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Story & People

The history of l’arche

The L’Arche Story

The first L’Arche community was founded in 1964 in the small town of Trosly, France in response to the inhumane conditions of the large institutions where people with intellectual disabilities had been placed. That first L’Arche community of just four men provided a model for robust L’Arche communities all over the world for the next 50 years.

1964

The First Community Opened

The first L’Arche home opened in Trosly, France in a previously abandoned small cottage. The first community provided a home in the truest sense of the word for its first four inhabitants and was a response to greater society’s call to bring people with intellectual disabilities out of the degrading conditions of institutions. No longer were people with disabilities seen as something shameful that needed to be quarantined, but as full human beings inherently deserving of respect.

1972

L’Arche Landed in the United States

The first L’Arche community in the United States opened in Erie, Pennsylvania. The first home was in a dilapidated neighborhood and those early days were difficult. The founders had to share their personal incomes to sustain the community, while eating “apples and onions” for many of those first community meals.

1973

Rehabilitation Act Signed into Law

The 1973 Rehabilitation Act included Section 504, which, for the first time, outlawed discrimination based on disability for the recipients of federal funds.

1981

L’Arche International Formed

L’Arche became an international federation as the second generation of L’Arche leaders began to emerge. L’Arche grew into a truly global movement that continues its mission to this day.

1983

Ten Years of L’Arche in the United States

After 10 years in the United States, a total of 10 L’Arche communities had opened. The first communities were in Cleveland, OH; Clinton, IA; Erie, PA; Mobile, AL; Seattle, WA; Lynchburg, VA; Spokane, WA; Syracuse, NY; Boston, MA; and Tacoma, WA.

1986

L'Arche USA is Founded

L’Arche USA was founded to help support existing communities in the United States and to help guide groups that are interested in founding new L’Arche communities.

1988

Fair Housing Act Amended

The Fair Housing Act (FHA) was amended to include provisions outlawing housing discrimination on the basis of disability.

1990

Americans with Disabilities Act Became Law

President George H. W. Bush signed the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) into law. As he signed the law, President Bush exclaimed “Let the shameful wall of exclusion finally come tumbling down.”

1992

L’Arche in the United States After Two Decades

Three more communities opened in Jacksonville, FL; greater Washington, D.C.; and Overland Park, KS to bring the total of L’Arche communities in the United States to 13.

2008

L'Arche USA Opens Headquarters in Portland, OR

This small office of only 326 square feet marked a big feat for an organization that was once nothing more than a handful of remote staff members, an answering machine in a kitchen, and a LOT of dedication.

2014

L'Arche Turned 50

Half a century after its founding, a once small grassroots movement had become a global effort to celebrate diversity and the inherent value of all humans. People with intellectual disabilities found communities that valued their voices.

2019

L'Arche USA's Mandate Discernment Process Launched

Every five years, L’Arche USA reviews and renews its mandate. The mandate determines L’Arche USA’s strategic priorities for the next five years.

2020

L'Arche USA Adopts New Mandate

L’Arche USA adopts a new mandate, which specifies our strategic priorities for the next five years.

The Impact of an Individual

Henri Nouwen

Many pilgrims on the spiritual journey have been drawn to the life, faith, and writings of Henri Nouwen. Henri Nouwen was a priest and professor who spent the last 11 years of his life in a L’Arche community in Trosly-Breuil, France and one near Toronto, Canada.

Born in Holland in 1932, Nouwen was an ordained priest who also studied psychology at the Catholic University of Nijmegen. He taught at the University of Notre Dame and the Divinity Schools of Yale and Harvard.

In 1986, one year after Nouwen accepted an opportunity to visit L’Arche Trosly-Breuil, he chose to make his permanent home at L’Arche Daybreak near Toronto, Canada. Ten years later, he died suddenly in Holland and was buried near the Daybreak community.

“When we honestly ask ourselves which person in our lives means the most to us, we often find that it is those who, instead of giving advice, solutions, or cures, have chosen rather to share our pain and touch our wounds with a warm and tender hand.” – Henri Nouwen

Several of Nouwen’s books were inspired by the life he shared with people with intellectual and physical disabilities in L’Arche. A journal of his year at L’Arche Trosly is captured in The Road to Daybreak: A Spiritual Journey. Additionally, Nouwen wrote Adam, God’s Beloved, a beautiful and inspiring account of how his life was transformed through a friendship with a Core Member in the Daybreak community.

Henri Nouwen of L'Arche France
Henri Nouwen dancing with a person with intellectual disabilities.