The good news is the Ottawa closure will come even as the Apostolate itself welcomes five new applicants, or novices, into formation this September.
Madonna House, a community of laymen, women and priests in Combermere, Ont., was founded by Russian emigre and Catholic convert Catherine Doherty in 1947.
The two pillars of Madonna House charism are communality, or what women’s director Elizabeth Bassarear calls “incarnational living,” and poustinia, the Russian word for desert and Doherty’s word for a retreat into silence and fasting.
The Ottawa House of Prayer was founded in 1974 as a house of poustinia.
“It’s a place,” says Bassarear, “where people can come to speak about God, be listened to and encounter God in the 24-hour, prayer and silence experience.”
Over the years, the Madonna House Apostolate has established mission houses, or “field houses,” throughout Canada and internationally. The first was opened in Whitehorse, Yukon, in 1954.
Fr. David Linder, director general of MH priests, notes the Ottawa house was “the most pure poustinia house” of the satellite communities.
“Poustinia houses are just one expression of the kinds of missions that we have. The houses in the Prairies have been very engaged with the urban poor, operating soup kitchens. Other missions are focused on catechesis.”
There has been a variety in the character of each house, but also, Linder says, “an ebb and flow in the opening and closing of missions.”
“Twenty years ago, we had five more missions than we have now. We can’t keep all of the missions open. We listen carefully over the course of years, not just days or weeks, about how we need to distribute our limited resources.”
However, this is not the standard tale of another religious community in decline.
The Apostolate has a total of 188 members worldwide, the majority of whom are in Combermere, where 126 are resident, 12 of whom are priests.
Madonna House has recently built a new kitchen addition to the main house in Combermere,“because we believe God wants us to continue and He is still sending people,”Bassarear said.
For most of its 50 years, Madonna House Ottawa was a two-person operation, and for all of those 50 years, consecrated lay woman Arlene Becker was there.
Truly a “poustinia in the marketplace,” the work of Becker and the house included not only welcoming the many who came seeking a place of silence, but also praying outside the abortion clinic on Bank Street, Ottawa, and the distribution of holy cards to the trick-or-treating children of the neighbourhood at Halloween.
Becker, now elderly and unable to manage the demands of running a retreat house, has taken up residence in Combermere.
We need “to balance accompanying the elderly members of the community while maintaining a place for younger people to come,” said Bassarear.