History

of Taizé

1940

At the outbreak of the Second World War, Roger Schutz-Marsauche, the 25-year-old son of a Reformed pastor, leaves Switzerland to help people in difficult situations in France. In Taizé, near the demarcation line that cut the country in two, he welcomes refugees, particularly Jews, fleeing the war. At the same time, he develops the project of creating a community, conceived by him during a long period of pulmonary tuberculosis.

1942-1944

Denounced for his activities, when France is totally occupied in autumn 1942 Roger has to stay in Switzerland. In Geneva, he meets his first brothers and they begin a life together, supported by daily prayer in the cathedral.

1944

The brothers are able to return to Taizé at the end of 1944. They pray three times a day in their house, then in the village church. With the help of Roger's sister, they take in children deprived of their families by the war, and on Sundays they welcome German prisoners-of-war, interned in a nearby camp. They run a farm and start a pottery workshop. They make ecumenical contacts, organize meetings and retreats, and engage in theological reflection.

1949

A few other young men gradually join the first brothers. At Easter, seven of them make a lifelong commitment to celibacy, life together and great simplicity of life—the first time since the Reformation that men of Protestant background make such a commitment. Brother Roger is prior. He and Brother Max make their first visit to Rome, where they are received by Pope Pius XII.

1951-1952

Brother Roger writes the Rule of Taizé, expressing the essential elements for living together. When there are twelve brothers, the first small group of brothers who go to live outside Taizé, known as a fraternity, is created: two brothers settle near Montceau-les-Mines, working in construction. In 1954, they move to a North African neighborhood in Marseilles (1954-1961), while two other brothers live in fraternity in Algeria (1953-1963).

1953-1955

Visits by Brother Roger and ecumenical meetings in the Holy Land, Rome, the Netherlands, Tunisia, Algeria, and the United States.

1958

Talks in Geneva at the World Council of Churches. John XXIII is elected Pope and receives the Taizé brothers. In Rome, first contacts with Latin American bishops.

1959

Fraternities in Abidjan, Ivory Coast (1959-1968), and Boston, USA (1959-1960). Brother Roger publishes <i>Living Today for God</i>.

1960

Mission to England with the Anglican Church. Opening of a meeting-place in Cormatin, 4 km from the community. First “Taizé colloquium” held, involving nine Catholic bishops and 65 Protestant pastors.

1962-1965

1962: first visit to Patriarch Athenagoras of Constantinople. First trip by a brother to East Germany. Inauguration of the Church of Reconciliation. 1962-1965: Brothers Roger and Max are observers at the Second Vatican Council. Launching of Operation Hope in Latin America to support agricultural cooperatives set up by bishops, then to finance the publication of a million New Testaments in Spanish and 500,000 in Portuguese. 1963: participation in the millennium of Mount Athos. 1964: first visit by a brother to Hungary. 1964: construction of the El Abiodh welcome center. A Franciscan fraternity (1964-1972) and a small Orthodox center (1965-1969) in Taizé. Fraternity in the United States (Madison 1965-1966; Boston 1965-1966; Chicago 1966-1971)

1966-1967

From then on, Brother Roger is received once a year by Pope Paul VI. 1966: Arrival in Taizé of the Sisters of Saint Andrew. End of August 1966 and 1967: the first two international youth meetings in Taizé. First visits by a brother to Czechoslovakia and Romania. Fraternities of brothers in Brazil (Olinda-Recife 1966-1972; Vitoria 1972-1978, Alagoinhas from 1978), Niger (1966-1998), and Rwanda (1966-1972).

1969

The first Catholic brother enters the community. Young adult meetings held every week in the summer and then, gradually, throughout the year.

1970

Easter: announcement and beginning of the preparation of a Council of Youth.

1973

Brother Roger in Poland. Visit to Taizé by Michael Ramsey, the archbishop of Canterbury.

1974

Templeton Prize in London. Opening of the Council of Youth in Taizé, then in subsequent years in Eastern Europe and on other continents. German Booksellers' Peace Prize in Frankfurt. Fraternity in Bangladesh (Chittagong 1974-1987; Mymensingh 1987-2023; Tharnarbaid from 2021).

1976-1979

Brother Roger travels with brothers and an intercontinental team of young adults to Calcutta (1976), Hong Kong (1977), Kenya and South Africa (1978), and Chile (1979), from where they write a message to the young. Fraternities of brothers in the Philippines (1977-1979), New York (1978-2003), Hong Kong (1977-1980), Japan (1978-1987), Kenya (1978-1989), and South Korea (from 1979).

1978

Brother Roger in the USSR. Audience with Pope John Paul II, continued each year. First young adult European meeting in Paris, then each year in a large western European city.

