Difference between revisions of "Charles de Foucauld"

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Charles de Foucauld 1858-1916.  Foucauld was a French military officer converted in 1886.  He became a Cistercian Trappist in 1890 and went to the Algerian Sahara in 1901 to live among Tuareg tribes people. He lived in a hermitage for "adoration and hospitality" in the middle of the desert.  Slowly he learned the Taureg language and became a friend of these nomadic people.  His life of isolation and simplicity was his testimony.  During the agony of World War I and growing anti-colonial sentiments he was assassinated on December 1, 1916, by neighboring tribesmen.  He was one of the early "Little Brothers of Jesus."
 
Charles de Foucauld 1858-1916.  Foucauld was a French military officer converted in 1886.  He became a Cistercian Trappist in 1890 and went to the Algerian Sahara in 1901 to live among Tuareg tribes people. He lived in a hermitage for "adoration and hospitality" in the middle of the desert.  Slowly he learned the Taureg language and became a friend of these nomadic people.  His life of isolation and simplicity was his testimony.  During the agony of World War I and growing anti-colonial sentiments he was assassinated on December 1, 1916, by neighboring tribesmen.  He was one of the early "Little Brothers of Jesus."
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Submitted by John A. Lapp
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[[Category:France Sources]]
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[[Category:Algeria Sources]]
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[[Category:Indigenous]]

Latest revision as of 15:42, 17 March 2016

Charles de Foucauld 1858-1916. Foucauld was a French military officer converted in 1886. He became a Cistercian Trappist in 1890 and went to the Algerian Sahara in 1901 to live among Tuareg tribes people. He lived in a hermitage for "adoration and hospitality" in the middle of the desert. Slowly he learned the Taureg language and became a friend of these nomadic people. His life of isolation and simplicity was his testimony. During the agony of World War I and growing anti-colonial sentiments he was assassinated on December 1, 1916, by neighboring tribesmen. He was one of the early "Little Brothers of Jesus."

Submitted by John A. Lapp