Raymond Flanagan

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Raymond Joseph David Stanislaus Flanagan, OCSO (November 29, 1903 - June 3, 1990) was a Catholic priest and Trappist monk.

He was born and raised in an Irish-Catholic family in Roxbury, Massachusetts. He had nine siblings. Two of his brothers also became priests and two of his sisters became nuns. Joseph entered the Society of Jesus as a high school senior and was ordained a priest on 22 July 1933. As a Jesuit, he gave many retreats and coached the debating team at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester. He did his Tertianship in Port Townsend in 1934/1935 and soon after (1936) transferred to the Trappist Abbey of Gethsemani; he made solemn vows there as Father Raymond on 5 April 1942.

Flanagan was one of two famous author-monks living in Gethsemani Abbey; the other was Thomas Merton. The monks corresponded frequently,[1] and Merton even wrote limericks about his confrere Fr. Raymond.[2]

Fr. Raymond was buried in the Gethsemani cemetery.

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