Csaba Böjte


Csaba Böjte is an ethnic Hungarian Franciscan monk, author, humanitarian, and director and founder of the Saint Francis Foundation of Deva, Romania. His foundation works to rescue homeless orphans in Transylvania.
The foundation provides food, housing, and education to children living in poor conditions, a large number of whom suffer from extreme poverty and chronic food insecurity. There are currently over 2500 children living in the Saint Francis Foundation's homes and shelters, and hundreds more are a part of the organization's live-in care system.

Biography

Böjte Csaba was born into an ethnic Hungarian family in Cluj, Romania, a city in Transylvania with a large Hungarian-speaking population. Böjte trained to be a car mechanic, but then decided to become a miner in the remote Harghita Mountains for a year. He made this abrupt change in career in order to test his abilities in preparation for becoming a priest.
Böjte's father was a poet and lived in Transylvania during the Ceaușescu communist dictatorship, under which he was sentenced to serve seven years in prison due to the contents of one of his poems. After serving four and a half years, Böjte's father escaped the prison where he had been tortured, and he died less than two years after his escape due to the injuries he sustained. His father's death was a turning point in Böjte's life, and it was then he decided to become a priest.
Böjte joined the Franciscan Order in 1982, under the Ceaușescu dictatorship, and his induction took place in secrecy. He completed his priestly studies in Alba Iulia and Esztergom, and was ordained in 1989.
Working as a priest in different places across Transylvania, Father Böjte settled in Deva, where he took several homeless orphans off the streets, and under his protection. Father Böjte broke the lock off of an abandoned Franciscan monastery, which had not been used in decades, and moved the homeless children in. Romanian authorities opposed this, repeatedly ordering Father Böjte to leave the monastery, under the pretense of trespassing. Father Böjte responded that the Romanian police would have to physically remove the children if they wanted them to leave the premises, which they did not do.
Word of Father Böjte's makeshift orphanage spread across Deva, and later the rest of Transylvania and Hungary as well. Besides providing the orphans with the basic necessities of life, Böjte also provided education for the orphans, which included religious and moral instruction. Many of the orphans under Father Böjte's protection went on to attend university.
Since opening the first orphanage in 1993, Father Böjte has helped house, feed, and educate over 6000 orphans through the Saint Francis Foundation, with over 2500 children currently under the Foundation's care.
Böjte has published numerous books, articles, and essays. Alongside his duties with the Saint Francis Foundation, he continues to hold masses, and speak at various engagements worldwide.

Orphanages

Following the illegal occupation of the abandoned monastery which was transformed into a makeshift orphanage, Father Böjte and his orphans renovated the building room by room. They also built their own kindergarten, primary school, and administration building. Father Böjte and the Saint Francis Foundation purchased two apartment buildings near the monastery, using them to house orphans in foster families, generally allocating 8-10 children to a foster parent. These family groupings consist of children of different ages, so the older children can take on extra responsibilities in the home, and help look after the younger children. Many of the rescued children go on to learn trades and attend university, while others stay behind helping raise children in the orphanage. The number of children in Saint Francis Foundation orphanages continues to grow, as more and more children are being brought under its care from increasingly remote and rural regions of Transylvania.
Saint Francis Foundation orphanages have now been established in cities, towns, and villages all across Transylvania. The majority of the Foundation's budget comes from donations, which is often used to purchase land and real estate to found new orphanages in order to deal with the increasing number of children under the Foundation's care. The Foundation operates with the support of volunteers, who help care for the children, as well as cook, clean, and build. The Saint Francis Foundation is not funded or supported by the Government of Romania. However, in 2005, the Government of Hungary provided the foundation with significant funding, and it donated 15 million HUF for the construction of a sports field for the orphanage in Sovata.

Books

In 2014 a civil initiative in Hungary collected signatures in an effort to award Böjte Csaba the Nobel Peace Prize.

Films about Böjte Csaba