About Us
Welcome to the Society of St. Vincent de Paul
The Society of St. Vincent de Paul is an international Christian lay voluntary organization dedicated to tackling poverty and disadvantage by providing practical assistance to those in need – irrespective of ideology, faith, ethnicity, age or gender. The vision of SSVP is to be a global catholic charity organization providing aid, development and hope to the poor and the marginalized.
The Society of St. Vincent de Paul was founded in 1833 to help impoverished people living in the slums of Paris, France. Blessed Frederic Ozanam, the founder of the Society was a French lawyer, author, and professor in the Sorbonne. He was only 20 years old when he founded the society. Frederic Ozanam was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1997.
The Society took the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint Vincent de Paul as its patrons under the influence of Sister Rosalie Rendu who guided Frederic and his companions in their approach towards those in need. She was beatified in November 2003 by Pope John Paul II. The Society is an accredited UN NGO and has presence in Newyork, Geneva and UNESCO in Paris.
Society of St. Vincent de Paul in India
The Society was first introduced in India by the French Missionaries at Pondicherry during the Year 1852-53 as a non-aggregated Conference. The Society was officially started in India in 1863 when some conferences in Bombay were aggregated and the Bombay Particular Council was instituted. Thenonwards the Society continued to grow in India.On 09.11.1953 the Superior Council of India was established and instituted with the Council General International. The Superior Council of India was renamed as National Council of India on 06.08.1973. The National Council of India has its Headquarters in Mumbai and the present President’s secretariat is at Thodupuzha, Kerala with the election of Bro. Johnson Varghese as the 13th National President of India with effect from 28th February 2015.
The National Council of India is registered under the Income Tax Act 1961with exemption under Sec 80G, FCRA under the ministry of HomeAffairs and Societies Regn. Act and Bombay Public Trust Act 1950.
HISTORY
The Society of St. Vincent de Paul began in Paris, France, in the year 1833 when a young law student at the Sorbonne, Frederic Ozanam, was challenged during a debate to demonstrate what he and his fellow Catholic students were personally doing to help the poor in the city of Paris. Ozanam’s reaction was immediate. Within weeks, Ozanam, at 20 years of age, and six of his peers formed the first “Conference of Charity.” Under the conference, this group of seven men financed their works of charity out of their own pockets and from contributions of well wishers. They visited the poor near their homes, providing them with needed aid and assistance. At the prompting of Monsieur Emmanuel Bailly and Sister Rosalie Rendu, superior of a convent of the Daughters of Charity, Ozanam soon placed the conference under the patronage of St. Vincent de Paul who had spent his life in 16th century serving the poor in France. Within few years, the original group of seven grew to 600, spreading to 15 other cities and towns in France, numbering more than 2,000 members. SVP gradually expanded outside Paris in the mid-19th century. From a small Conference of Charity, today the Society has spread throughout the world, thus fulfilling the wish of its founder “I would like to embrace the world in a network of Charity”.
Birth of the society of St. Vincent de Paul
In the early 19th century, Paris was in the grip of social and political unrest. The revolution of July dealt a fatal blow to the old Bourbon monarchy. Religion was in decline and atheism was gaining ground. Many agricultural workers were leaving the fields in search of work in the large cities. Once they arrived, the majority found only unemployment, minimal salary or factories closed due to political divergence.
In 1832, a cholera epidemic spread through the city of Paris, killing more than 1200 people per day. In the slums that had formed around the outskirts of the city, thousands of people lived without any resources, some inhabitants in total destitution. Frederic Ozanam, then a young student of Law, had to pass through the poorest neighbourhoods in order to attend his courses at university. He became profoundly affected by the despair of families decimated by the epidemic. Ozanam and some of his friends – who together took part in history conferences where they debated world events – decided to get together as Christians; not to talk, but to act: to set up a Conference of Charity. Emmanuel Bailly approved of their project. He provided them with the editorial office of the catholic Tribune as a place to meet, as well as agreeing to lead the new team.
