| Blessed Edmund Ignatius Rice |
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Blessed Edmund Ignatius Rice
Edmund Rice was born in Westcourt, Callan, Co. Kilkenny in 1762. There were seven boys and two girls in the family. It comes as a surprise that a Catholic family could be prosperous in these days but they had a lease of a good sized farm and were industrious people. In view of his future work in education it was fortunate that he received a very good education himself, first at a local hedge school and then at a private secondary school in Kilkenny. Edmund called in his step-sister Joan Murphy to help him care for his disabled daughter; he developed the business which he inherited from his uncle in 1795. Having properly cared for his daughter, in 1802 Edmund began a night school for the uneducated boys from the quays of Waterford. His deep desire was to found a religious order of men who would educate these poor boys so that they could live with dignity and high self-esteem. But his volunteer assistants could not stick it. Neither could the paid teachers he later employed. Just when his spirits were lowest, and he looked a failure to all his business colleagues, two men from his native Callan joined him not only to educate these unruly boys but also to join Edmund in his plan to found a religious order. To do such a thing was contrary to the law. Nevertheless Edmund and his growing number of companions went ahead and in 1808 seven of them took religious vows under Bishop Power of Waterford. They were called Presentation Brothers. This was the first congregation of men to be founded in Ireland and one of the few ever founded in a Church by a layman. Edmund had in the meantime built a substantial school out of his own money, but it was already proving too small for the many boys who flocked to him for an education. Gradually an extraordinary transformation took place in the "quay kids" of Waterford. Edmund and his Brothers educated them, clothed and fed them. Other Bishops in Ireland supplied him with men whom he prepared for religious life and teaching. In this way the Presentation Brothers spread throughout Ireland. However, the groups in separate dioceses were not under Edmund's control but the Bishop's. This created problems when Brothers were needed to be transferred. So Edmund sought and ultimately obtained approval from Pope Pius VII for his Brothers to be made into a pontifical congregation with Edmund as Superior General; he was then able to move Brothers to wherever they were most needed. From this time on they were called Christian Brothers. By 1825 there were 30 Christian Brothers working in 12 towns and cities and educating 5,500 boys, free of charge. Many of these boys were also being clothed and fed. Edmund's life was steeped in a spirituality that was strong and practical: he was forever caring for the poor in the wretched circumstances of their lives, for he believed there was a great need "to give to the poor in handfuls". Many people, both men and women, from many cultures, young and old were helped and given hope and purpose and a new footing in life. He and his Brothers even cared for the inmates of the jails of Waterford. Edmund was privileged to comfort and accompany many a condemned man to the gallows. The poor never forgot his love for them and saw Edmund as "a man raised up by God". In 1838, at the age of 76, he retired from leadership of the congregation, and went to live in Waterford where he died on 29 August 1844. Blessed Edmund Rice |









