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CHARTER OF THE COMMUNITIES OF L'ARCHE
- L'Arche began in 1964 when Jean Vanier and father Thomas Philippe,
in response to a call from God, invited Raphael Simi and Philippe Seux, two men with
mental handicaps, to come and share their life in the spirit of the Gospel and of
the Beatitudes that Jesus preached.
From this first community, born in France and in the Roman Catholic tradition, many
other communities have developed in various cultural and religious traditions.
These communities, called into being by God, are united by the same vision and the
same spirit of welcome, of sharing and simplicity.
Aims
- The aim of L'Arche is to create communities which welcome
people with a mental handicap. By this means L'Arche
seeks to respond to
the distress of those who are too often rejected, and to give them a valid place
in society.
- L'Arche seeks to reveal the particular gifts of people with
a mental handicap, who belong at the very heart of their communities and who call
others to share their lives.
- L'Arche knows that it cannot welcome everyone who has a mental
handicap. It seeks to offer not a solution but a sign, a sign that a society, to
be truly human, must be founded on welcome and respect for the weak and the downtrodden.
- In a divided world, L'Arche wants to be a sign of hope. Its
communities, founded on covenant relationships between people of differing intellectual
capacity, social origin, religion and culture, seek to be sign of unity, faithfulness
and reconciliation.
Fundamental principles
- Whatever their gifts or their limitations, people are all
bound together in a common humanity. Everyone is of unique andsacred value, and everyone
has the same dignity and the same rights. The fundamental rights of each person include
the rights to life, to care, to a home, to education and to work. Also, since the
deepest need of human being is to love and to be loved, each person has a right to
friendship, to communion and to a spiritual life.
- If human beings are to develop their abilities and talents
to the full, realizing all their potential as individuals, they need an environment
that fosters personal growth. They need to form relationships with others within
families and communities. They need to live in an atmosphere of trust, security and
mutual affection. They need to be valued, accepted and supported in real and warm
relationships.
- People with a mental handicap often possess qualities of welcome,
wonderment, spontaneity and directness. They are able to touch hearts and to call
others to unity through their simplicity and vulnerability. In this way they are
a living reminder to the wider world of the essential values of the heart without
which knowledge, power and action lose their meaning and purpose.
- Weakness and vulnerability in a person, far from being an
obstacle to union with God, can foster it. It is often through weakness, recognized
and accepted, that the liberating love of God is revealed.
- In order to develop the inner freedom to which all people
are called, and to grow in union with God, each person needs to have the opportunity
of being rooted and nourished in a religious tradition.
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The Communities
1. Communities of faith:
L'Arche Communities are communities of faith, rooted in prayer
and trust in God. They seek to be guided by God and by their weakest members, through
whom God's presence is revealed. Each community member is encouraged to discover
and deepen his or her spiritual life and live it according to his or her particular
faith and tradition. Those who have no religious affiliation are also welcomed and
respected in their freedom of conscience.
- Communities are either of one faith or inter-religious. Those that are Christian
are either of one church inter-denominational. Each community maintains links with
the appropriate religious authorities and its members are integrated with local churches
or other places of worship.
- Communities recognize that they have an ecumenical vocation and a mission to
work for unity.
2. Called to Unity.
- Unity is founded on the covenant of love to which God calls all the community
members. This implies welcome and respect for differences. Such unity presupposes
that the person with a handicap is at the center of community life. This unity is
built up over time and through faithfulness. Communities commit themselves to accompany
their members (once their membership is confirmed) throughout their lives, if this
is what those members want.
- Home life is at the heart of a L'Arche community. The different members of a
community are called to be one body. They live, work, pray and celebrate together,
sharing their joys and their suffering and forgiving, each other, as in a family.
They have a simple lifestyle which gives priority to relationships.
- The same sense of communion unites the various communities throughout the world.
Bound together by solidarity and mutual commitment, they form a worldwide family.
- Called to growth.
3. Places of hope
- L'Arche communities are places of hope. Each person, accordingto his or her own
vocation, is encouraged to grow in love, self-giving and wholeness, as well as in
independence, competence and the ability to make choices.
- The communities wish to secure for their members education, work and therapeutic
activities that will be a source of dignity, growth and fulfillment for them.
- The communities wish to provide their members with the means to develop their
spiritual life and to deepen their union with and love of God and other people.
- All communities members are invited to participate, as far as possible, in decisions
concerning them.
4. Integrated in society.
- L'Arche communities are open and welcoming to the world around them.They form
an integral part of life in their localities, and seek to foster relationships with
neighbours and friends.
- The communities seek to be competent in all the tasks they are called to accomplish.
- The communities wish to enable people with a handicap to work, believing work
to be an important means of integration.
- The communities seek to work closely with:
- - the families and guardians of people who are handicapped
- - professionals
- - government authorities
- and with all those who work in a spirit of justice and peace for people who are
handicapped.
5. Conclusion
- L'Arche is deeply concerned by the distress of people who suffer injustice and
rejection because they are handicapped. This concern should impel the communities
of L'Arche to do all they can to defend the rights of people with a mental handicap,
to support the creation of places of welcome for them, and to call on our society
to become more just and respectful towards them. The communities of L'Arche want
to be in solidarity with the poor of the world, and with all those who take part
in the struggle for justice.
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For further information, please click on any of our hyperlinks.
For specific queries, please contact:
L'Arche Secretariat
Cluain Aoibhinn, Fairgreen Lane, Callan, County Kilkenny, Ireland
e mail admin@larche.ie
Telephone. 056 7725283
International Telephone. +353 56 7725283
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