The first meeting took place on 23rd April 1833, a close to St. Sulpice Church it was made up of Emmauel Bailly, Paul Lamache, Felix Clave, Auguste Le Taillandier, Jules Devaux, Francis Lallier and Frederic Ozanam.
The principle of a weekly meeting had already been agreed with the main activity consisting of house visits to the poor. The group placed themselves under the patronage of St. Vincent de Paul and under the protection of the Virgin Mary. The team built up a relationship with a member of the Daughters of Charity, Sr. Rosalie Rendu, who organized the distribution of aid from a welfare office in the neighbourhood around Mouffetard Street, then in the 12th District of Paris. The society of St. Vincent de Paul was born.
Dramatic Expansion
Frederic Ozanam wrote on 24th July 1834: “I wish that all those that are young of hearts and mind come together in acts of charity; and that a large world-wide organization is set up with the aim of providing aid and support to the working classes”. His wish had come true very soon, at the end of that very year the group was now made up of even more 100 members! It was necessary to consider dividing the group. On 24th January 1835, two sections were created with Ozanam became vice – president of the first group. The regions soon followed: As students left Paris after finishing their studies they began setting up conferences: Nimes – 10th February 1835, Lyon – 16th august 1836, then Rennes, Nantes…
In 1836 a “Management Council” was required which soon took the title of the General Council; a name that is still used to this very day.
The SSVP Today
Today, the society continues to grow. This growth is mainly in developing countries which now make up to two thirds of the conferences. This new model has led the SSVP to become a forerunner in reflection and action in favour of development with partners in developing countries.
Today about 8,00,000 active members and 1.5 million volunteers spread over 150 countries preserve the spirit of St. Vincent de Paul and the charity work of Frederic Ozanam and his friends, in continuing to provide aid to those most in need whilst maintaining alive the message of Christ.
SOCIETY IN INDIA
Society of St. Vincent de Paul in India
The Society was first introduced in India by the French Missionaries at Pondicherry during the Year 1852-53 as a non-aggregated Conference. The Society was officially started in India in 1863 when some conferences in Bombay were aggregated and the Bombay Particular Council was instituted. Thenonwards the Society continued to grow in India.On 09.11.1953 the Superior Council of India was established and instituted with the Council General International. The Superior Council of India was renamed as National Council of India on 06.08.1973. The National Council of India has its Headquarters in Mumbai and the present President’s secretariat is at Chennai, Tamil Nadu with the election of Bro. S. Jude ZR Mangalraj as the 14th National President of India with effect from 28th February 2021.
The National Council of India is registered under the Income Tax Act 1961 with exemption under Sec 80G, FCRA under the ministry of HomeAffairs and Societies Regn. Act and Bombay Public Trust Act 1950.
FOUNDER BLESSED FREDERIC OZANAM
Frederic Ozanam was born on April 1813 in Milan, to Jean and Marie Ozanam. He was the fifth child of 14 Children, one of only three to reach adulthood. His family, which was of Jewish origin, had been settled in the region around Lyon, France for many centuries. An ancestor Frederic, Jacques Ozanam (1640 – 1717) was a noted mathematician. Jean Ozanam, Frederic’s Father, had served in the armies of the First French Republic, but with the rise to power of Napoleon Bonaparte, and the founding of the first French Empire, he turned to trade, to teaching, and finally to medicine.
In his youth he experienced a period of doubt regarding the Catholic faith, during which he was strongly influenced by one of his teachers at the College de Lyon, the priest Abbe Noirot. His conservative and religious instincts showed themselves early, and he published Réflexions sur la Doctrine de Saint-Simon a pamphlet against Saint-Simonianism in 1831, which attracted the attention of the French poet and politician Alphonse de Lamartine, born in the area. Ozanam also found time to help organize and write for the Association for the Propagation of the Faith, a lay Catholic organization founded in the city with the aim of supporting Catholic missionaries, of which many came from the area. That autumn he went to study law in Paris, where he suffered a great deal from homesickness. Ozanam fell in with the Ampère family (living for a time with the mathematician André-Marie Ampère), and through them with other prominent Catholics of the time, such as Count François-René de Chateaubriand, Jean-Baptiste Henri Lacordaire, and Charles Forbes René de Montalembert.
