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Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen

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Our Mother of Perpetual Help Church: CMRI church in Sulphur Springs, Ohio, United States

Key Information

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (Latin: Congregatio Mariae Reginae Immaculatae; CMRI) is a sedevacantist traditionalist Catholic religious congregation that is not in communion with the Holy See.[1] The CMRI is dedicated to promoting the message of Our Lady of Fátima and the devotion of the practice of Total Consecration to the Virgin Mary as taught by Saint Louis Marie de Montfort.[2] The CMRI was founded by Francis Schuckardt, but he was later expelled from the organisation due to allegations of sexual abuse and drug use.

The congregation lists over 90 traditional Catholic churches and chapels both in the United States and abroad, as well as at least 13 schools staffed by religious.[3][non-primary source needed]

Alternative names

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The group has used and was designated by various other names including:

  • Fatima Crusade[4]
  • Tridentine Latin Rite Church[4]
  • Oblates of Mary Immaculate[5]
  • Fatima Crusaders[6]

Superiors Generals

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Activities

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The Sisters at Mount Saint Michael record CDs and perform an annual Christmas concert.[7]

The CMRI hold the Fatima Conference at Mount Saint Michael in Spokane, Washington every October. The Conference includes five days of lectures, daily Mass, devotions, and meals.[8]

The CMRI has been involved with mass media since their founding as a method of recruitment and information. Throughout their history, the CMRI has produced books, pamphlets, and audio recordings. The CMRI runs a bookstore, Mary Immaculate Queen Center,[9] and produces various periodicals: The Reign of Mary (quarterly magazine), Adsum (Mater Dei seminary monthly newsletter), and Anima Mariae, the CMRI sisters' newsletter. The CMRI also produces CDs of the annual Fatima Conference talks, as well as a livestream of Daily Mass and devotions from the City of Mary in Rathdrum, Idaho.[10]

History

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Speaking tours and Coeur d'Alene beginnings (1967 to 1971)

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Francis Schuckardt and Robert Chicoine (a former Marine, bricklayer, and newspaper pressman from New Bedford, Massachusetts) attracted followers through international speaking tours as part of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima. Chicoine first heard Schuckardt in a 1965 talk in San Diego about the message of Fatima. After listening to Schuckardt for three nights in a row, he became his disciple.[11]

In 1971, Schuckardt changed the name of the group to Traditional Latin Rite Catholic Church.[4]

By 1984, the CMRI owned and operated schools, camps, and properties,[12] including a convent and girls high school in Colbert, Washington[13] and a mansion at 2314 E South Altamont Boulevard in Spokane, Washington, which operated as the priory and Schuckardt's main residence.[13]

Chicoine era (1984 to 1989)

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In 1984, Chicoine accused Schuckardt of abuse and drug addiction.,[1] and Schuckardt and a small group of his followers were expelled from the CMRI and left the Spokane area, taking the name Tridentine Latin Rite Church. In addition to Alphonsus, Schuckardt was followed by 4 religious sisters and 10 religious clerics and brothers.[14] A larger group of the priests, religious, and laity remained with Chicoine at Mount Saint Michael, retaining the CMRI name and the bulk of the church property. Local media in 1984 reported that there were 5,000 followers of the group in the United States, 800 of whom live in the Spokane area.[13] By 1986, local media reported about half the members of the church's religious orders left.[15]

Following the expulsion of Schuckardt, sedevacantist Bishop George Musey (of the Thục apostolic line) conditionally re-administered the sacraments imparted by Schuckardt, whose validity was now considered dubious, and conditionally re-ordained the remaining priests.[16]

In 1986, the Congregation held its first General Chapter, which established its rule and constitutions, that were later approved by sedevacantist Bishop Robert McKenna ORCM.[17]

Pivarunas era (since 1989)

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In August 1989, Father Tarcisius Pivarunas (Mark Pivarunas) was elected Superior General of the congregation.[18]

On 1 February 1991, sedevacantist Bishop Moisés Carmona expressed his desire to consecrate as bishop whomever the congregation chose. On 3 April 1991, Pivarunas was elected to be consecrated a bishop. Pivarunas dropped his religious name, "Tarcisius", and in accordance with CMRI Constitutions, resigned as Superior General. He was succeeded by Father Casimir M. Puskorius. On 24 September 1991, in Mount Saint Michael, Pivarunas was consecrated a bishop by Bishop Carmona.[19]

In June 2007, 15 sisters (including Rev. Mother Ludmilla) living at Mount Saint Michael in Spokane were expelled for disputing the CMRI stance of sedevacantism. They later reunited with the Catholic Church, and formed the Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Church (SMMC) under the authority of William Skylstad, Bishop of Spokane.[1]

In 2016, Pivarunas administered the sacrament of confirmation to 20 people in Paese, during a Mass presided by Father Florian Abrahamowicz. The Diocese of Treviso declared the confirmations to be "valid but illicit".[20]

Criticism

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In 1986, Jim Sparks of the Spokesman-Review Spokane Chronicle wrote a front page article "Tranquility returns to Tridentines" describing abuse and controversies occurring within the CMIQ.[21] These included:

  • In 1981, the Nebraska Supreme Court gave Dennis Burnham custody of his daughter because of his wife's involvement with the church, not based on religious affiliation per se but due to concerns about the daughter's welfare.[22]
  • Fr. Chicoine shaved (or cropped) the front part of a girl's hair for explaining to a friend the meaning of a menstrual period and the meaning of a common obscene gesture.[22]
  • A teaching nun gave a child a black eye and swollen face when the child refused to eat their own vomit.[22]
  • A 16-year-old was punished by being ordered to crawl across a parking lot and up a flight of stairs to a chapel on his bare knees, leading to damaged cartilage.[22]

In 2006, the Southern Poverty Law Center designated Mount St. Michael one of twelve "anti-semitic radical traditionalist Catholic groups."[23] The 2021 list no longer included Mt. St. Michael.[24]

In December 2018, a priest was accused[25] of ritual sexual abuse of a child at the Holy Innocents Catholic School in Waite Park, MN in the 1970s and 1980s.[26][27]

