Cultural Office of Cluny

Cultural Office of Cluny
Classification Roman Catholic
Region France
Founder Olivier Fenoy
Origin 1963
France and other countries
Official website www.officeculturelcluny.org/

The Cultural Office of Cluny, often named OCC (renamed Cultural Office of Cluny - National Federation of Total Animation [OCC - FNAG] in 1978) is an Catholic-related association registered as a voluntary association, created in France by Olivier Fenoy in 1963. It is a group of cultural animation composed of a theater company whose activities include arts, cultural travels, photographs, among other things. Although primarily located in France, the OCC has several centers in Québec and Chile.[1] The group was widely referred to as a cult in the media, particularly after the publication of the first parliamentary report in which it was mentioned.

History and organization

Strongly influenced by a text of Pius XII sent to artists in 1952, then by Marthe Robin,[2] Fenoy created and the OCC and devolepped it alongside Grégoire Molle. The name comes from a café in the Quartier Latin, "Le Petit Cluny", where the founders organized their first meetings, and therefore has no connection with the Abbey of Cluny. In 1973, "the community of Cluny" or "missionaries of hope" was created by hundreds of people who wanted to permanently live this lifestyle.[3] The charter accompanying the association's statutes requires to members celibacy and chastity. Postulants, novices and engaged must give their goods to the community.[4] The first artistic creation of the group was "Un Caprice" by Alfred de Musset.[2] Students centers were quickly created. The OCC has acutellement about ten centers throughout France (Palis, Entrevaux, Château de Machy, Center Le Brûlaire, etc...). It publishes a quarterly magazine named Le Courrier: Nouvelles de Cluny.[1]

In 1972, the Secretary of State for Youth and Sports granted to the OCC a provisional approval as organization of popular education. This approval was withdrawn in 1982, then reinstated by the State Council in 1990.[5]

Reception

The OCC was listed as a cult in the 1995 and 1999 parliamentary reports and considered as a "pseudo-Catholic" and a "medium-sized cult" in terms of wealth (its annual budget reached between 5 and 20 million francs at the time). The commission accused the OCC to infiltrate the world of childhood by the formula of courses and seminars in the field of leisure but also academic support and cultural development.[6][7] Anti-cult association ADFI criticized the OCC for its methods of seduction, its particular lifestyle (reduced sleep, long prayers, inability to be alone, etc.), possible families breakdowns, its hierarchical structure,[1] psychological pressures and despoilment.[8] Former members claimed to have been "seduced by promises of social advancement" in the group, then to have been "totally ruined after their stay at the centers in Claux and Le Machy".[9] The OCC rules were described as "binding and totalitarian".[10]

For their part, Bishop of Troyes Gérard Daucourt, as well as Bishops Montagrin, Pontier and Jean Vernette,[11] criticized the classification of cult attributed to the OCC and wrote a protest letter to Philippe Séguin, arguing that this caused some harm to the OCC as well as to the Catholic Church.[12][13] For André-Hubert Mesnard, the classification made by the Parliamentary Commission was not democratic because the list could not be changed after its publication and thus the groups incriminated, including the OCC, could not defend themselves against criticisms.[14] CESNUR stated that the group was "nearly bankrupted due to the refusal of public theatres to air its shows", after its cult designation.[15]

Judicial cases

The OCC launched numerous lawsuits or was sued in many cases throughout its history.[1] The first ones were in 1980: the OCC was sued on material issues in Digne and Aix-en-Provence. On these occasions, Fenoy's brother, former followers, parents' members, and a priest from Lyon provided negative testimonies about the association.[5]

Later, on 4 June 1998, the court of Angers, then on 4 November 1999, the Court of Appeal of Angers dismissed the OCC which said that its leaders were lay monks and therefore not under the social security regulations, and tried to challenge the tax recovery imposed by URSSAF.[16] In a lawsuit filed by a former member in Grenoble, it was revealed that Fenoy had homosexual intercourses and that he "kept members in a high material and spiritual dependency". In 1988, the OCC filed a complaint for defamation against the President of the association "L'Alouette" for issuing a leaflet warning against cults in which the OCC was cited, but was dismissed.[4]

The General Councils of several French départements, including Rhône and Aube, and the Grenoble city hall gave important subsidies, which raised much criticism.[17]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 UNADFI (1993). "Heurs et malheurs de l'Office Culturel de Cluny". BULLES (in French) (Prevensectes). Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  2. 1 2 Landron, Olivier (2004). Les communautés nouvelles — Nouveaux visages du catholicisme français (in French). Paris: Cerf. pp. 118–19. ISBN 2-204-07305-9.
  3. Vernette, Jean; Moncelon, Claire (1995). "Office culturel de Cluny (OCC)". Dictionnaire des groupes religieux aujourd'hui (religions - églises - sectes - nouveaux mouvements religieux - mouvements spiritualistes) (in French). SOS Dérives sectaires. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  4. 1 2 Fouchereau, Bruno (1996). La mafia des sectes — Du rapport de l'Assemblée Nationale aux implications des multinationales (in French). Filipacchi editions. pp. 96–103. ISBN 2-85018-648-1.
  5. 1 2 Landron, Olivier (2004). Les communautés nouvelles — Nouveaux visages du catholicisme français (in French). Paris: Cerf. pp. 428–30. ISBN 2-204-07305-9.
  6. "Rapport fait au nom de la Commission d'enquête sur les sectes — Les sectes en France" (in French). Assemblée Nationale. 1995. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  7. "Rapport fait au nom de la Commission d'enquête sur les sectes - Les sectes et l'argent" (in French). Assemblée Nationale. 1999. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  8. Plana, Sandrine (2006). Le prosélytisme religieux à l'épreuve du droit privé (in French). p. 328. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  9. Huckel, Roland (May 1991). "Étude technologique de la manipulation mentale, pratiquée dans les sectes contestées". Bouée (in French). Anti-scientologie. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  10. Le Tallec, Cyril (2006). Les sectes politiques: 1965-1995 (in French). p. 109. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  11. Trouslard, Jacques (2005). "Quelques réflexions relatives à l'article du journal La Croix sur les sectes" (in French). Psychothérapie Vigilance. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  12. Mesnard, André-Hubert (1997). "L'Office culturel de Cluny et le rapport". Pour en finir avec les sectes — Le débat sur le rapport de la commission parlementaire (in French). CESNUR — Di Giovanni. pp. 327–34. ISBN 88-85237-11-8.
  13. Chantin, Jean-Pierre (2004). Des "sectes" dans la France contemporaine: 1905-2000, contestations ou innovations religieuses? (in French). p. 127. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  14. Bayard, Jean-Pierre (2004). Guide sur les sectes et les sociétés secrètes (in French). Philippe Lebaud editions. p. 345. ISBN 2-84898-039-7.
  15. Introvigne, Massimo (1 December 1997). "Religious Liberty in Western Europe". CESNUR. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  16. UNADFI (1999). "Les moines laïques condamnés". BULLES (in French) (Prevensectes). Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  17. "Quand l'Europe finance une secte". L'Express (in French) (Prevensectes). 6 August 1998. Retrieved 25 August 2009.

External links

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