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  1. It took eight years before De La Salle consented, at the insistence of the brothers, to permit twelve of them to take perpetual vows of association, stability, and obedience. The brothers appear to have put great weight on commitment by vows in order to keep them faithful.

  2. The Brothers. De La Salle was moved by “the situation of abandonment of the children of the artisans and the poor”. Shortly after that, he became involved in helping a group of schoolmasters to set up schools in order to provide poor boys with a sound education.

  3. The De La Salle Brothers, officially named the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools (Latin: Fratres Scholarum Christianarum; French: Frères des Écoles Chrétiennes; Italian: Fratelli delle Scuole Cristiane) abbreviated FSC, is a Catholic lay religious congregation of pontifical right for men founded in France by Jean-Baptiste de ...

  4. a Catholic teacher than those in which, at the beginning, De La Salle extols the teacher's vocation as that of a veritable coadjutor with Christ in the forming of human persons.

  5. Apr 10, 2018 · Based on De La Salles negotiations, the Brothers leave the General Hospital in Rouen, take over four of the city’s schools, and assign 10 Brothers to teach in them.

  6. Nov 8, 2023 · The travel programme includes visits to at least four key places in the life of De La Salle and the first Brothers: Reims, Paris, Parmenie and Rouen.

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  8. Aug 26, 2009 · The Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools is a Catholic religious order founded by Jean-Baptiste de La Salle in France in 1680. In Canada, members are generally referred to as Christian Brothers or De La Salle Brothers.

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