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The Irish Nuns at Ypres: An Episode of the War

Chapter 3: NOTE BY PRIORESS
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About This Book

A firsthand narrative by a member of an Irish convent recounts the community's experiences during the heavy fighting around Ypres in the First World War. The account records bombardment and destruction of the town, the sisters' acts of charity and courage caring for the wounded and maintaining religious life amid danger, internal notes from the prioress, and the community's evacuation and arrival at an English abbey. Interwoven are reflections on loss, resilience, and the practical details of survival and rebuilding the monastery after wartime ruin.

NOTE BY PRIORESS

These simple notes, destined at first for the intimacy of our Abbey, we now publish through the intervention of Mr. Barry O’Brien to satisfy the numerous demands of friends, who, owing to the horrors of the fighting round Ypres, have shown great interest in our welfare.

Owing, also, to the numerous articles about us, appearing daily in the newspapers—and which, to say the least, are often very exaggerated—I have charged Dame M. Columban to give a detailed account of all that has befallen the Community, since the coming of the Germans to Ypres till our safe arrival at Oulton Abbey. I can therefore certify that all that is in this little book, taken from the notes which several of the nuns had kept, is perfectly true, and only a simple narrative of our own personal experiences of the War.

May this account, to which Mr. Redmond has done us the honour of writing an introduction at the request of Dame Teresa, his niece, bring us some little help towards the rebuilding of our beloved and historic monastery, which, this very year, should celebrate its 250th anniversary.

M. MAURA, O.S.B.,
Prioress.

April 1915.