“There have been many tears, and much sadness,” Sr. Brewer, vice chair of the board of trustees of the Seton Healthcare Family in Austin, said. “There have also been some fears: What is going to happen? What will we do without the Daughters? Will Seton remain Catholic? Will we keep our mission …our focus on persons who are poor?” She said Seton’s leaders have reassured those concerned, that Seton will remain Catholic and will continue the sisters’ legacy.
This statement from an article on the website of the Catholic Health Association of America has been echoed many times in 10 cities over recent months.
Daughters of Charity sisters who are part of the Province of St. Louise will withdraw from 10 of the 70-plus cities the congregation serves. The transition will free up nearly 50 of the congregation’s 512 sisters to serve in other cities where the province is identifying pressing unmet needs.
By relocating sisters to communities with fledgling ministries from locations with well-grounded ministries and sponsored works where the sisters have prepared the laity to carry on their charism, the Daughters of Charity, “will be closer to where the needs are,” said Sr. Louise Gallahue, DC, provincial of the Province of St. Louise, based in St. Louis.
She likened the transition to the pruning of the vine described in Scripture. “This is needed to create new life — we are withdrawing” from some ministries to establish or grow others.
Within a year, Daughters of Charity will depart from:
- Austin, Texas
- Birmingham, Ala.
- Bridgeport, Conn.
- Buffalo, N.Y.
- East Brunswick, N.J.
- Indianapolis and Lafayette, Ind.
- Jacksonville, Fla.
- Martinsburg, W.Va.
- Nashville, Tenn.
Sisters in these cities serve in ministries including health care, social services, education, prison ministry, immigrant services, parish ministry and social justice advocacy. In many of the cities, the sisters serve at health care facilities that are part of St. Louis-based Ascension Health. The province now known as the Daughters of Charity, Province of St. Louise, is one of Ascension Health’s founding sponsors.
Visit a photo slideshow to see more on the Daughters of Charity history.
Specific details are not yet available about which sisters are heading where, Sr. Gallahue said. “The council will work with each transitioning Daughter of Charity to determine her future mission, always keeping the service to those living in greatest poverty in mind,” said Sr. Gallahue. The new and existing ministries benefiting from the transfers may be in health care and social service. They may be in areas of heightened focus for the province, including helping immigrants and engaging in anti-human trafficking efforts. The new ministries may be in the U.S. or abroad.
St. Vincent de Paul, one of the Daughters of Charity’s founders, said “we should be active and mobile,” responding to needs, said Sr. Gallahue. “We want to be open to what’s new in terms of priorities. We want to think more globally and more broadly” of how to serve the poor and vulnerable.
She said new areas of ministry may be in places “where no one else wants to go” such as in poor, rural areas. And the sisters likely will go where they have affiliated ministries or partners, such as communities where there is a Society of St. Vincent de Paul local conference or Vincentian priest presence.
Sr. Gallahue, Sr. Brewer and Sr. Dinah White, DC, agree that in the cities the sisters are leaving, the laity in the various ministries have been preparing for the day the sisters would no longer be present. Sr. White, DC, advisor to the president of St. Vincent’s Health System in Birmingham, an Ascension Health member system, said of her colleagues there, “They’ll do fine, they’re a committed and passionate group of people.”
Ascension Health and its hospitals formally instruct lay leaders and staff in Catholic social teaching, the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services and other aspects of Catholic ministry. There are two-year formation programs for senior leaders and middle managers and reflection activities for all associates both at the system level and local level.
The Daughters’ legacy of caring is a treasure that the sisters want to entrust to those with a true appreciation of its value, Sr. White said. She added that the laity “see the great trust we’re giving them, in giving them this treasure.”
More details on the website of the Catholic Health Association of America
Tags: Daughters of Charity, Gallahue
Well said! Only one idea is omitted: in each of the cities listed, I would bet big-time, that there are living some one or more Former Daughters, who, like the Marines (once a Marine, always a Marine) never forget their training and their goals in life. Sure, they may be married, or focused on other points of service, but they are there. I am sure of it. It is one reason I am so grateful for this FAMVIN website/listserv. Those who worry ought instead to issue a proclamation asking for those Former Daughters to come, to help, to serve–even if only part-time or just sometime. There is no such city that does not have at least one person or more connected still to the Daughters. Or so I think. gh
Well said! Only one idea is omitted: in each of the cities listed, I would bet big-time, that there are living some one or more Former Daughters, who, like the Marines (once a Marine, always a Marine) never forget their training and their goals in life. Sure, they may be married, or focused on other points of service, but they are there. I am sure of it. It is one reason I am so grateful for this FAMVIN website/listserv. Those who worry ought instead to issue a proclamation asking for those Former Daughters to come, to help, to serve–even if only part-time or just sometime. There is no such city that does not have at least one person or more connected still to the Daughters. Or so I think. gh