Background
Winance was born in Belgium on 10 July 1909.
Winance was born in Belgium on 10 July 1909.
Winance was the last surviving founders of Saint Andrew"s Abbey in Valyermo, California. he taught philosophy at Claremont Graduate University for 38 years. He was named for Saint Eleutherius, the patron saint of freedom. He joined Saint Andre"s monastery when he was 17 years old.
He obtained a doctorate in philosophy in 1934 from the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium.
China
Winance was ordained a Roman Catholic priest in 1936. Winance and two other priests then established a monastery in Sichuan province.
In 1937, Winance helped to found both a Catholic elementary school and a seminary for the new Diocese of Nanchong (now called the Roman Catholic Diocese of Shunqing), which was established in 1929. Winance and the other Benedictine monks were isolated during the second Sino-Japanese War, which lasted from 1937 until 1945, the end of World World War World War II The relocated the monastery to the Sichuan capital city of Chengdu following World World War World War II The monks opened the Institute of Chinese and Western Cultural Studies in Chengdu.
The institute"s library eventually contained more than 10,000 books and other publications.
The city of Chengdu, which was the last stronghold of the Chinese Nationalists, fell to Mao Zedong"s Communist forces on 25 December 1949. The Communist authorities shuttered the Institute of Chinese and Western Cultural Studies and confiscated the books in its library. Winance, along with six priests and five nuns of foreign origin, were expelled from China.
The group travelled nearly 3,000 miles under armed guard by bus, train, junk and foot to Guangzhou and then the British controlled colony of Hong Kong.
Two Chinese Catholic Benedictine monks remained in China, one of which spent 27 years in prison. United States
Following his expulsion from China, Winance was sent to Rome, where he taught philosophy at Sant"Anselmo, a Benedictine college, for four years.
In 1958, he published a book of his experiences during the Chinese Revolution entitled, "The Communist Persuasion, A Personal Experience of Brainwashing." He next went to Saint John"s University, Minnesota. In California, he taught in the Claremont Colleges graduate program in philosophy and at Saint John"s Seminary College in Camarillo.
Doyle, Paula. "French Eleutherius Winance, Benedictine monk, dies at 100." The Tidings.
21 August 2009, p. 4. (The Tidings is the Catholic newspaper of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles)
Winance, Eleutherius. The Communist Persuasion: A Personal Experience of Brainwashing.
Translated by Emeric A. Lawrence.
(New York: P J Kennedy & Sons, 1958)
Woo, Elaine. "Longtime professor of philosophy.
Father Eleutherius Winance, 1909-2009." Los Angeles Times, 21 August 2009, A32.
Father Winance and the other monks were forced to attend indoctrination sessions on Marxist philosophy.
Winance was accused by police in 1952 of being a member of the Legion of Mary, which the Chinese government alleged was a seditious organization.