References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI; Latin: Congregatio Mariae Reginae Immaculatae) is a sedevacantist traditionalist Catholic religious congregation founded in 1967 in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, as a lay association devoted to spreading the messages of Our Lady of Fatima and preserving the traditional Roman Catholic faith, liturgy, and sacraments unchanged from before the Second Vatican Council.[1][2] Comprising priests, brothers, and sisters, the CMRI rejects the post-Vatican II reforms, including the Novus Ordo Mass and revised Code of Canon Law, viewing them as incompatible with Catholic doctrine on grounds of heresy and schism.[3] The group's core theological position holds that the papal see (sede) has remained vacant (vacant) since the death of Pope Pius XII in 1958, as subsequent claimants have publicly defected from the faith through endorsement of modernist errors condemned by prior pontiffs, rendering their elections invalid under historical Catholic teaching such as that of St. Robert Bellarmine and Pope Paul IV's bull Cum ex apostolatus officio.[3] This stance underpins the CMRI's mission to safeguard the Church's indefectibility and infallibility amid what it describes as an unprecedented doctrinal crisis.[3] Led by Superior General Bishop Mark A. Pivarunas since the 1980s, the congregation maintains its motherhouse at Mount St. Michael in Spokane Valley, Washington, and operates over 120 Mass centers, seminaries, schools, and missions across the United States and abroad.[1] Originally initiated by Francis Schuckardt amid growing opposition to liturgical and doctrinal changes in the 1960s, the CMRI formalized its structure in 1986 with a general chapter adopting constitutions approved by an independent bishop, emphasizing adherence to the 1917 Code of Canon Law.[1] Defining achievements include the establishment of St. Louis Marie de Montfort Seminary for priestly formation and educational institutions teaching traditional catechism, alongside publications and apostolates promoting Fatima devotion as central to averting spiritual chastisement.[1] While internal debates over liturgical practices like the una cum phrase have arisen, the congregation prioritizes the salvation of souls through unaltered Catholic worship and doctrine.[4]

Foundational Overview

Founding and Core Mission

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) was established in 1967 in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, by Francis Schuckardt, initially as an association of lay brothers and sisters focused on disseminating the messages of Our Lady of Fatima.[1] Schuckardt, who had been involved in traditionalist Catholic circles amid growing concerns over post-Vatican II liturgical changes, collaborated with Denis Chicoine to form the group, emphasizing devotion to the Immaculate Heart of Mary and total consecration to the Virgin Mary as central spiritual practices.[5] By 1969, the arrival of a sympathetic priest enabled the administration of sacraments, transitioning the association toward a more structured religious congregation.[1] The core mission of the CMRI revolves around preserving the traditional Roman Catholic Faith, including the Tridentine Mass and pre-Vatican II sacraments, in response to perceived modernist innovations within the post-conciliar Church.[6] Members commit to the three simple vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, aiming to achieve personal sanctity while promoting Fatima's call for reparation, prayer, and conversion to counter contemporary ecclesiastical developments viewed as heretical.[7] This mission underscores a sedevacantist stance, holding the papal see vacant since the death of Pius XII in 1958 due to doctrinal deviations by subsequent claimants, thereby justifying independent operation to safeguard apostolic doctrine.[6] The congregation's foundational documents and practices prioritize fidelity to unchanging Catholic teaching over institutional allegiance to post-1958 hierarchies.[8]

Alternative Designations

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen is most commonly designated by its acronym CMRI, derived from the English name, while its official Latin title is Congregatio Mariae Reginae Immaculatae.[1][9] In its formative period during the late 1960s and early 1970s, the organization operated under the informal name Fatima Crusaders, reflecting its initial focus on promoting the messages of Our Lady of Fatima through speaking tours and crusading activities led by founder Francis Schuckardt.[10][11] An extended variant of the name, Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen of the Universe or Oblates of Mary Immaculate Queen of the Universe, appeared in early documentation and publications associated with the group's establishment as a religious congregation around 1967–1971, emphasizing a broader Marian devotion.[10] These designations highlight the evolution from a lay apostolate to a formalized religious community, though the core CMRI abbreviation has predominated since the 1980s following internal schisms and leadership changes.[12] Infrequently, the acronym CMIQ has been used in secondary references, but this appears to be a non-standard variant without endorsement from the group's primary materials.[13]

Theological Foundations

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) grounds its theology in the perennial doctrines of the Catholic Church as articulated prior to the Second Vatican Council, asserting fidelity to the infallible Magisterium up to the pontificate of Pius XII. They view the Church's deposit of faith as unchanging, encompassing dogmas such as extra ecclesiam nulla salus—no salvation outside the visible Catholic Church—and the condemnations of religious indifferentism and ecumenism issued by popes including Gregory XVI, Pius IX, Leo XIII, Pius XI, and Pius XII.[6][14] This framework rejects any innovations perceived as dilutions of these truths, prioritizing the 1917 Code of Canon Law and the Council of Trent's definitions on sacraments and liturgy.[6] Central to CMRI theology is sedevacantism, the position that the papal see (sede vacante) has remained unoccupied since the death of Pope Pius XII on October 9, 1958. They argue that the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965) promulgated heretical teachings—particularly on religious liberty, ecumenism, and the salvific value of non-Christian religions—that contradict prior infallible decrees, such as those in Quanta Cura (1864) and Mortalium Animos (1928).[6][14] Subsequent papal actions, including the introduction of the Novus Ordo Missae in 1969, are deemed a "striking departure from the Catholic theology of the Mass," as critiqued by Cardinal Alfredo Ottaviani, rendering the modern hierarchy incapable of upholding the First Vatican Council's affirmation that the See of Peter remains "unimpaired by any error."[6] Drawing on theologians like St. Robert Bellarmine, CMRI holds that a manifest heretic automatically loses ecclesiastical office ipso facto by divine law, as heresy severs one from the Church, preventing any valid claim to the papacy.[15] This sedevacantist stance is presented as the logical application of Catholic principles to the post-conciliar crisis, where popes endorsing errors cannot bind the faithful under obedience, lest one resist divinely instituted authority—a theological impossibility.[15] CMRI emphasizes that their priests continue to administer valid sacraments according to pre-1958 rites, preserving the Church's visibility amid apostasy, in line with Christ's promise that the gates of hell shall not prevail.[14] A prominent devotional element integrates the message of Our Lady of Fatima, promoting total consecration to the Immaculate Heart of Mary as a remedy for the crisis and a means to restore traditional Catholic order.[2]

