Assembly 2023 – Asamblea 2023 Sisters of Mercy of Newfoundland

The Sisters of Mercy of Newfoundland have just completed an Assembly, August 21- 23.  The theme of the Assembly was “Mercying Together into the Future.” 

Most of the sessions were held by Zoom to accommodate sisters living in Peru and Ontario.    On August 21 we invited the whole Congregation (67 of us- more than half already living there – to the Residence at Littledale, 3rd floor) for prayer and socialization.  That was the opening of our Assembly. This was the first time we have met together since our last Assembly in 2019.

The next day we gathered via Zoom, with Sr. Catalina Wims, rsm in Ireland to translate Spanish and M. Guy Richard, an employee of the Sisters of Providence in Montreal, Quebec as our Zoom technician.   Our meetings were facilitated by Ms.  Anne Walsh, a Newfoundland “mercy person” who works mainly with the Redemptorists and the Archdiocese of St. John’s.   Our Assembly takes place midway between our Chapters and provides opportunity for the whole Congregation to pray, reflect and converse about the life and mission of the Congregation in its response to our Chapter directions.

Special guests, Margaret Endicott, rsm,  Linda Haydock, snjm, were part of two sessions related to ministry and governance.  Our own, Elizabeth Davis facilitated a session regarding a new legal entity that will eventually govern and manage our various ministries.  In the afternoon of the first day we spent contemplative time viewing a presentation in remembrance of all of our Sisters and Associates who had died.

On August 22 over 60 of us, took part in a beautiful turkey dinner in the main dining room at The Residence at Littledale, where many of our sisters live.  We enjoyed a celebratory cake served as dessert.  This gave us another opportunity to be together in the one room!  We had five sisters among us celebrating their jubilees: Sisters Theresa March and Joan Gosse celebrated 70 years and Sisters Helen Harding, Sylvia Doyle and Rona O’Gorman celebrated 60 years – a grand total of 320 years!

The days were rich and full and we enjoyed a wonderful spirit of interest, engagement, celebration and gratitude.  We look forward to ongoing efforts to carry the mandate of our 2021 Chapter forward and prepare for our next Chapter in 2025!

Sister Diane welcomes the Sisters to the Assembly. <> La Hermana Diane da la bienvenida a las Hermanas a la Asamblea
Ms. Anne Walsh leads the prayer to open the Assembly. <> La Sra. Anne Walsh dirige la oración de apertura de la Asamblea
Some of the Sisters join in the Opening Prayer. <> Algunas Hermanas participan en la oración de apertura.
Some of the Sisters join in the Opening Prayer. <> Algunas Hermanas participan en la oración de apertura
Some of the Sisters at the Assembly.<> Algunas de las Hermanas en la Asamblea
Some of the Sisters at the Assembly.<> Algunas de las Hermanas en la Asamblea.
Sr. Rona O’Gorman prepared to cut the cake. Maurizio, chef at The Residence at Littledale, and Sr. Diane supervise!<> La Hermana Rona O'Gorman se prepara para cortar la tarta. ¡Maurizio, chef de The Residence at Littledale y la Hna. Diane supervisan!
L-R: Sisters Rona O’Gorman, Sylvia Doyle and Helen Harding celebrate 60 Years.<> L-R: Las Hermanas Rona O'Gorman, Sylvia Doyle y Helen Harding celebran 60 Años.
Sisters Theresa March and Joan Gosse celebrate 70 years. <> Las Hermanas Theresa March y Joan Gosse. celebran 70 años
Music while waiting for Dinner. <> Música mientras se espera la cena.
The dietary staff at the Residence with Sisters Rosa and Verna. El personal dietético de la Residencia con las Hermanas Rosa y Verna

 

Las Hermanas de la Misericordia de Terranova acaban de terminar una Asamblea, del 21 al 23 de agosto. El tema de la Asamblea fue “Mercying Together into the Future“.

La mayoría de las sesiones se realizaron por Zoom para acomodar a las hermanas que viven en Perú y Ontario. El 21 de agosto invitamos a toda la Congregación (67 de nosotras – más de la mitad ya viviendo allí – a la Residencia en Littledale, 3er piso) para la oración y la socialización. Esa fue la apertura de nuestra Asamblea. Era la primera vez que nos reuníamos desde nuestra última Asamblea en 2019.

Al día siguiente nos reunimos a través de Zoom, con la Hna. Catalina Wims, rsm en Irlanda para traducir al español y M. Guy Richard, un empleado de las Hermanas de la Providencia en Montreal, Quebec como nuestro técnico de Zoom. Nuestras reuniones fueron facilitadas por la Sra. Anne Walsh, una “persona de la misericordia” de Terranova que trabaja principalmente con los Redentoristas y la Archidiócesis de St. Nuestra Asamblea tiene lugar a medio camino entre nuestros Capítulos y ofrece a toda la Congregación la oportunidad de orar, reflexionar y conversar sobre la vida y la misión de la Congregación en su respuesta a las orientaciones de nuestro Capítulo.

Invitados especiales, Margaret Endicott, rsm, Linda Haydock, snjm, formaron parte de dos sesiones relacionadas con el ministerio y el gobierno. Nuestra Elizabeth Davis dirigió una sesión sobre la nueva entidad jurídica que regirá y gestionará nuestros distintos ministerios. Por la tarde del primer día pasamos un tiempo contemplativo viendo una presentación en recuerdo de todas nuestras Hermanas y Asociados fallecidos.

