Jean Vuaillat (1915–2009) was a French Roman Catholic priest, poet and biographer. He served as a priest in
Lyon as well as small towns in the
Loire and
Rhône regions until he became a
canon at the
Lyon Cathedral in 1982. He published many poetry collections and several biographies. He won five literary prizes from the
Académie française.
Vuaillat was ordained as a Roman Catholic priest in 1940.[1][2] He served as a
vicar in
Givors near Lyon, and later at the
Église Saint-Pierre de Vaise in Lyon.[2] In the midst of
World War II, in 1943, he served as a vicar to the Catholic youth in the
Service du travail obligatoire in Germany.[2] He subsequently published an account of his service in Poland entitled Ma vie en Pologne sous le IIIème Reich. At the end of the war, in 1945, he became the director of the Catholic school in
Fourvière.[2]
Vuaillat was the founder and editor of Laudes, a journal, from 1967 to 2006.[2]
Vuaillat published many poetry collections.[3] He won five literary prizes from the
Académie française: the Prix Véga et Lods de Wegmann for Solitude de neige in 1966; the Prix Archon-Despérouses for Douze psaumes in 1970; the Prix Marie Havez-Planque for Apprivoiser la mort in 1976; the Prix Capuran for Mariales et signets pour Noël in 1980; and the Prix François Coppée for Ciels d’arrière-saison in 1996.[4]
Aside from poetry, Vuaillat authored the biographies of Saint
Philip Neri as well as missionaries
Jean-Pierre Néel and Benoît Berthet. He also published the biographies of composers
Mozart and
Gabriel Fauré.
Vuaillat was a significant book collector.[2] He maintained a correspondence with
Léopold Sédar Senghor, among many others.[2]