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Many people have no idea
where the Carmelites began!
The first hermits lived on
Mount Carmel in Israel in the time of Elijah the
Prophet, hundreds of years before Christ. Later,
many Crusaders went to the Holy Land to free
such holy places as Bethlehem, Nazareth and many
other sites associated with the Life of The Lord
Jesus, from the Muslims. After they achieved
their task of freeing the Holy Land, many of
them stayed on Mount Carmel; a mountain range
which juts out into the Mediterranean Sea near
the present city of Haifa, along the southern
border of present-day Lebanon.
We can read about the
Prophet Elijah in the First and Second Books of
Kings. There were also Jews and Moslem Hermits
on Mount Carmel dedicated to the life of Elijah
the Prophet. This all took place between 1190
and 1206. The first written document of the
Carmelites, our RULE, dates to 1206. The
Christian Hermits from Mount Carmel went to the
Patriarch of Jerusalem, St. Albert, (not of
Trapani) and asked for a Rule of Life. That was
the official beginning of the Carmelites. In
1245, the Muslims recaptured much of the Holy
Land. They massacred most of the Carmelites.
Those who escaped returned to their home
countries of Italy, France, England and Germany.
It is from these 4 countries in Europe that the
Order spread throughout the world. Today, there
are 5200 Carmelites of all Branches of the
Order, male and female, throughout the world.
The North American Province
of Carmelites was named after the Prophet
Elijah, or "St. Elias". We were founded by the
Irish Carmelites in 1889. Our first foundation
was in Manhattan where we worked as chaplains in
Bellevue Hospital. Across the street from
Bellevue was our first Church, Our Lady of The
Scapular of Mount Carmel. It was from this place
that the Province spread to the Bronx, Brooklyn,
Westchester and Orange Counties, Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania and Florida.
Our Province also
established the first Carmelite houses in
California. We worked on the foreign Missions in
Zimbabwe in Africa for many years, and have one
of our priests in Rome, one in Colombia and one
in France. Recently we have taken on two new
Missions in very different climates; Trinidad
and Viet Nam. (April '97 Chapter)
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Carmelites arrived in
Middletown, New York in 1912 and established the
parish of Our Lady Of Mount Carmel. The "new"
Church is behind Mt Carmel School. There were
five mission churches attached to Mt Carmel. (In
1969, one became a diocesan parish. In 1998 two
other missions were transferred to the
Archdiocese of New York, as well.) In 1917 the
Carmelites purchased the property on which the
National Shrine now stands, for the purpose of
introducing seminarians to Carmelite
Spirituality. From 1917 to the present there has
always been some form of seminary training on
this property: Pre-Novitiate, Novitiate, High
School Seminary, College Program and today it
again houses the Novitiate Program for the two
North American Provinces.
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