Bleun-Brug
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Bleun-Brug (or Fleur de Bruyère in French, meaning Heather) is a Catholic association oriented towards Breton nationalism.
[edit] Origins
The group was created in 1905 by abbot Jean-Marie Perrot, with a name devised at the 1905 conference of the Union Régionaliste Bretonne at Kerjean Castle. The heather symbolizes Breton tenacity. The association had the motto: Breton et Foi sont frère et sœur en Bretagne. ("Breton and faith are brother and sister in Brittany.")
The association fights to preserve Breton faith, language, and traditions. To accomplish this, it holds an annual party featuring Breton theatre, song, and lectures.
[edit] Magazine
The magazine Feiz ha Breiz, which first existed from 1865 to 1884, was restarted by Bleun-Brug in 1899, eventually becoming the official mouthpiece of the association.
[edit] Post-War
Bleun-Brug was guided mainly by abbot Perrot over a period of forty years, with the goal of maintaining Breton traditions and the usage of the Breton language amongst the rural populations of Basse-Bretagne. It was a true Catholic movement, subject to the bishopric of Quimper. The statutes of the association, established in 1912, were amended in 1925 to define its two objectives:
- To promote the Breton ideal intellectually, politically, and economically.
- To contribute, as Catholics, to realising in Brittany the full scope of its traditional faith.