As the aging religious community at the storied Monastery of the Angels gets smaller and smaller, the Los Angeles Catholic lay community is attempting to save and preserve the property. The Monastery of the Angels Foundation of Los Angeles, a non-profit in the process of formation, wants to acquire the monastery to ensure that it remains a sacred space and a sanctuary from secular Hollywood life for decades to come.
Monastery of the Angels
Since 1949, the Dominican Nuns of the Sacred Order of Preachers have operated the Monastery of the Angels. There, the community practices perpetual adoration and dedicates themselves to studying the scriptures and prayer for the world outside their walls. The cloistered order quickly became a Hollywood mainstay and has been regarded by many as the Catholic heart of tinseltown.
In recent years, however, many of the sisters have become too old to continue maintaining the property. This situation has only been exacerbated by the world pandemic, which saw several nuns fall to COVID-19. With only a handful of nuns remaining, the order has begun to search for alternative means to sustain the property.
In an interview with Religion News Service, prioress Sister Maria Christine, president of the Association of North American Dominican Monasteries, said that the order is “looking at many options,” one of which would be to bring in another religious order to manage the property. Sr. Maria Christine said:
Lay campaign
The nuns are exploring their options, but a lay group has arisen that seeks to solve the problem themselves. The Monastery of the Angels Foundation of Los Angeles is a group formed with the express goal of saving the monastery. The group, which is working to be recognized as a non-profit, wants to acquire the property to ensure that it remains a sacred space to serve the Catholic community of Los Angeles.
The foundation has already launched a website, Friends of the Angels, as well as a petition that has garnered nearly 4,300 signatures as of May 20. On their website they outline their plans for the monastery which include guided tours, prayer services, occasional Masses, and making the property available as a serene place to pray and escape the hectic secular life of Hollywood.
The foundation wrote on their planning page:
Foreign investors
Speaking to Religious News Service, Richard Schave, one of the minds behind the foundation, noted that they want to ensure the property doesn’t fall into the hands of foreign investors. The fear is that an outside party who is not familiar with the monastery’s value to the community will buy the land up for redevelopment.
The Friends of the Angels website does not indicate how much money would need to be raised in order to secure the monastery. They do, however, offer a newsletter which would allow interested parties to stay up to date with the development of the foundation and their work.
Click here to learn more about the Monastery of the Angels Foundation of Los Angeles’ plans.