Excerpt:
Brother Déodat joined the congregation in December 1913.
Still extremely reserved, he was not fully inducted
into the order but took temporary vows, a situation
that remained unchanged for most of his stay on Guernsey.
Employed as a sacristan, he was assigned to the refectory.
This new role suited him very well, but he was already
thinking of a different occupation. He was convinced
that ‘children learn mostly through their eyes’, so
at his own request he was granted a space soon after
his arrival in which to build a miniature replica of
the Basilica and Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes. From
then on, he devoted all his spare time to completing
his task.
Determined to construct a beautiful yet functional
church, he rebuilt it three times. The first chapel
was erected in March 1914, but because it measured only
nine feet by four foot six, it aroused mockery, and
Brother Déodat destroyed it straight away. This did
not discourage him, however, and he immediately returned
to his task. The grotto was completed a few months later.
Although his work was interrupted by the outbreak of
the First World War, he was exempted from military service
and he quickly rebuilt the chapel, making it eighteen
inches wider. This second building remained until September
1923, but another event led to its untimely demolition:
the Bishop of Portsmouth, who was visiting the community,
was unable to get through the door. Brother Déodat was
so upset at being denied the saying of Mass inside the
shrine that he pulled the chapel down again.
By the time he had completed most of the work on the
current Little Chapel, he was sixty years old. The tiny
new church held ten people. Echoing the lines of a majestic
cathedral, an impressive spire rose above the entrance.
The main aisle was flanked with four niches, and the
church had a crypt on two levels. In that same year,
Brother Déodat at last made his perpetual vows in the
privacy of his own sanctuary, in front of just three
witnesses.
The article as it appears in Raw
Vision magazine.
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