Leadership Structure

Historical Superiors General

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) was founded in 1967 by Francis Schuckardt, who served as its first Superior General until his expulsion in May 1984 amid internal accusations of moral misconduct and authoritarian governance.[16][17] Schuckardt, originally a lay Fatima Crusade organizer, established the group as a response to perceived post-Vatican II doctrinal deviations, initially as a lay association that evolved into a religious congregation with traditionalist sedevacantist emphases.[16] Following Schuckardt's removal, Father Denis Chicoine was elected Superior General, holding the position from 1984 to August 1989.[17] Chicoine, who had served as vicar general, led efforts to reform the congregation's structure, including the first General Chapter in July 1986 at Mount St. Michael in Spokane, Washington, where the Rule and Constitutions were formalized and approved by Bishop Robert McKenna.[1] His tenure focused on stabilizing the group post-split, though it ended with his succession amid ongoing internal transitions. In August 1989, Father Mark Pivarunas (religious name Tarcisius) was elected Superior General, serving initially until 1991.[18] Pivarunas, ordained in 1985 by Bishop George Musey and previously rector of the seminary, assumed leadership at age 30 to guide the congregation's continuity in sedevacantist practices and expansion.[18] He resigned per constitutional terms but was re-elected in 1995, holding the role continuously thereafter; he was consecrated bishop on September 24, 1991, by Bishop Moisés Carmona to ensure sacramental validity.[18] During the interim 1991–1995 period, Father Casimir Puskorius served as Superior General, maintaining administrative oversight before Pivarunas's return.[19] Under Pivarunas's long-term leadership, the CMRI established permanent parishes, relocated its seminary to Rathdrum, Idaho, in 2022, and emphasized traditional Latin liturgy and devotions.[1]
Superior GeneralTenureKey Notes
Francis Schuckardt1967–1984Founder; expelled amid scandals.[17]
Denis Chicoine1984–1989Post-expulsion reformer; oversaw 1986 General Chapter.[17][1]
Mark Pivarunas1989–1991; 1995–presentElected 1989; bishop 1991; led expansions including seminary moves.[18][1]
Casimir Puskorius1991–1995Interim leader; current parish pastor.[19][20]

Current Leadership and Governance

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) is governed by a hierarchical structure outlined in its Rule and Constitutions, formally established during its first General Chapter in July 1986 and approved by Bishop Robert McKenna, O.P.[1] This framework adheres to the 1917 Code of Canon Law, supplemented by the principle of epikeia to address circumstances arising from the perceived vacancy of the Holy See.[1] The Superior General oversees the priests and brothers, while the Mother General directs the affiliated Marian Sisters; both positions are elected by their respective chapters for terms that allow for re-election, ensuring continuity in leadership since the congregation's stabilization post-1989.[1][21] Bishop Mark A. Pivarunas, CMRI, has served as Superior General since his election in August 1989, following the expulsion of prior leadership.[18] Born on October 31, 1958, Pivarunas entered religious life in 1974, professed solemn vows in 1980, and was ordained a priest on June 27, 1985, by Bishop George Musey.[18] He received episcopal consecration on September 24, 1991, from Bishop Moisés Carmona, enabling him to ordain clergy and administer confirmations across CMRI missions in the United States, Mexico, Canada, and beyond.[18] As of 2025, Pivarunas continues to lead from Mater Dei Seminary in Omaha, Nebraska, where he also serves as rector; he presided over ordinations of four priests on April 29, 2025, demonstrating active governance.[18][22] Reverend Mother Mary Agnes, CMRI, holds the position of Mother General for the Marian Sisters, having been re-elected in a recent chapter assembly.[1][23] Under her direction, the sisters manage educational and devotional apostolates, including schools and care for seminarians, integrated within the broader congregational structure.[1] Governance emphasizes fidelity to pre-Vatican II disciplines, with decisions ratified through periodic chapters and diets—gatherings of professed members for consultation without elections.[23] This model supports over 120 mission chapels, prioritizing sacramental administration and traditional formation amid sedevacantist commitments.[2]

Doctrinal Positions and Practices

Sedevacantist Theology

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) maintains that the Holy See has been vacant since the death of Pope Pius XII on October 9, 1958, rendering subsequent claimants to the papal office invalid due to their promulgation of doctrines incompatible with the perennial Catholic Faith.[6] This position, known as sedevacantism—derived from the Latin sede vacante meaning "vacant seat"—affirms unwavering belief in the papacy, its primacy, and infallibility as defined by the First Vatican Council (1869–1870), which holds that the Roman Pontiff, when speaking ex cathedra, possesses the charism of infallibility in matters of faith and morals.[3] CMRI theologians argue that a true pope cannot defect from the Faith or approve heresy, as this would contradict divine promises of the Church's indefectibility (Matthew 16:18) and the impossibility of the Church's magisterium erring, per Pope Leo XIII's Satis Cognitum (1896).[15] Central to CMRI's sedevacantist theology is the assertion that the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965) introduced heretical teachings, such as religious liberty (Dignitatis Humanae) and ecumenism, which contradict prior infallible condemnations by popes including Gregory XVI (Mirari Vos, 1832), Pius IX (Syllabus of Errors, 1864), Leo XIII (Humanum Genus, 1884), and Pius XI (Mortalium Animos, 1928).[6] Likewise, the Novus Ordo Missae promulgated by Paul VI in 1969 and revised sacramental rites (e.g., episcopal consecrations in 1968) are deemed invalid or gravely defective, violating the Council of Trent's anathemas on the Mass (Session VII, 1547) and Pius XII's Sacramentum Ordinis (1947).[6] Post-conciliar popes, by endorsing these innovations, manifestly adhere to heresy, thereby incurring automatic loss of ecclesiastical office under divine and natural law, as articulated by St. Robert Bellarmine in De Romano Pontifice (1586): a public heretic cannot be pope ipso facto, ceasing membership in the Church and thus eligibility for the Petrine office.[3] This is reinforced by Canon 188 §4 of the 1917 Code of Canon Law, which provides for tacit resignation of office upon public defection from the Faith.[15] CMRI rejects alternative traditionalist positions, such as "recognize and resist," as theologically untenable, since no precedent exists in Catholic history or doctrine for the faithful to acknowledge a reigning pope while resisting his authoritative teachings on faith and morals.[15] In response to objections, they emphasize that divine law—barring heretics from papal election (Cum ex Apostolatus Officio, Pope Paul IV, 1559)—supersedes any ecclesiastical mitigations, such as Pius XII's Vacantis Apostolicae Sedis (1945), which did not alter the intrinsic incapacity of heretics to hold office.[24] Prolonged vacancies do not violate the Church's visibility or perpetual succession, as historical interregna (e.g., 1268–1271) demonstrate, and future papal election remains possible via imperfect council or general consensus of the Church in the absence of valid cardinals.[24] During this vacancy, CMRI priests claim supplied jurisdiction for sacraments under epikeia, preserving the Church's hierarchical structure without innovation.[6]