1980-1983

The Council of Youth is temporarily suspended. It is replaced by a pilgrimage. The first major stages held in Spain, Belgium, East Germany, Canada (1980), Czechoslovakia, Poland, Yugoslavia (1981), Lebanon (1982), and Hungary (1983). First young adult European meetings in Rome (1980) and London (1982).

1983-1985

Peace initiatives: visits to the Soviet and American ambassadors in Madrid (1983), to the Secretary General of the United Nations (1985). 1983: participation in the World Council of Churches assembly in Vancouver. Mother Teresa at Taizé. Brother Roger goes with brothers to Haiti and the Dominican Republic (1983) and Mauritania (1984). First intercontinental youth meeting in Madras (1985).

1986-1988

Pope John Paul II at Taizé (1986). First East-West young adult meeting in Ljubljana (1987). The meetings at Taizé become intercontinental every week.

1988-1989

1988: Brother Roger's second visit to the Soviet Union. UNESCO Prize for Peace Education. 1989: one million New Testaments in Russian sent by Operation Hope to the USSR. Charlemagne Prize in Aachen. First young adult European meeting in Eastern Europe, in Wroclaw, Poland.

1990

Brother Roger in Romania. Fifty years at Taizé. With the fall of the Berlin wall, the number of young pilgrims in Taizé doubles in a year. Young adult European meeting in Prague.

1991-1999

Young adult meetings in Asia, in Manila, Philippines (1991), in North America (Dayton, Ohio, USA), and in Africa, (Johannesburg, South Africa) (1995). Continuation of European meetings in Eastern Europe (1991: Budapest; 1999: Warsaw).

1992-1994

Special visits to Taizé: Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey with a thousand young Anglicans (1992), fourteen Swedish Lutheran bishops (1994). 1992: Robert Schuman Prize in Strasbourg. From 1993 on: fraternity of brothers in Senegal.

1998-1999

First humanitarian shipment from Operation Hope to North Korea: 1,000 tonnes of corn to alleviate famine. First visit by a brother to North Korea. Brother Roger invited to Rome as a special guest at the Bishops' Synod on Europe.

2000

Holy Year. In Rome brothers lead prayers throughout the year.

2005

Violent death of Brother Roger. Brother Alois, designated by him as his successor, becomes prior.

2006

Brother Alois meets Pope Benedict XVI, Patriarchs Bartholomew of Constantinople and Alexis II of Moscow, and Archbishop Rowan Williams of Canterbury, and takes part in the general assembly of the World Council of Churches in Porto Alegre (Brazil). 2006: Four Freedoms Prize in the Netherlands. Young adult meeting in Kolkata (India), followed in subsequent years by other young adult meetings in Africa (Nairobi, Kenya, 2008; Kigali, Rwanda, 2012; Cotonou, Benin, 2016; Cape Town, South Africa, 2018), Asia (Yogyakarta, Indonesia, 2007 ; Manila, Philippines, 2010), the Americas (Cochabamba, Bolivia, 2007; Santiago, Chile, 2010; Chicago, USA, 2012; South Dakota, USA, 2013; Mexico City and Dominican Republic, 2014), Australia and New Zealand (2015).

2008-2009

Brother Alois is a special guest in Rome at the bishops' synods on the Word of God (2008) and, in following years, on the new evangelization (2012), on youth (2018), and on synodality (2023 and 2024). One million Bibles printed and distributed in China by Operation Hope. Brother Alois goes to China.

2011-2012

Visit to Taizé by ten Korean Buddhist monks. Several pilgrimages by brothers with groups of young people to places in the Orthodox tradition: Moscow (2011), Constantinople (2012), Moscow, Minsk and Kiev (2015), Bucharest (2016). With brothers and young volunteers from Taizé, visit to the World Council of Churches in Geneva (2012 and 2023).

2013

Brother Alois in North Korea.

2015-2017

2015: 100 years since Brother Roger's birth, ten years since his death, 75 years since the community began. Beginning in 2015, a fraternity of brothers in Cuba. 2016: European meeting in Riga, Latvia. 2017: Patriarch Bartholomew at Taizé. First Islamo-Christian friendship meeting in Taizé. First young adult meeting in the Middle East, in Egypt, in Beirut (2019), then in the Holy Land (2022).

2019-2021

Beginning of work to uncover the truth about sexual abuse. Beginning in 2020: a fraternity of brothers in Pantin, on the outskirts of Paris. 2021: after the interruption caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, weekly youth meetings resume at Taizé as before.

2023

Preparation and animation of the “Together” meeting in Rome and around the world. Brother Alois hands over his duties as prior to Brother Matthew.

2024

A fraternity of brothers for six weeks in Ukraine. Young adult European meeting in Tallinn, Estonia.