Only 15 km from our holiday home, the
ecumenical community of Taizé is situated. Every year
thousands of young adults come here. The young adults stay in
Taizé, the adults accompanying usually stay in gîtes in the
area.
The beginnings
Everything began in 1940 when, at the age of twenty-five,
Brother Roger left Switzerland, the country where he was born,
to go and live in France, where his mother came from. For
years he had been an invalid, suffering from tuberculosis.
During that long illness, the call had taken shape in him to
create a community where simplicity and kind-heartedness would
be lived out as essential Gospel realities.
When the Second World War started, he had the conviction that
he should begin at once to offer assistance to people in
difficult straits. The small village of Taizé, where he
settled, was close to the demarcation line that divided France
in half, and so was well situated to be a place of welcome for
refugees fleeing the war.
Thanks to a modest loan, Brother Roger was able to buy a house
in Taizé that had been uninhabited for years, with the
outlying buildings. He asked one of his sisters, Genevieve, to
come and help him offer hospitality. Among the refugees they
sheltered were Jews.
In order not to put any pressure on those he was sheltering,
Brother Roger prayed alone; he often went into the woods near
the house to sing. So that none of the refugees, in particular
those who were Jews or agnostics, would feel ill-at-ease,
Genevieve explained to each of them that it was better for
those who wished to pray to do so alone in their rooms.
In the autumn of 1942 they had been found out and everyone
should leave at once. Brother Roger was able to return in
1944, and then he was not alone. In the meantime a few
brothers had joined him, and they had begun a life together
that continued in Taizé.
A “parable of community”
In 1945, a young man from the region created an association to
take charge of young boys orphaned by the war. When he
suggested to the brothers that they welcome some of them in
Taizé. Gradually other young men arrived and joined the
original group, and on Easter Day 1949, the first brothers
committed themselves for their whole life to celibacy, to
material and spiritual sharing and to a great simplicity of
life.
Today, the Taizé Community is made up of over a hundred
brothers, Catholics and from various Protestant backgrounds,
coming from more than twenty-five nations. By its very
existence, the community is thus a concrete sign of
reconciliation between divided Christians and separated
peoples.
The brothers earn their living by their work. They do not
accept donations. In the same way, if a brother inherits
something from his family, it is given by the community for
the very poor.
Already in the 1950s, brothers went to live in disadvantaged
places to be with people who were suffering from poverty or
divisions. Today, small groups of brothers are present in
Asia, Africa and South America.
Church leaders also come to Taizé. The community has welcomed
Pope John Paul II, three Archbishops of Canterbury, Orthodox
metropolitans, the fourteen Lutheran bishops of Sweden, and
countless pastors from all over the world.
Over the years, the number of visitors to Taizé has continued
to grow. At the end of the 1950s, young adults between the
ages of 17 and 30 began to arrive in ever-greater numbers.
From 1962 on, brothers and young people sent by Taizé came and
went continually to the countries of Eastern Europe, always
very discreetly, to be close to those who were trapped within
their borders. Now that walls have fallen and travel is easier
between East and West, contacts with Orthodox Christians,
always important, have increased significantly.

Brother Roger died on 16 August 2005, at the age of 90, killed
during the evening prayer. Brother Alois, whom Brother Roger
had chosen many years ago as his successor, is now the prior
of the Community.
Intercontinental meetings of young adults
Every week from early spring to late autumn, young adults from
different continents arrive on the hill of Taizé. They are
searching for meaning in their lives, in communion with many
others.
Some weeks in the summer months, more than 5000 young people
from 75 different countries thus take part in a common
adventure. And this adventure continues when they return home.
It is expressed in their concern to deepen an inner life and
by their readiness to take on responsibilities in order to
make the world a better place to live in.
In Taizé, the visitors are welcomed by a community of brothers
who have committed themselves to follow Christ by a yes for
life. Sisters also take part in the welcome. During the
meetings, three times each day all those present gather for
prayer, worshipping God together in singing and silence. Each
day, brothers of the community give Bible introductions that
are followed by times of reflection and discussion,
participants also help with practical tasks.
One can also spend the week in silence as a way of letting the
Gospel illuminate one’s life in greater depth. In the
afternoon, groups devoted to specific topics allow people to
make the connection between the wellsprings of the faith and
the pluralistic reality of contemporary society: “Is
forgiveness possible?” “The challenge of globalisation,” “How
can we respond to God’s call?” “What kind of Europe do we
want?”… There are also topics related to art and music.
By meeting other young people from throughout the world in a
climate of openness and listening, participants discover that
roads to unity can be opened up amidst the diversity of
cultures and Christian traditions. This provides a solid basis
to be creators of trust and peace in a world wounded by
divisions, violence and isolation.
In undertaking a “pilgrimage of trust on earth,” Taizé does
not organise a movement around the community. Each person is
invited, after his or her stay, to live out in their own
situation what they have understood, with greater awareness of
the inner life within them as well as of their bonds with many
others who are involved in a similar search for what really
matters.
More about Taizé
http://www.taize.fr/en