Liturgical and Sacramental Practices

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen adheres exclusively to the Traditional Latin Mass as codified in the Roman Missal prior to the post-Vatican II reforms, rejecting the Novus Ordo Missae as sacramentally invalid.[2][25] This stance stems from their analysis that alterations in the Novus Ordo, such as the substitution of "for many" with "for all" in the consecration formula, fail to signify the intended remission of sins and propitiatory sacrifice, violating essential sacramental form as defined in papal documents like Apostolicae Curae (1896).[25] Consequently, CMRI clergy celebrate Mass using the full traditional consecration words: "which shall be shed for you and for many unto the remission of sins," preserving the rite's sacrificial character and distinction from Protestant memorial services.[25] In sacramental administration, CMRI priests and bishops confer the seven sacraments—Baptism, Confirmation, Eucharist, Penance, Anointing of the Sick, Holy Orders, and Matrimony—employing pre-Vatican II rites, matter, and forms to ensure validity according to traditional Catholic doctrine.[26][27] For the Eucharist, they specify wheaten bread and grape wine as remote matter, with the priest's intent aligned to transubstantiation via precise words of institution.[26] These practices occur in over 120 affiliated chapels and Mass centers worldwide, where the sacraments are offered to the faithful seeking traditional forms.[2] CMRI maintains that their clergy's sacraments are not only valid but legitimate, grounded in divine law obliging ordained priests to administer them out of charity and mission from Christ (e.g., Matthew 28:19; John 20:22), independent of defective post-conciliar hierarchies.[27] Jurisdiction for Penance, for instance, is supplied in the internal forum under canon law principles of common necessity (e.g., Canon 879), given the unavailability of undisputed Catholic authority since the 1960s.[27] Holy Orders within CMRI trace apostolic succession through bishops consecrated in the traditional rite, enabling episcopal conferral of Confirmation and Orders.[27] This framework rejects post-Vatican II sacramental changes as defective, prioritizing rites unchanged since Trent.[25]

Key Devotions and Spiritual Emphasis

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen places primary spiritual emphasis on total consecration to the Blessed Virgin Mary, following the method outlined by Saint Louis Marie Grignion de Montfort in his treatise True Devotion to Mary.[28] This practice entails a complete, irrevocable surrender of one's person, actions, and merits to Mary as a means of greater union with Christ, undertaken after a 33-day preparation period involving specific prayers, meditations, and acts of renunciation.[28] Members renew this consecration annually on the feast of the Annunciation, integrating it into daily spiritual routines to foster interior conversion and reliance on Mary's intercession.[29] A core devotion is the propagation of the Fatima message, received by the three shepherd children in 1917, which calls for prayer, penance, and devotion to the Immaculate Heart of Mary to achieve world peace and the triumph of her heart.[30] The congregation promotes practices such as the daily Rosary, reparation for sins through the Five First Saturdays devotion—entailing confession, Communion, Rosary recitation, and 15 minutes of meditation on the Mysteries—and the wearing of the brown scapular as signs of consecration.[30] This apostolate underscores their commitment to fulfilling Our Lady's requests, including the full consecration of Russia, as essential for averting chastisements foretold at Fatima.[30] Devotion to the Miraculous Medal, originating from apparitions to Saint Catherine Labouré in 1830, holds special significance among the congregation's priests, brothers, and sisters, who regard it as a potent sacramental for invoking Mary's protection and graces.[31] Worn as a badge of trust in her maternal care, it symbolizes their reliance on her intercession amid perceived spiritual crises in the Church.[31] The Confraternity of Mary Immaculate Queen further structures lay participation through required daily prayers, spiritual exercises, and communal acts aimed at deepening Marian piety and union with God.[32] Their patroness, Mary Immaculate Queen, inspires a royal Marian spirituality, envisioning her enthroned over the universe with emblems of sovereignty, as depicted in traditional iconography and their coat of arms.[33] This emphasis aligns with the congregation's sedevacantist framework, prioritizing pre-Vatican II devotions to safeguard authentic Catholic piety against modern dilutions.[2]

Historical Development

Early Formation and Speaking Tours (1967-1971)

