Early years The Taizé Community was founded by
Brother Roger (Roger Schütz) in 1940. He pondered what it really meant to live a life according to the
Scriptures and began a quest for a different expression of the Christian life. A year after this decision, Schütz reflected: Because his native
Switzerland was neutral and thus less affected by the war, Schütz felt as if France would be ideal for his vision, seeing it as a "land of poverty, a land of wartime suffering, but a land of inner freedom." He eventually settled in
Taizé, which was a small, isolated village just north of
Cluny, the site of a historically influential Christian monastic foundation. In September 1940, Schütz purchased a small farm house that would eventually become the home of the Taizé Community. Only miles south of the demarcation line that separated
Vichy France and the
Zone occupée, Brother Roger's home became a sanctuary to countless war
refugees seeking shelter. On 11 November 1942, the
Gestapo occupied Roger's house while he was in Switzerland collecting funds to aid in his refuge ministry. Roger was not able to return to his home in Taizé until the autumn of 1944, when
France was liberated. In 1941, Brother Roger had published a few small
brochures outlining several facets of a Christ-centred communal life together. These brochures prompted two young men to apply, soon followed by a third. They all lived in Switzerland in a flat owned by Roger's family until after the war when they began a new life together in the French countryside. Over the next few years, several other men would join the community. On
Easter Sunday 1949, seven brothers committed themselves to a life following Christ in simplicity, celibacy and community.
Growth and current situation In the years that followed, others joined. In 1969, a young Belgian doctor became the first Catholic to pledge his life to the Taizé Community. More brothers from Reformed, Anglican and Catholic backgrounds joined the community. Soon the Brothers of Taizé were making trips to take aid to people in both rural and urban areas. They began forming "fraternities" of brothers in other cities that sought to be "signs of the presence of Christ among men, and bearers of joy". Since 1951, the brothers have lived, for longer or shorter periods, in small fraternities among the poor in
India (chiefly in
Calcutta),
Bangladesh, the
Philippines,
Algeria,
Cuba,
South Korea,
Brazil,
Kenya,
Senegal, and the
United States (chiefly in the
Hell's Kitchen section of
Manhattan,
New York City). In August 2005 Brother Roger, aged 90, was killed in a knife attack by a mentally-ill woman. At his funeral, Brother Roger had an ecumenical dream fulfilled. The presider at his funeral was the president of the Vatican's council for the unity of Christians, Cardinal
Walter Kasper. Anglican bishop
Nigel McCulloch of
Manchester, England, who represented
Rowan Williams, the
Archbishop of Canterbury, read the first reading in English. The second reading was read in French by the Rev.
Jean-Arnold de Clermont, president of the Conference of European Churches, and in German by Bishop
Wolfgang Huber, head of the Evangelical Church in Germany. Cardinals and archbishops, Orthodox, Anglican and other religious leaders and international politicians joined ordinary Christians in prayer during the funeral, including the President of Germany,
Horst Köhler, and the retired Archbishop of Paris,
Jean-Marie Lustiger. His funeral was attended by approximately 10,000 people. In 2010, for the celebration of the 70th anniversary of Taizé, five years after Brother Roger's death, ecumenical messages of love and benediction were received from church leaders as varied as: •
Pope Benedict XVI •
Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople •
Patriarch Kirill of Moscow • The
Archbishop of Canterbury,
Rowan Williams • The General Secretary of the
Lutheran World Federation,
Ishmael Noko • The General Secretary of the
World Communion of Reformed Churches, Setri Nyomi • The General Secretary of the
World Council of Churches,
Olav Fykse Tveit • The
Archbishop of York,
John Sentamu • The Anglican
Archbishop of the Cape,
Thabo Cecil Makgoba • The President of the
German Bishops' Conference, Archbishop
Robert Zollitsch • The President of the
Netherlands Episcopal Conference,
Ad van Luyn • The President of the Community of Christian Churches in the
Canton of Vaud, Pastor Martin Hoegger. At the end of 2010, the community was composed of about one hundred brothers, from Protestant and Catholic traditions, who originate from about thirty countries around the world. From 2005 to 2023, the community was led by
Brother Alois, a German-born Catholic, who had been appointed by Brother Roger before his death. After consulting his brothers, Brother Alois appointed Brother Matthew, a British Anglican, to succeed him in December 2023. ==Components==