In 1860, a young French priest named Antoine Chevrier purchased an abandoned ballroom in one of Lyon's poorest neighborhoods and turned it into a shelter for street children. But the building had a history --- built by working people for working people, emptied as industrialization ground them down --- and Chevrier understood that what he was doing was not charity. It was restitution. This is the story of a man who looked at the poor not as recipients of his generosity but as the very place where the divine was already present, and who gave everything he had to act accordingly.
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