In 1967, Francis Schuckardt, a former member of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima who had rejected the organization's accommodation to Vatican II reforms, founded the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, as a small religious community comprising lay supporters, aspiring religious brothers, and nuns dedicated to preserving pre-conciliar Catholic liturgy and promoting the Fatima apparitions' message of repentance and warning against modern ecclesiastical changes.[34] Initially numbering about a half-dozen young adherents, the group formalized under Schuckardt's leadership, emphasizing strict adherence to the Traditional Latin Mass, Marian devotion to Mary Immaculate Queen, and opposition to what they viewed as doctrinal dilutions post-1962.[10] This formation coincided with the establishment of the Fatima Cell Group Movement—later rebranded the Fatima Crusade—a lay apostolate aimed at cell-based propagation of anti-modernist Catholicism, which served as the congregation's early outreach mechanism.[34] Schuckardt, alongside collaborator Denis Chicoine—a former Marine and journalist—leveraged prior international speaking experience to extend tours domestically and regionally from 1967 onward, focusing on Fatima's prophecies of chastisement for unrepented sin and critiques of Vatican II's collegiality and ecumenism as deviations from perennial doctrine.[35] These lectures, often held in rented halls or private homes, drew audiences disillusioned by rapid liturgical shifts, such as the introduction of vernacular Masses and altered sacraments, attracting recruits who formed the core of CMRI's expanding celibate membership.[36] By emphasizing first-hand accounts of Fatima's calls for Russia's consecration and personal conversion, the tours positioned the congregation as a bulwark against apostasy, with Schuckardt portraying himself as a prophetic voice amid growing traditionalist dissent.[34] The period culminated in 1971 with Schuckardt's priestly ordination by Vietnamese Archbishop Pierre Martin Ngô Đình Thục, a figure sympathetic to traditionalist concerns, enabling the first sacramental administration within the nascent congregation and solidifying its shift from lay crusade to structured religious order.[34] During these formative years, CMRI acquired initial properties in Coeur d'Alene, including the Mary Immaculate Queen Center, to support communal life and tour logistics, though growth remained modest, limited to dozens of committed members amid broader Catholic resistance to post-conciliar novelties.[10] Sources from Schuckardt's associates affirm the tours' role in ideological cohesion, while later critiques highlight early authoritarian tendencies in recruitment, though empirical records confirm the focus on doctrinal fidelity over expansionist goals.[35][36]

Expansion and Property Acquisitions

In the years following its founding in 1967, the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen experienced steady growth through public speaking tours, missionary outreach, and the establishment of informal Mass centers, necessitating a more permanent infrastructure to support increasing membership and operations.[1] By the mid-1970s, the group's expansion had outgrown temporary facilities, prompting the acquisition of larger properties to centralize religious, educational, and administrative functions. A pivotal expansion occurred in December 1977, when the congregation purchased Mount Saint Michael, a former Jesuit scholasticate spanning approximately 735 acres north of Spokane, Washington.[37] [38] This acquisition, funded through personal contributions from supporters, prevented the site's conversion to commercial use by developers and provided space for a chapel, K-12 academy, library, museum, and residential facilities for priests, brothers, and sisters.[37] Mount Saint Michael became the congregation's primary hub, enabling the consolidation of apostolates and accommodating growth in vocations and lay attendance. Further property developments supported seminary training and regional outreach. In 1984, Mater Dei Seminary was founded on the Mount Saint Michael grounds to train priests in traditional rites.[39] It relocated to Omaha, Nebraska, in 1989 for strategic reasons, with the congregation establishing permanent parishes in cities including Omaha, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Akron, and Detroit by 1992.[1] In 1999, St. Joseph’s Minor Seminary was set up in Rathdrum, Idaho, to nurture younger candidates.[1] A significant recent acquisition came in 2019, when a 10-acre property in the Iowa countryside near Omaha was obtained for Mater Dei Seminary, featuring housing for up to 20 seminarians and fostering a rural retreat environment conducive to formation.[1] [23] These acquisitions facilitated the congregation's broader expansion to over 120 Mass centers across the United States and abroad by the 2020s, alongside schools and convents, while maintaining a focus on self-sustaining operations through donations and internal enterprises.[1]

Schuckardt Leadership and 1984 Expulsion

Francis Schuckardt founded the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) in 1967 in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, initially as a small group dedicated to promoting the Fatima apparitions and traditional Catholic practices amid opposition to Vatican II changes.[12] As its superior general, Schuckardt directed the congregation's expansion, including speaking tours, recruitment of members, and acquisition of properties such as the Mount St. Michael complex in Spokane, Washington, purchased in 1978 as the group's headquarters.[40] Under his leadership, the CMRI adopted sedevacantist theology, rejecting post-Vatican II popes, and Schuckardt himself was ordained a priest in 1971 and consecrated a bishop by an independent prelate from the Old Catholic lineage, a move that drew criticism for lacking apostolic succession in traditionalist circles.[12] Schuckardt exercised centralized authority, emphasizing strict discipline, communal living, and apocalyptic interpretations of prophecy, including claims of personal mystical experiences such as a divine papal coronation, which positioned him as the group's paramount spiritual leader.[12] This fostered a personality-driven structure, with members viewing him as the sole valid bishop amid broader traditionalist fragmentation, though detractors later described it as cult-like due to isolationist practices and unquestioned obedience.[12] By the early 1980s, internal tensions escalated due to Schuckardt's reported health decline, including typhoid sequelae and medication dependency, leading to erratic decision-making and allegations of incompetence.[12] In April 1984, four former seminarians publicly accused Schuckardt of sexual abuse spanning years of his leadership.[40] Additional claims emerged of drug addiction, financial mismanagement—including on June 3, 1984, reports of misused funds—and authoritarian conduct, such as dictatorial control and physical punishments.[40] These allegations, primarily from disaffected members, prompted a community confrontation; Schuckardt's vicar general, Denis Chicoine, and other leaders deemed the charges substantiated enough to act. On June 21, 1984, the CMRI leadership formally expelled Schuckardt, citing the cumulative evidence of moral and administrative failures as incompatible with his role.[12] Schuckardt departed with a minority of approximately 100 loyalists, relocating initially to California and later Seattle, where he continued a splinter group under figures like Bishop Mary Fidelis until his death in 2006.[12] The majority of the congregation retained control of Mount St. Michael and core assets, initiating reforms to distance from Schuckardt's personal rule while preserving sedevacantist commitments.[40]

Pivarunas Era and Continuity (1989-Present)

