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Little Sisters of the Sacred Heart

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Little Sisters of the Sacred Heart are a religious congregation of contemplative nuns in the world, founded by a Belgian widow Alida Capart in 1933[1] in Montpellier (Hérault, France) and whose spirituality is inspired by Father Charles de Foucauld (Blessed Charles of Jesus, 1858-1916). "Nazareth can be lived anywhere".[2]

After the Second Vatican Council, they left the habit and adapted their constitutions to live more mixed with people, in a "living with", among the most disadvantaged, favoring simplicity and fraternal joy. "We try to discover the ways of inner silence that open to God and to others" (Constitutions)).[3]

Today these nuns are around fifty divided into small fraternities in Algeria,[4] Tunisia, Mali, Burkina Faso, Bolivia, France and Spain, where they are in the last two countries mainly in small apartments "on the periphery". The general fraternity is in Rosny-sous-Bois and the formation fraternity in L'Île-Saint-Denis, on the outskirts of Paris.[5]

The congregation has a blessed, Sister Odette Prévost[6] (1932-1995), a French nun who is one of the nineteen Martyrs of Algeria, beatified in 2018.

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