While still a student, Frédéric took up journalism and contributed considerably to Bailly’s Tribune catholique, which became L’Univers, a French Catholic daily newspaper that adopted a strongly ultramontane position. Ozanam and his friends revived a discussion group called a “Society of Good Studies” and formed it into a “Conference of History” which quickly became a forum for large and lively discussions among students. Their attentions turned frequently to the social teachings of the Gospel. At one meeting during a heated debate in which Ozanam and his friends were trying to prove from historical evidence alone the truth of the Catholic Church as the one founded by Christ, their adversaries declared that, though at one time the Church was a source of good, it no longer was. One voice issued the challenge, “What is your church doing now? What is she doing for the poor of Paris? Show us your works and we will believe you!”
As a consequence, in May 1833 Frédéric and a group of other young men founded the charitable Society of Saint Vincent de Paul, which already by the time of his death numbered upwards of 2,000 members. The founding members developed their method of service under the guidance of a Sister (now a Blessed) Rosalie Rendu, a member of the Congregation of Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul, who was prominent in serving the poor in the slums of Paris. The members of the conferences collaborated with Sister Rosalie during the time of the cholera epidemic. When fear had gripped the population, she organized the conferences in all the neighborhoods of Paris to care for the cholera victims, becoming well known in the city for her work, especially in the 12th arrondissement. Frederic’s first act of charity was to take his supply of winter firewood and bring it to a widow whose husband had died of cholera.
Ozanam received the degrees of Bachelor of Laws in 1934, Bachelor of Arts in 1835 and Doctor of Laws in 1836. His father, who had wanted him to study law, died on May12, 1837. Although he preferred literature, Frederic worked in the legal profession in order to support his mother, and was admitted to the Bar in Lyon in 1837. Still, he also pursued his personal interest, and in 1839 he obtained the degree of Doctor of Letters with a thesis on Dante that then formed the basis of Ozanam’s best-known books. A year later he was appointed to a professorship of commercial law at Lyon, and in 1840, at the age of twenty-seven, assistant professor of foreign literature at the Sorbonne. He decided to give a course of lectures on German Literature in the middle ages and in preparation for it went on a short tour of Germany. His lectures proved highly successful despite the fact that he attached fundamental importance to Christianity as the primary factor in the growth of European civilization, unlike his predecessors and most of his colleagues, who shared in the predominantly anti-Christian climate of the Sorbonne at that time.
In June 1841, he married Amélie Soulacroix, daughter of the rector of the University of Lyon, and the couple travelled to Italy for their honeymoon. They had a daughter, Marie. Candelas describe Ozanam as “A man of great faith. He valued friendships and defended his friends no matter what the cost. He was attentive to details, perhaps to the extreme. He showed a great tenderness when dealing with his family. He had a great reverence for his parents, and revealed his ability to sacrifice his career and his profession in order to please them.
Upon the death in 1844 of Claude Charles Fauriel, Ozanam succeeded to the full professorship of foreign literature at the Sorbonne. The remainder of his short life was extremely busy, attending to his duties as a professor, his extensive literary activities, and the work of district-visiting as a member of the society of St Vincent de Paul.
During the French Revolution of 1848, of which he took a sanguine view, he once more turned journalist by writing, for a short time, in various papers, including the Ère nouvelle (“New Era”), which he had founded. He traveled extensively, and visited England at the time of the Exhibition of 1851.