In August 1989, Father Mark A. Pivarunas was elected Superior General of the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI), providing stable leadership following the internal divisions and expulsions of the mid-1980s.[1] Under his direction, the congregation focused on consolidating its traditional Catholic identity, adhering to pre-Vatican II doctrines, the 1917 Code of Canon Law, and the message of Fatima, while expanding sacramental and educational outreach.[1] Pivarunas, who had professed final vows in 1980 and been ordained a priest on June 27, 1985, by Bishop George J. Musey, was consecrated a bishop on September 24, 1991, by Bishop Moises Carmona at Mount St. Michael in Spokane, Washington.[18] This episcopal elevation enabled him to ordain numerous priests—over 30 reported in seminary records—and consecrate two auxiliary bishops, ensuring continuity in the apostolic succession lineage tracing to Archbishop Pierre Martin Ngô Đình Thục.[18] He also administered the sacrament of Confirmation to thousands of faithful across the United States, Mexico, Canada, New Zealand, South America, and Europe, reinforcing the group's sedevacantist mission amid broader traditionalist fragmentation.[18] The early 1990s marked organizational growth, including the relocation of the seminary from Spokane to Omaha, Nebraska, where Pivarunas founded Mater Dei Seminary and served as its rector and pastor of Mary Immaculate Church.[1] By 1992, permanent parishes were established in Omaha, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Akron, and Detroit, with the congregation servicing over 120 Mass centers worldwide by the 2020s.[1] Educational initiatives expanded with St. Michael's Academy in Spokane and Mary Immaculate Queen School in Rathdrum, Idaho; St. Joseph's Minor Seminary opened in Rathdrum in 1999 to train young candidates.[1] Religious communities grew, with over 30 sisters in three convents by the early 1990s, later adding seven more convents and a cloistered novitiate near the motherhouse; Mater Dei Seminary accommodated up to 20 seminarians.[1] Subsequent developments included the sisters' relocation to Mount St. Michael in 1996 and priests to a nearby convent, maintaining the Spokane hub.[1] In 2019, Mater Dei Seminary moved to the Iowa countryside before relocating to Rathdrum, Idaho, in 2022, where it was renamed St. Louis Marie de Montfort Seminary.[1] Pivarunas has continued as Superior General into the present, emphasizing unity among traditional Catholics through pastoral letters, international travels, and propagation efforts, with the CMRI preserving its rule and constitutions adopted in the 1986 General Chapter.[18][1]

Apostolates and Activities

Educational Initiatives

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen operates a network of traditional Catholic schools across the United States and Canada, staffed primarily by its religious sisters, with curricula integrating rigorous academics, phonics-based reading instruction at the elementary level, and comprehensive formation in Catholic doctrine and moral virtues.[41] These initiatives emphasize structured environments that foster prayer, discipline, and intellectual development, evidenced by strong standardized test outcomes, such as entire elementary classes achieving top reading proficiency levels.[41] St. Michael's Academy, the flagship K-12 institution located at Mount St. Michael in Spokane, Washington, exemplifies these efforts, offering day and boarding options for girls in grades 8-12 alongside a focus on critical thinking, fine arts, and preservation of Catholic culture through small class sizes and instruction by CMRI religious and lay faculty.[42][43] Additional academies, such as Mater Dei Academy in Omaha, Nebraska (K-12 with boarding), Mary Immaculate Queen School in Rathdrum, Idaho (K-12), and Immaculate Heart of Mary School in Colorado Springs, Colorado (K-8), extend this model regionally, prioritizing faith-centered education over secular alternatives.[43] Priestly formation constitutes another core educational apostolate, with Mater Dei Seminary in Omaha, Nebraska, providing advanced theological training for seminarians in a rural retreat setting accommodating up to 20 residents.[39] Complementing this, St. Joseph's Minor Seminary in Rathdrum, Idaho, functions as a high school boarding program for boys, combining standard academics with daily Mass, the Divine Office, and vocational discernment to cultivate priestly habits.[44][43] Overall, these programs operate in at least a dozen U.S. states and provinces, including Colorado, Florida, Michigan, and Ontario, adapting to local parish needs while upholding uniform standards of traditional catechesis.[43]

Publications and Propagation Efforts

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) maintains The Reign of Mary as its flagship quarterly magazine, published by MIQ Press to advance the group's dual mission of upholding traditional Roman Catholic doctrine and disseminating the Fatima apparitions' message. Issues contain articles, editorials, and columns addressing sedevacantist critiques of post-Vatican II changes, Marian devotion, liturgical practices, and moral teachings, with recent editions such as No. 192 (Spring 2024) emphasizing Mary's role as Mediatrix of all graces.[45] Subscriptions cost $20 annually within the United States, with options for multi-year renewals and international air mail at higher rates; back issues are available from $1 to $6 each, supporting ongoing distribution.[46] CMRI also issues specialized newsletters to document internal activities and reinforce doctrinal propagation: Adsum, a monthly from Mater Dei Seminary established in 1989; Anima Mariae, quarterly from the Sisters of Mary Immaculate Queen featuring mission updates; and The Guardian, monthly from St. Joseph Minor Seminary for vocational formation.[47] Complementing these, the Mary Immaculate Queen Center produces printed materials including papal encyclicals, doctrinal booklets, leaflets, and devotional pamphlets, alongside sales of traditional Catholic books, rosaries, and scapulars to fund and extend outreach.[47] These publications underpin CMRI's propagation efforts, particularly the Fatima Apostolate, which urges daily Rosary recitation, First Saturday reparations, and total consecration per St. Louis de Montfort's method to avert divine chastisements foretold at Fatima in 1917.[30] By editing and circulating literature that critiques modern ecclesiastical developments while advocating pre-conciliar rites and devotions, CMRI priests and sisters engage in missionary work across over 120 chapels, aiming to convert souls through written apologetics and sacramental promotion.[7]

