The Last Carmelite Monks in America
The Window for September 24, 2007
Deal W. Hudson
The last eight Carmelite monks in America, perhaps even the world, live in a four-bedroom rectory in the mountains of northwest Wyoming.
Deal W. Hudson
The last eight Carmelite monks in America, perhaps even the world, live in a four-bedroom rectory in the mountains of northwest Wyoming.
With
35 candidates in various stages of discernment, they hope to move 70
miles away to a 492-acre property near Carter Mountain once owned by
"Buffalo Bill" Cody as his hunting preserve.
"Buffalo
Bill's house is dilapidated, but the newer lodge on the property was
meant to be a monastery," said Rev. Daniel Mary of Jesus Crucified, the
40-year-old prior of the community.
"We
are sleeping in all kinds of places all over the property -- one is
sleeping in the library, one in the office -- we are going to have to
be moving no matter what."
Father Daniel founded the community on October 15, 2003, when Bishop David Ricken of Cheyenne sealed their enclosure. For Father Daniel, it was a homecoming: His father, rancher Jerry Schneider, runs the Mt. Carmel Youth Ranch four miles up the road. The youth ranch, like the monastery, is starting to gain a national reputation. Parents who want help with troubled youngsters send them to Schneider.
Father
Daniel exudes the same kind of can-do enthusiasm that animates his
father, who is one of the most unforgettable characters you will ever
meet -- a massive, soft-spoken cowboy with a deep devotion to the
Mother of God. It's obvious to me where the son's determination comes
from.
He
left his life as a Carmelite hermit in Minnesota because they were
losing their vocations. "Young men simply could not adjust to a
solitary life; they needed a community -- that's why I asked for
permission from the prior to start a monastic community."
Archbishop
Harry J. Flynn of Minneapolis gave Father Daniel permission to contact
Bishop Ricken in Wyoming, who had let it be known that he was looking
for Carmelites to live in his diocese. Archbishop Flynn said to me,
"This is meant to be, this is of God." After the meeting with Flynn,
Father Daniel called Bishop Ricken, who immediately invited him to
Wyoming.
"I
think we are the only community of Carmelite Monks in the world that
live a cloistered life." The eight brothers live in a "constitutional
enclosure," which they can leave only for medical reasons, not even for
a death in the family.
They
do, however, foster relationships with their families, who can stay at
the guesthouse. The only contact the brothers have with people outside
the community are the special visitors they invite to stay in the
"speak room."
Though they don't meet with very many people outside the community, they do sell them coffee. On their Web site there is a tab for "Mystic Monk Coffee." Click the tab and you will find for sale an array of coffee beans "roasted solely by real monks who are passionate about coffee."
You will also be offered the doubled-handled "Mystic Monk Mug." Father Daniel explained, "It is a longstanding tradition that Carmelites drink coffee using both hands in thanksgiving for the fruits of the harvest."
Why coffee?, I asked him. "Out
here in Wyoming there's not much you can do. I have a brother, Michael
Mary, who worked in coffee shops all his life and really has a lot of
knowledge about coffee, so we just went for the gusto and tried it."
They started selling coffee in June of this year, and sales are already
brisk. "It was just meant to be, I guess," says Father Daniel.
It was just meant to be.
That phrase was used a number of times by Father Daniel when I
interviewed him. He told me that Buffalo Bill died a Catholic,
receiving last rites on his deathbed, and so the new monastery and
retreat center "is meant to be."
By
Christmas, Father Daniel and his fellow monks hope to be celebrating
the Tridentine Latin Mass and singing Gregorian chant in the shadow of
Carter Mountain.
I will
stay in touch with Father Daniel and his "last Carmelite monks" and
will let you know if the move to Buffalo Bill's property "was meant to
be."
* * *
Father
Daniel asked me to request your prayers and your support. To send a
donation, or some books for their monastery library, write to:
Carmelite Monastery
P.O. Box 2747
Cody, WY 82414-2747
P.O. Box 2747
Cody, WY 82414-2747
Likewise -- I was confused by the title and the first sentence: "The last eight Carmelite monks in America, PERHAPS EVEN THE WORLD, live in a four-bedroom rectory in the mountains of northwest Wyoming." (Simply googling "carmelites" calls this into question -- what about the Carmelite hermitage in Bolivar, PA? (http://www.carmelites.com/hermitage.htm)
Posted by: Christopher | September 30, 2007 at 12:55 PM
I'm glad to here about a cloistered community in the U.S.A. However, I think your title is misleading and disrespectful to all the other Carmelites throughout the world.
Posted by: Billy | September 25, 2007 at 05:02 PM
"With 35 candidates in various stages of discernment, they hope to move 70 miles away to a 492-acre property near Carter Mountain once owned by "Buffalo Bill" Cody as his hunting preserve."
Is this the TE Ranch by any chance? My great-grandfather and his brother were ranchhands there.
Posted by: Kevin Jones | September 25, 2007 at 01:45 PM