Dominique Pire

@Belgian Men, Family and Childhood

Dominique Pire was a Belgian cleric and educator known for his work in helping refugees in post-World War II Europe

Feb 10, 1910

BelgianMiscellaneousEducatorsAquarius Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: February 10, 1910
  • Died on: January 30, 1969
  • Nationality: Belgian
  • Famous: Belgian Men, Cleric, Miscellaneous, Educators
  • Known as: Georges Pire, Georges Charles Clement Ghislain Pire
  • Universities:
    • Catholic University of Leuven
    • Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas
  • Birth Place: Dinant

Dominique Pire born at

Dinant

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Birth Place

Dominique Pire lived a simple life in the monastery at Huy and spent 32 years of his life in service to humanitarian causes. Even though he was a monk, he refused to mix his personal faith with his commitments to social justice and chose to use a more universal language to spread his messages of peace rather than using explicitly Christian language.

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Personal Life

He died from complications from surgery on January 30, 1969, at the age of 58.

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Personal Life

Dominique Pire was born as Georges Charles Clement Ghislain Pire in Dinant, Belgium, on February10, 1910, to Georges Pire, Sr. and Berthe Pire. He had three younger siblings.

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Childhood & Early Life

During the World War I, his family fled the country to escape from advancing German troops. The family spent four years as refugees in France before being able to return to Belgium. They struggled to re-establish their lives as their old home was now in ruins.

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Childhood & Early Life

Pire grew up to be an intelligent and sensitive boy. He studied classics and philosophy at the Collège de Bellevue before entering the Dominican order at La Sarthe in Huy, Belgium, at the age of 18. He took his final vows in 1932 and adopted the religious name of "Dominique Pire."

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Childhood & Early Life

He then proceeded to study theology and the social sciences at the Pontifical International Institute Angelicum, the future Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum in Rome. He obtained his doctorate in theology in 1936 with a thesis titled ‘L’Apatheia ou insensibilité irréalisable et destructrice’ (Apatheia or unrealisable and destructive insensitivity).

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Childhood & Early Life

He returned to the monastery of La Sarthe, in Huy, and began teaching sociology and moral philosophy. During this time he realized that in order to serve humanity in a better way he would have to venture outside the monastery as well.

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Career

He ventured into humanitarian work and started helping impoverished families improve their standard of living and gain a sense of dignity. In 1938, he founded two organizations, the Service d'entr'aide familiale (Mutual Family Aid) and Stations de plein air de Huy (Open Air Camps) for children.

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Career

The World War II broke out in 1939 and Pire became active in the resistance movement, helping to return downed Allied flyers to their own forces. He also served as an agent for the intelligence service during the war.

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Career

Pire was troubled by the pathetic conditions of the refugees. After the war ended, he became deeply involved in the enormous refugee problem. He visited the camps for refugees in Austria, and wrote a book, ‘Du Rhin au Danube avec 60,000 D. P.’ Taking forward his work, he founded an organization, Aid to Displaced Persons, in 1949.

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Career

Soon the organization which provided aid to refugees, regardless of their nationality or religion, had branches throughout Europe. He also founded four homes for the aged refugees at Huy (1950), Esneux (1951), Aertslaer (1953), and Braine-le-Comte (1954). In addition, he initiated the system of sponsors that allowed a refugee to be helped by a person in another country.

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Career

Dominique Pire is best remembered for his work in helping refugees in post-World War II Europe. Deeply dedicated to humanitarian work, he became a chaplain to the Belgian resistance during the war, and founded homes for aged refugees, among other services. In the post war period, he organized a network of sponsors who supplied food, clothes and medicine to the displaced refugees and set up villages for their rehabilitation.

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Major Works