Missionary and Parish Work

The priests of the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) conduct missionary and parish work by administering the Traditional Latin Mass, traditional sacraments, and catechesis at over 120 affiliated churches, chapels, and Mass centers worldwide, with an emphasis on preserving pre-Vatican II liturgical practices.[2] This apostolate involves both fixed parishes with regular services and traveling missions where priests visit periodically to celebrate Mass, hear confessions, and deliver sermons on traditional Catholic doctrine.[21] Brothers and sisters provide supporting roles, such as assisting in religious instruction and maintaining chapel facilities, though the primary outreach is led by the clergy.[7] In the United States, CMRI maintains 92 locations across 41 states, comprising 31 parishes with frequent daily or weekly Masses, 47 missions offering services on Sundays or holy days, and 14 dedicated chapels.[48] Prominent parishes include Mary Immaculate Queen Church in Rathdrum, Idaho, which serves as a central hub with attached schools and residences; Our Lady of the Snow Catholic Church in Denver, Colorado; and St. Joseph's Catholic Church in Detroit, Michigan, where full sacramental life is provided to parishioners.[48] Missions, such as St. Jude Mission in Daleville, Alabama, and Infant of Prague Mission in Tucson, Arizona, often operate in rented or temporary venues, relying on lay support for setup and promotion.[48] Internationally, CMRI's missionary efforts focus on sporadic visits by priests to established chapels and missions in Europe, the Americas, Asia, and Oceania, accommodating smaller communities without resident clergy.[49] In Europe, services occur twice monthly in locations like Ely, England; Airvault and Lorient, France; and Ulm, Germany, with priests such as Fr. Caleb Armour and Fr. Eugen Rissling traveling from bases in the UK or Germany.[49] Latin American missions include Capilla del Convento de San Jose in Guadalajara, Mexico, and Capilla San Jose in Cordoba, Argentina, where daily Masses are offered at select sites under bishops like Pio Espina.[49] In Asia and Oceania, outreach extends to the Chapel of the Most Holy Trinity in Las Piñas, Philippines; occasional Masses in Singapore, South Korea, and Vietnam; and weekly services in Whangarei and Auckland, New Zealand, facilitated by priests like Fr. Brendan Legg.[49] These efforts prioritize evangelization in regions with limited access to traditional rites, often coordinated through CMRI's central directory for scheduling and contact.[49]

Facilities and Operations

Principal Properties

The principal properties of the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) center on Mount St. Michael in Spokane, Washington, which serves as the organization's headquarters and primary operational hub. Acquired in December 1977 by traditional Catholics affiliated with the group to prevent its conversion to commercial use, the site comprises a nearly 1,000-acre estate originally purchased in 1881 for $2.00 per acre.[37] The core facility is a four-story Tudor-Gothic building in a "T" shape, constructed starting in 1915 with a three-story west wing added in 1929, formerly a Jesuit scholasticate from 1916 to 1968.[37] It houses the motherhouse of the Marian Sisters since 1996, following an internal exchange of facilities with the priests and brothers; St. Michael's Academy, a K-12 private school; a main chapel on the second floor for the traditional Latin Mass; an extensive library; a religious gift shop; a mail-order center; and a museum displaying historical artifacts.[1][37] Mater Dei Seminary, the CMRI's major seminary for priestly formation, operates from a property acquired in fall 2019 in the rural western Iowa countryside, approximately 50 minutes from Omaha, Nebraska.[1][23] The 10-acre site includes housing for up to 20 seminarians and provides a secluded retreat-like environment conducive to theological studies and traditional Catholic training.[1] A secondary campus, Mater Christi Seminary, supports this operation.[43] Additional key holdings include St. Joseph's Minor Seminary, established in 1999 in Rathdrum, Idaho, for younger candidates, and the relocated St. Louis de Montfort Seminary, moved to Rathdrum in 2022.[1] These properties underpin the congregation's educational and vocational apostolates, distinct from its network of over 120 mission chapels worldwide.[2]

Global Presence and Chapels

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) oversees more than 120 traditional Latin Mass centers, encompassing churches, chapels, and missions, primarily in the United States but extending to various international locations across five continents.[2] These sites are served by CMRI priests, often through regular or periodic visits, with services adhering to pre-Vatican II liturgical practices.[49] Internationally, CMRI maintains affiliations in over 20 countries outside the United States, focusing on regions with demand for sedevacantist Traditional Latin Masses. In North America, dedicated efforts include missions in Canada (Alberta, Ontario, Québec) and Mexico (Guadalajara, Tijuana).[49] South American presence centers on Argentina (Córdoba, Tucumán) and Brazil (Rio de Janeiro, Bofete), supported by local clergy such as Bishop Pio Espina and Fathers Pedro Maria and Gabriel Maria G. Rodrigues.[49] European operations span multiple nations, with Masses in the Czech Republic (Marianske Lazne, Prague), England (Ely), France (Airvault, Lorient, Chambéry), Germany (Ulm, Munich), Ireland (Dublin, Knock, Cork), Italy (Paese, Trieste), Lithuania, Russia (Moscow, St. Petersburg), and Scotland (Glasgow).[49] In Asia, chapels and occasional Masses occur in the Philippines (Las Piñas, Chapel of the Most Holy Trinity), Singapore, South Korea, and Vietnam (Saigon). Australasia features missions in Australia (Adelaide, Perth) and New Zealand (Whangarei, Auckland, New Plymouth).[49]
ContinentKey Countries and Locations
EuropeCzech Republic, England, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Russia, Scotland
North AmericaCanada (Alberta, Ontario, Québec), Mexico (Guadalajara, Tijuana)
South AmericaArgentina (Córdoba, Tucumán), Brazil (Rio de Janeiro, Bofete)
AsiaPhilippines (Las Piñas), Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam (Saigon)
AustralasiaAustralia (Adelaide, Perth), New Zealand (Whangarei, Auckland)
Many overseas chapels operate on a bimonthly or occasional basis due to reliance on traveling priests, such as Fathers Eugen Rissling, Thomas Le Gal, and Alexander Kryssov, reflecting CMRI's emphasis on propagation amid limited resident clergy abroad.[49] No formal convents or seminaries are documented internationally in current directories, with operations centered on sacramental access rather than permanent infrastructure.[49]

