4 nuns keep Greek Orthodox convent going with help of beeswax, baking and beauty products - Action News
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Toronto

4 nuns keep Greek Orthodox convent going with help of beeswax, baking and beauty products

A mere 50 km north of the sprawling Greater Toronto Area lies a small Greek Orthodox convent that runs on the devotion and elbow grease of just four nuns, who keep it going with a cottage industry that turns out beeswax candles, baked goods and custom-sewn vestments.

Nuns run small industry while living a monastic life on outskirts of Toronto

Mother Magdalene in chapel at convent lighting beeswax tapers that they make at the convent - candle is the only source of light in the chapel as there is no electricity. (Maureen Brosnahan/CBC)

The four nuns who make up the Holy Theotokos Convent, about 50 kmnorth ofToronto, thrive on beeswax, baked goods and some sewing on the side.

Their convent, tucked into 20 acres of picturesque rolling hills just north of Stouffville, Ont., isa step back into a simpler, more traditional time. There is no TV and no radio.

The convent is tucked away on 20 acres of picturesque rolling hills in Cedar Valley, north of Stouffville, Ont. (Maureen Brosnahan/CBC)

The women,ranging in age from 45 to 72, dress in traditional black habits, including veils. They consider themselvessemi-cloistered, and their days are filled with prayer, traditional services and work.

Once you come in, you just feel like you've left everything else behind.- Sister Irene

"Once you come in, you just feel like you've left everything else behind, and you're just in thisquiet place,"said Sister Irene, 45, a RyersonUniversitygraduate in tourism and hospitality who grew up inToronto. She has been a Greek Orthodox nun for 20 years.

The women welcome visitors and do access the internet. It's a modern necessity, according to Mother Magdalene, who has a business degree and oversees the community. Their candleoperation, Joyous Light, uses only 100 per cent beeswax and supplies all varieties of candles tothe public and churches throughout the Greater Toronto Area.

That, along with a line of all-natural cosmetics and cremes, called Nun Better,pays the bills and allows them to be self-sufficient, although they do get some donations and support from theirmother convent inBoston.

The nuns keep their convent going by selling beeswax candles, baked goods and doing some sewing on the side. (Maureen Brosnahan)

Sister Irene acknowledges the irony of nuns selling body products. "But it's needed,"shesays, laughing. "You always need some kind of soap, some kind of moisturizing bar. With the bakingand the candles, our hands do get wear and tear,and so we do appreciate a nice cream and wedo use it ourselves."

Moved from Boston 14 years ago

The nuns, all originally from Canada, came to the area in 2001 after their mother convent inBoston ran out of room and the community decided to expand. The Greek Orthodox Church has only one order of nuns, and prior to 2001, their only North American convents were in Boston and Seattle.

"We were looking for properties,and we had come up from Boston. We had seen a few different properties, but none of themreally fit," said Mother Magdalene.

Their real estate agent suggestedchecking out the site in Cedar Valley, a former retreat centre for auto parts manufacturerMagna International. Itwasn't yet on the market. "We drove by, and without even seeing it all, we said 'This is it,'" said Mother Magdalene.

The site includes a main convent building, above, and an adjacent candle-making facility. The nuns also maintain the grounds, cutting trees and grass in summer, plowing paths and roads in winter and tending to natural spring-fed ponds stocked with fish. (Maureen Brosnahan/CBC)

Their candle factory is located in a building adjacent to the convent. It operates daily as the nuns,with occasional help from volunteers, churn out tens of thousands of candles each yeartapers,votives, pillars and novelty shapes. They go through more than 20,000 kilograms ofbeeswax annually, which they purchase from beekeepers across Canada.

"The bee is just an amazing creature, and the beeswax is such a beautiful product," MotherMagdalene said. "As it burns, it's also very healthy as well, it takes out the negative ions in thearea, prevents allergies and promotes better sleep. These are very clean, don't create soot anddon't blacken the walls."

Sister Irene added that they also use the waste candle wicks and wax to make small fire-starterlogs, which they also sell. "They're about three inches long, and all you do is light one end of them,and it slowly burns and lights your fire," she said. "We don't throw away pretty much anything atall."

Echoes ofGreek and Russian Orthodox churches

Inside the convent, the walls are covered with elaborate artwork, hand carvings, painting andiconography, much of it imported from Greece and Russia. The chapel has no artificial light, andthe nuns and clergy conduct their services by candle light. The dining and living areas have manylarge and open windows that overlook the rural landscape.

Sister Irene, left, and Mother Magdalene are two of four nuns who live on the property. (Maureen Brosnahan/CBC)

Their days begin with chanting and prayers, in elaborate services sometimes lasting two hours.Visiting clergy are often welcomed, but men and women sit and eat separately. Music and soundis piped throughout the building. Apart from cooking, sewing and candle-making, the nuns runtheir own errands and visit the sick in local hospitals.

The nuns also maintain the grounds, including the natural spring-fed ponds stocked with fish.They cut trees and grass in summer and plow the paths and roads in winter. Mother Magdalenesaid she is often up before dawn in the winter months, manoeuvring her large Ford F150 truckwith its front plow.

"It keeps us fit, that's for sure," she said.

Baking draws the neighbours

In addition to making candles and body products, the nuns also sew elaborate custom vestmentsfor Eastern Orthodox priests and sell Greek wedding, baptismal and religious books and items.

"It's a pretty big demand. We have some people who want things done for Christmas, and we'realready starting into Easter season if you can believe it," said Mother Magdalene.

The site of the convent used to be a retreat for Magna International before the nuns moved in in 2001. 'We drove by, and without even seeing it all, we said "This is it,"' said Mother Magdalene. (Maureen Brosnahan/CBC)

But Sister Irene says it's their baking traditional sweetbreads, cookies and confections thatdraw in the neighbours.

"When we're baking bread, you can smell it all over the neighbourhood,"she said.

She acknowledges that monastic life is not for everyone. "It's a hard decision. You kind of give upa lot, so it's not the most popular choice for people nowadays."

But she said she's happy with her choice and doesn't miss much despite being somewhat detachedfrom the outside world.

"I think our days are so full and so busy. I don't think we'd have the timefor it even if we wanted it."