His naturally weak constitution, however, fell a prey to consumption, which he hoped to cure by visiting Italy, but on his return to France, he died in Marseille on September 8, 1853 at the age of forty. He was buried in the crypt of the church of St. Joseph des Carmes at the Institut Catholique in Paris.
PATRON
“Love the poor. Honour them, my children, as you would honour Christ himself”
Vincent de paul was born in the small southern French town of Pouy (later renamed St. Vincent De Paul in his honour) on 24th April 1581 and ordained as a priest in 1600 at the age of 19. As a young man he ministered to the wealthy and powerful. However an appointment as chaplain to a poor parish, and to galley prisoners, inspired him to a vocation of working with those most marginalised and powerless.
Vincent urged his followers to bring God’s justice and love to people who were unable to live a full human life. Deal with the most urgent needs. Organize charity so that it is more efficient.. teach reading and writing, educate with the aim of giving each the means of self support. Intervene with authorities to obtain reforms in structure… there is no charity without justice. Vincent de Paul died in Paris on 27th September 1660 at the age of 79. He was canonised on 16th June 1737 and, in 1883, the church designated him as the special patron of all charitable associations.
The society was named after Saint Vincent de Paul and follows his teachings and compassion for people in need. Saint Vincent de Paul is the international patron of the Society.
SPIRIT OF THE SOCIETY
Vincentians are united in an international society of charity by their spirit of poverty, humility and sharing. Inspired by Gospel values, the society of St. Vincent de Paul, a Catholic Lay organization, leads women and men to join together to grow spiritually by offering person to person service to those who are needy and suffering in the tradition of its founder, blessed Frederic Ozanam and patron St. Vincent de Paul.
As a reflection of the whole family of God, members, who are known as Vincentians, are drawn from every ethnic and cultural background, age group, and economic level. Vincentians are united in an international society of charity by their spirit of poverty, humility and sharing, which is nourished by prayer and reflection, mutually supportive gatherings and adherence to a basic Rule.
Organized locally, Vincentians witness God’s love by embracing all works of charity and justice. The society collaborates with other people of good will in relieving need and addressing its causes, making no distinction in those served because, in them, Vincentians see the face of Christ.
YOUTH IN THE SOCIETY
“ I invite you to plant seeds in your young people that one day will grow to nourish the future development of the Society. I remember when i was young how Emmanuel and Sr. Roselie believed, guided and encouraged me to serve the poor. I encourage you to do the same with young and young adults in your parish. Do not be afraid to sow many seeds and be open to the many new possibilities of engaging young people in the society. Take these new ideas, use them and support the hopes and dreams of others. Challenges yourself – be inventive and persistent in putting creative ideas into practice as you continue to develop our network of charity around the world. ” – Frederic Ozanam, Founder, Society St. Vincent de Paul.
The involvement of Youth and Young Adults is an ongoing process that began with the beginning of the society of St. Vincent de Paul by Frederic Ozanam and his friends. It is the responsibility of every member in the society to collaborate and brainstorm with the young people who are the future of the society.
WOMEN IN THE SOCIETY
At first, women were practically absent from the university and did not take part in the creation of the group. However, despite the existence of the ladies of charity, founded for young women by Saint Vincent himself and Louise de Marillac, woman wished to join the society and follow the rules set by the founders. Thus on 10th January 1856, celestina Scatabelli founded in Bolonia, a female branch of the society of Saint Vincent de Paul. The two branches merged together on 20th October 1967, during an international assembly in Paris, a few months later, the merger of the society with the Louise de Marillac Movement took place. In India women play an active role in the functioning of the society.
AGGREGATION AND INSTITUTION
Aggregation of a Conference and Institution of a Council by the International Confederation of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul in Paris is a formal recognition of admission into the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. Every Conference which desires to obtain admission into the Society must apply to the International Confederation of Society of St. Vincent de Paul for Aggregation. The Councils will also have to follow the same procedure for Institution by International Confederation of Society of St. Vincent de Paul.