History of Emmaus
The
first Emmaus Community was founded in Paris in 1949 by Father
Henri-Antoine Groues (pictured centred), better known as the Abbé Pierre, a Catholic
priest, MP and former member of the French Resistance during the Second
World War. As an MP, he fought to provide homes for those who lived on
the streets of Paris.
One
night, a man called Georges was brought to Abbé Pierre. Georges had
been released after 20 years in prison, only to find his family unable
to cope with his reappearance. Homeless and despairing, he had tried to
commit suicide in the Seine. Abbé Pierre did not just offer him a
place to sleep. He asked for his help. He told Georges of the homeless
mothers who came to him for help for them and their children and how he
could not cope with the problem on his own. Could Georges join him in
his mission to help them?
Georges became the
first Emmaus Companion, living with Abbé Pierre and helping him to
build temporary homes for those in need, first in the priest's own
garden, then wherever land could be bought or scrounged. He later said;
"Whatever else he might have given me - money, home, somewhere to work -
I'd have still tried to kill myself again. What I was missing, and what
he offered, was something to live for."
The Ragpickers of Paris
In
1951, Abbé Pierre resigned as an MP to devote himself to fighting
homelessness and poverty. He had relied on his salary to pay for Georges
and the 18 men who now formed the first Community and were still
building homes for those who desperately needed them. So the former MP
and resistance hero toured the smart restaurants of Paris asking for
donations. The Companions were outraged. They told Abbé Pierre firmly
that begging compromised their - and his - self respect. Instead, to
raise the money they needed, they became "rag pickers", collecting
things that people no longer wanted and selling them on. So the concept
of Companions running self supporting businesses, with the profits going
to those in greater need was born.