Lamanabi Trappist Monastery

Lamanabi Trappist Monastery (Indonesian: Biara Trappist Lamanabi, Pertapaan Lamanabi) is a monastery complex of the Catholic Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance (O.C.S.O.), popularly known as the Trappists, located in East Flores, East Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia. The monastery was officially established on 1996 as a daughter house of Rawaseneng Monastery in Temanggung Regency, Central Java.[1]

Pertapaan Lamanabi
Monastery information
Full nameBiara Trappist Lamanabi
OrderTrappists (OCSO)
Established1996
Mother houseRawaseneng Monastery
DioceseDiocese of Larantuka
People
Founder(s)Dom Mikael Santana, OCSO
Site
LocationLamanabi Village,
Tanjung Bunga, East Flores,
East Nusa Tenggara
Country Indonesia
Public accessYes, outside cloistered area

Following the Rule of Saint Benedict, like any nuns or monks in other Trappist monasteries, the monks of Lamanabi live independently by doing various manual works to feed themselves, such as producing candles,[2] and doing all of the household works by themselves.

Lamanabi Monastery is known as the "choice of pilgrim" seeking "silence and peace",[3] with Frans Seda and some of the Kompas Gramedia's executives reportedly had made a "pilgrimage" to the monastery.[4]

Superiors

Superiors of the community since the official establishment in 1996:[5]

  • 1996 : Mikael Santana, OCSO (Superior)
  • 2005 – 2017 : Mikael Santana, OCSO (Prior)

See also

References

  1. Budi Santosa Johanes; Agustinus Sudarmanto (March 15, 2009), Bisnis ala Trappist (in Indonesian), hidupkatolik.com
  2. Mikael Santana (2012). "Letters—Worth Noting....Worth Quoting" (PDF). AIM USA. Vol. 21 no. 2. The United States Secretariat of the Alliance for International Monasticism. p. 7.
  3. Lukas Narek (December 16, 2013), Eidi Krina Jason Sembiring (ed.), Pertapaan Lamanabi, Wisata Rohani di Ujung Flores Timur (in Indonesian), SINDOnews.com
  4. Dion DB Putra (January 4, 2010), Frans Seda Sehat dan Kuat Berkat Ulat Bulu (in Indonesian), Kompas.com
  5. Lamanabi, Ordo Cisterciensis Strictioris Observantiae, retrieved June 2, 2016

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