Jacques Sevin
Jacques Sevin (7 December 1882 in Lille – 19 July 1951 in Boran-sur-Oise) was a French Jesuit known for his role in the introduction of Scouting to France.
Fr. Jacques Sevin | |
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Fr. Jacques Sevin | |
Personal details | |
Born | 1882 |
Died | 1951 |
Nationality | French |
Occupation | Catholic Priest S.J., Jesuits Society of Jesus |
Catholic Scouting
Fr Sevin was exempted from military service in 1902 and remained in Belgium through the First World War. In 1916 he was appointed professor at the college of Tuquet in Mouscron, near the French border.
Eight days after his arrival in Mouscron, the Germans took over the college as a military hospital. It was then that Father Sevin became involved in the Scouting movement then gaining strength in the United Kingdom.
Between 1917 and 1919, he wrote his classic book Scouting and established the first Catholic Scout troop in Mouscron in 1918.
Scouting, being an import from Britain, was strongly disparaged in ecclesiastical circles of the time. But Father Sevin was able to demonstrate that it could be revised to correspond to a deep Christian vision of man. By the founding of the Scout Association of France in July 1920, he absorbed the experiences of Catholic Scouting that had existed in France since 1911 and became the architect of an alliance between Scouting on the model established by Lord Baden-Powell and the Christian Gospel. He began publishing the monthly newsletter Le Chef in 1921.
According to Mother Madeleine Bourcereau, "The meeting between the Scout method and intuitions of P. Sevin, has developed a pedagogy based on Gospel values, where each young person is encouraged to flourish and develop his or her personality by drawing out the latent talent within himself or herself. Father Sevin dedicated himself to making known the riches of scouting and all its educational and evangelical value — no easy task."
He set to music a prayer attributed to St. Ignatius of Loyola, became the "Scout prayer," here translated literally from the French:
Lord Jesus, Teach us to be generous, To serve you as you deserve, To give without counting, To counter without worry of injury, To work without seeking rest, To spend us today On the other reward than knowing We do Your Holy Will.
Beatification
The cause of beatification of the Servant of God was introduced in Rome in 1989. He was declared Venerable May 10, 2012.[1]
Notes
- Le fondateur du scoutisme "vénérable", Le Figaro, 10 mai 2012.