our cheese making, we didn't want
to cause any pollution. We didn't ask for a cent, and paid for it
all ourselves." He adds, chuckling, "No, we're not worried.
We ask for nothing, so they leave us alone."
For
more information, visitors may contact St-Benoît-du-Lac by
phone: (819) 843-4080; by fax: (819) 868-1861; or by email: abbaye@st-benoit-du-lac.com.
For those wishing to stay at the men's hostel, reservations are
required by phone. For reservations at the women's hostel (Saint
Scholastica's Villa), call (819) 843-2340. The Abbey Website may
be visited at: http://www.st-benoit-du-lac.com.
St-Benoît
Tower.
(Photo: Matthew Farfan)
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