The inauguration ceremony for the training and community center, which bears the name of the woman who initiated the first Mérieux Foundation mission to Madagascar in 2006, was attended by Alain Mérieux, the Mérieux Foundation’s President, and its Director General, Benoît Miribel.
The building is currently undergoing refurbishment, with support from the Mérieux Foundation. The building had stood empty for many years. It should open its doors next April, when it will be home to:
- Student accommodations, as the “Maison” is located in the vicinity of Antananarivo University,
- A space for training and retreats, managed by the Chemin Neuf Community of Madagascar, which will offer spiritual and ethical training,
- The Mission house for the Chemin Neuf Community of Madagascar, an ecumenical Catholic community in which Bénédicte and Antoine, her husband, were involved.
The “Maison” will now be known as “Maison Bénédicte”, in honor of Bénédicte Contamin who passed away on August 21, 2015 following a battle with cancer, after devoting her life to caring for the most vulnerable members of society.
Bénédicte was the Mérieux Foundation’s Regional Manager for the Indian Ocean, a post based in Madagascar. She was a specialist in internal medicine and infectious and tropical diseases. Her achievements include overseeing the creation of the Charles Mérieux Center for Infectious Disease in 2010 with the support of Fondation Christophe et Rodolphe Mérieux.
At the inauguration event for the center, her husband, Antoine Contamin expressed the wish that the “Maison Bénédicte” should be a place where young people can learn and work towards the common good for the country. Antoine Contamin, who is also a doctor, has been working with the Mérieux Foundation since late January, managing the Mother and Child initiatives.
The Mérieux Foundation in Madagascar in brief
In the past ten years, seven laboratories in Madagascar have been rehabilitated thanks to support from the Mérieux Foundation. The foundation also offers technical support for the creation of a network of public hospital laboratories (RESAMAD). A pharmacy course, the first of its kind in the Indian Ocean, was also launched in 2006 to bolster hospital pharmacy capacities.
The foundation also built the Charles Mérieux Center for Infectious Disease in Antananarivo University, home to a Rodolphe Mérieux Laboratory, a BSL-2 level facility specializing in molecular diagnostics, a practical exercise room, and a conference room.
Bénédicte Contamin was also instrumental in the foundation’s support of several local charities in Madagascar, like Akamasoa (“the good friends”) of Father Pedro Opeka, which fights against poverty.
Learn more about the life and work of Bénédicte Contamin with the foundation
Learn more about what the Mérieux Foundation does in Madagascar