Controversies and Debates

Allegations Against Francis Schuckardt

In April 1984, Francis Schuckardt, then leader of the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI), faced accusations of sexual misconduct from multiple sources within the organization, including claims of homosexual acts involving seminarians. Denis Chicoine, Schuckardt's vicar general, publicly accused him of engaging in such relationships, contributing to a confrontation that escalated into Schuckardt's expulsion from the group later that year. Four former seminarians reportedly detailed instances of sexual abuse by Schuckardt, prompting internal investigations and defections among followers.[19][12][40] Additional allegations included chronic drug abuse, with reports of Schuckardt using amphetamines and appearing intoxicated or "high" during religious functions, which undermined his authority and shocked the Mount St. Michael community. Critics also charged him with financial irregularities, though specifics remained tied to the broader crisis of leadership. These claims, emerging amid growing dissent over Schuckardt's authoritarian style, led to a schism; approximately half the congregation, including key clergy like Mark Pivarunas, rejected his continued oversight.[50][17][40] Schuckardt denied the sexual and drug-related accusations, attributing them to a conspiracy orchestrated by Chicoine and others seeking to usurp control of the congregation and its assets. Supporters later acknowledged that some instances of misconduct occurred but framed them as lapses influenced by Schuckardt's health issues and spiritual battles, without conceding systemic abuse. No criminal charges were filed against him, and the allegations remained internal to the sedevacantist milieu, lacking external adjudication; however, they irrevocably fractured the group, with Schuckardt forming a separate faction before his death in 2008.[16][34]

Critiques of Sedevacantism from Mainstream Perspectives

Mainstream Catholic apologists, including those affiliated with organizations like Catholic Answers, argue that sedevacantism contradicts the doctrine of the Church's indefectibility, which holds that the Church, as founded by Christ, cannot fail in its essential mission or lack a visible hierarchical structure for an extended period.[51] This position posits that a papal vacancy lasting over 60 years—since the death of Pius XII in 1958—would represent a profound defect, undermining Christ's promise in Matthew 16:18 that "the gates of hell shall not prevail" against the Church, as interpreted in Vatican I's Pastor Aeternus (1870), which affirms the perpetual succession of the Roman Pontiffs.[52] Sedevacantists' claim of formal heresy by post-Vatican II popes is seen as incompatible with this, since a true pope cannot promulgate heresy ex cathedra, and even personal errors do not automatically invalidate election or office under canon law principles like those in Cum ex Apostolatus Officio (1559), which require formal declaration by competent authority rather than private judgment.[53] Critics further contend that sedevacantism misapplies papal infallibility by conflating a pope's personal impeccability with his magisterial protection, ignoring that popes like Honorius I (d. 638) were condemned for negligence in combating heresy but not deposed ipso facto without conciliar action.[54] Theologians such as Jimmy Akin emphasize that sedevacantist interpretations rely on a novel, rigorist view of heresy that lacks historical precedent in the Church's handling of papal disputes, such as during the Great Western Schism (1378–1417), where parallel claimants existed but the see was not deemed perpetually vacant.[51] This approach, they argue, elevates individual discernment over the Church's corporate judgment, fostering schism and contradicting the visibility of the Church as a juridically structured society with apostolic succession, as defined in Vatican I and echoed in modern catechisms.[55] Practically, mainstream perspectives highlight the absence of any legitimate mechanism for electing a new pope under sedevacantist premises, as the position rejects the validity of post-1958 bishops and cardinals needed for a conclave, per Universi Dominici Gregis (1996) norms adapted from earlier codes.[56] Without such authority, sedevacantist groups lack divine mandate to resolve the crisis, rendering their stance self-defeating and akin to Protestant private judgment, as noted by apologists like Trent Horn in rebuttals to figures such as the Dimond Brothers.[53] The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has implicitly addressed similar dissent through documents like Ad Tuendam Fidem (1998), which classifies denial of papal authority as dissent from definitive teachings, though it does not name sedevacantism explicitly, underscoring the Church's preference for fraternal correction over automatic nullification of office.[52] These critiques portray sedevacantism not as a valid theological option but as a peril to unity, with empirical evidence in the fragmentation of sedevacantist factions—evident since the 1970s—demonstrating causal instability absent a recognized supreme authority.[55]

Internal Schisms, Departures, and Responses

In 1984, the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) experienced a significant internal division when its founder, Francis Schuckardt, was confronted by several priests over allegations of drug abuse and sexual immorality, leading to his departure with a small group of followers.[17][40] The remaining members reorganized the congregation, with Fr. Denis Chicoine serving as Superior General from 1985 to 1989, followed by Fr. Tarcisius Pivarunas, who was consecrated a bishop in 1991 by Bishop Moises Carmona.[17] Schuckardt continued leading a separate faction until his death in 2006, with both groups viewing the other as schismatic due to the lack of a recognized superior authority in their sedevacantist framework.[38] The CMRI responded to the split by seeking conditional re-ordination of its priests from Bishop George J. Musey in April 1985 to address doubts about the validity of orders received under Schuckardt's leadership, which had involved consecration by an Old Catholic bishop.[17] This reorganization stabilized the group, enabling it to formalize its statutes in a 1986 General Chapter and expand its missions, seminaries, and publications while adhering to its sedevacantist position.[1] Another notable departure occurred in June 2007, when 15 sisters from the CMRI's Spokane motherhouse left amid theological disagreements, primarily their rejection of sedevacantism in favor of recognizing Pope Benedict XVI as the legitimate pontiff.[19][57] The sisters, led by Sister Mary Eucharista, were effectively expelled or chose to depart, forming a new community under the Diocese of Spokane with Bishop William Skylstad's approval, and they subsequently reconciled with the Roman Catholic Church.[58][59] The CMRI's response emphasized fidelity to its doctrinal stance, portraying the nuns' exit as a deviation from true Catholicism, and the congregation continued its operations without reported further fragmentation on that issue, maintaining over 120 chapels and missions.[2] No additional major internal schisms have been documented since, though the group has faced ongoing critiques from both mainstream Catholic and other traditionalist perspectives regarding its isolationist practices post-Schuckardt.[19]

References

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