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Schoenstatt Retreat and Conference Centre, Cape Town

Schoenstatt’s Founder was a priest, Father Joseph Kentenich was born in 1885, near Cologne in Germany. In 1912, he was appointed Spiritual Director in the Pallottine Minor Seminary. His educational goals were clear: "The young men were to become strong, free, leader personalities who aimed at holiness in everyday life in the World." He inspired the young people to achieve this goal through self-education, encouraging them to turn to Mary as a Mother and Educator.

On October 18, 1914, he dared to take the first step in founding the Schoenstatt Movement. Gathered with some of the students in their small Chapel. They consecrated themselves to Mary, an act that has since become known as: "the Covenant of Love." This Covenant of Love, is a mutual exchange in which Mary completely gives herself. Whoever responds by offering his or her life entirely to Our Lady. They asked her to make the little Chapel her shrine. This is now a place of grace and pilgrimage. In return, they offered her their apostolic efforts, prayers and sacrifices, that this wish would become a reality. None of the youths who had gathered in the little cemetery Chapel of the once Augustinian Monastery could have known that this day was the beginning of such a growth and development.

Nearly 100 years of Schoenstatt history have shown that our Lady took their Covenant seriously and had claimed this spot for herself. Schoenstatt has become one of the bigger religious centres of renewal in the World!

The Schoenstatt Family today is made up of more than 25 different branches and communities all over the World. As an apostolic Movement, it belongs to one of the renewals of spiritual life within the Catholic Church, including communities for laity and priests, for married and unmarried, for youth and families – each organised according to the degree of commitment to apostolate and community life.

"Some call it cute, some call it an oasis of peace, a source of strength, others ask: “Why so small?” Whatever the experience, the truth is that our little Shrine in Constantia is a replica of the original Shrine in Schoenstatt, Germany." The original foundations of the so-called Mother Shrine go back to the 1300's when the property belonged to the Augustinian Community.

The meaning of the word Schoenstatt means “a beautiful place”. The Shrine in Constantia was blessed in 1960 and has become a haven for many. In 1901 the property in Schoenstatt, Germany, came into the hands of the Pallottine Fathers. In 1914, Fr Joseph Kentenich, together with some young seminarians, invited the Mother of God to come into the shrine and make it a place of grace and pilgrimage. It was a daring request which was to have far-reaching consequences.

The First World War had already begun and some of the young men were later called on, to fight in the battlefields. A number of them died, having pledged their lives for the fruitfulness of Schoenstatt. They were all heroic and saintly. The cause for canonisation has been opened for Joseph Engling, one of the seminarians. This Shrine in Constantia, is 1 of the almost 200 “Daughter Shrines”, found on all Continents.