Christian Brother

Roman Catholicism
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Christian Brother, member of either of two separate but similar congregations of Roman Catholic laymen devoted to teaching youth.

Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools

The Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools (F.S.C.) was founded by St. Jean-Baptiste de La Salle at Reims, France, in 1680 for the education of boys, especially of poor families; the congregation is now established throughout the world and is also known as the de La Salle Brothers. The brothers are supported in their mission by the La Salle Foundation, an administrative organization that was created in 1973 and is led by brothers, a lay assistant, and regional delegates. The congregation also receives support from the Lasallian Partners, a network of volunteers who share responsibilities for the Lasallian educational mission. Partners can be men or women, married or single, lay or religious (including priests and deacons from other orders). The de La Salle Brothers also offer opportunities for young people to participate in solidarity missions around the globe.

Besides teaching in elementary, secondary, and teacher-training schools, the brothers administer and staff universities; agricultural schools; boarding schools; crèches (day nurseries); technical, trade, and commercial schools; youth and family services programs; summer camps; and retreat centers. A number of their schools offer support for children with developmental or physical disabilities.

Congregation of the Brothers of the Christian Schools of Ireland

The Congregation of the Brothers of the Christian Schools of Ireland (C.F.C.) was founded in 1802 in Waterford, Ireland, by Blessed Edmund Ignatius Rice, a merchant of that city. Rice established the order to serve the needs of poor Catholic boys in his country, where the English Penal Laws of the period prohibiting Catholic schools had reduced great numbers of Catholics to poverty and ignorance of formal Christian teaching. In 1808 the brothers first professed religious vows according to the rule of the Congregation of Our Lady of the Presentation, an order of women religious whose work in Waterford had greatly impressed Rice. In 1820 the brothers received approval for their formation from Pope Pius VII, becoming the first male Irish order to be raised to the status of a papal institute. Two years later the brothers elected Rice as the order’s first superior general.

The congregation spread to other countries as Irish-born bishops sought help in educating the youth of their dioceses. The brothers also operated orphanages, industrial schools (reformatories), colleges, and institutions for blind and deaf children. Internationally, the brothers became known as the Irish Christian Brothers or the Edmund Rice Christian Brothers, to avoid confusion with the French-based congregation formed by La Salle. In the 20th and 21st centuries, the order’s work has also involved founding and operating high schools, retreat centers, and various missions serving the poor, people with HIV/AIDS, immigrants, homeless people, and young adults. Their work centers on issues such as promoting nutrition and sustainable development, encouraging business initiatives for women, and ending human trafficking.

Irish Christian Brothers and abuse allegations

In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, the Irish Christian Brothers were among the religious orders that came under investigation for physical and sexual abuse in their schools and institutions, particularly in Ireland, Australia, and North America. In November 2009 the Irish branch of the order offered to pay €161 million in land transfers and money for counseling services and a government-run trust fund for abuse survivors in Ireland. The payout offer came after the publication earlier that year of the government’s Report of the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse, commonly known as the Ryan Report, which detailed a system of rampant institutional abuse. In 2013 the North American branch of the order reached a settlement in which they agreed to pay $16.5 million to more than 400 people who had been sexually or physically abused as children in Christian Brothers schools and orphanages in the United States and Canada.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by René Ostberg.