El 22 de agosto, más de 60 de nosotras, participamos en una hermosa cena de pavo en el comedor principal de The Residence at Littledale, donde viven muchas de nuestras hermanas. Disfrutamos de un pastel de celebración servido como postre. Esto nos dio otra oportunidad de estar juntas en la misma habitación. Cinco hermanas celebraron su jubileo: Las Hermanas Theresa March y Joan Gosse celebraron 70 años y las Hermanas Helen Harding, Sylvia Doyle y Rona O’Gorman celebraron 60 años – ¡un gran total de 320 años!

Los días fueron ricos y llenos y disfrutamos de un maravilloso espíritu de interés, compromiso, celebración y gratitud. Esperamos seguir esforzándonos para llevar adelante el mandato de nuestro Capítulo 2021 y prepararnos para nuestro próximo Capítulo en 2025.

Mercy’s Legacy

I recently attended a ceremony that truly marked the end of an era – the closing of St. Clare’s Mercy Convent. Its history began 102 years ago, as St. Clare’s Home for Working Girls and was the first location of St. Clare’s Mercy Hospital.

Sisters who lived in St. Clare’s Mercy Convent in recent years:
Front row (l-r): Sister Marie Etheridge, Sister Jane McGrath, Sister Marian Grace Manning, and Sister Madonna O’Neill
Back Row, left to right: Sister Brenda Lacey, Sister Elizabeth Davis and Sister Madonna Gatherall

Over the years, 92 Sisters of Mercy called it home.

In her emotional remarks during the recent closing ceremony, one of its former residents, Sister Elizabeth Davis, reminisced: “It is a holy space which has seen and heard joy and laughter, music and dancing, pain and tears, anger and gentleness, fear and hope, dreams and promise.”

But the Sisters have left their mark on face of health care delivery in this province.

Sister Elizabeth believes it’s a lasting legacy. “While the physical convent may be gone, we have far more than the memories of the place and of the women who once called it home.”

We have the energy that flows from the spirit of mercy that lived in the convent and now lives forever in this hospital and in our world.

Read the complete article here

Remembering Our Newfoundland Story 9: Death of Sister M. Perpetua O’Callaghan

Sarah O’Callaghan, born in Ireland in 1877, is one of the leading lights in Mercy educational history in Newfoundland.

In 1903 her brother Daniel wrote the bishop of St. John’s, Michael Francis Howley expressing his desire to enter the priesthood and serve in his diocese. In that letter he spoke glowingly of his sister Sarah, noting thatshe was “an accomplished scholar” who was hoping to join the Presentation Sisters in Newfoundland. Bishop Howley was more interested in Sarah than in Daniel, seeing her as a promising candidate for the furtherance of the educational plans for his diocese.

At this time St. Bride’s College, Littledale, established in 1884 by the Sisters of Mercy as a boarding school for young women interested in the teaching profession, was becoming increasingly important in the educational and cultural life of Newfoundland. The need for highly qualified teachers for Littledale was a constant concern for the bishop. Consequently, he was quick to welcome Sarah to the diocese, not for the Presentation Sisters but for the Sisters of Mercy.

Sarah arrived in St. John’s in the Fall of 1903, entered the Sisters of Mercy, was received as Sister M. Perpetua and while still a novice was named headmistress of Littledale. Under her wise and competent guidance, Littledale flourished and in 1917 it was raised to the status of a college.

After seventeen years of intense involvement in the life and growth of her beloved Littledale, Sister M. Perpetua was ready for a change. She went to Fordham University in New York, where in 1923 she was awarded the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, the first Sister of Mercy of Newfoundland to receive this distinction. Upon her return to St. John’s she served in a number of positions, including Mistress of Novices. She died at the age of 56 years at St. Bride’s Convent on August 22, 1933, with her brother, Father Dan at her bedside.

Sister Mary Perpetua was a faithful and zealous Sister of Mercy, a woman of extraordinary talent and energy, a great teacher and mentor and a tireless advocate for the cause of education.

Sarah O’Callaghan, nacida en Irlanda en 1877, es una de las figuras más destacadas de la historia educativa de la Misericordia en Terranova.

En 1903, su hermano Daniel escribió al obispo de St. John’s, Michael Francis Howley, expresando su deseo de entrar en el sacerdocio y servir en su diócesis. En esa carta hablaba elogiosamente de su hermana Sarah, señalando que era “una erudita consumada” que esperaba unirse a las Hermanas de la Presentación en Terranova. El obispo Howley estaba más interesado en Sarah que en Daniel, pues la veía como una candidata prometedora para llevar adelante los planes educativos de su diócesis.

Bride’s College, Littledale, fundado en 1884 por las Hermanas de la Misericordia como internado para mujeres jóvenes interesadas en la profesión docente, adquiría cada vez más importancia en la vida educativa y cultural de Terranova. La necesidad de profesoras altamente cualificadas para Littledale era una preocupación constante para el obispo. En consecuencia, se apresuró a acoger a Sarah en la diócesis, no para las Hermanas de la Presentación, sino para las Hermanas de la Misericordia.

Sarah llegó a St. John’s en el otoño de 1903, ingresó en las Hermanas de la Misericordia, fue recibida como Hermana M. Perpetua y, siendo todavía novicia, fue nombrada directora de Littledale. Bajo su sabia y competente dirección, Littledale floreció y en 1917 fue elevado a la categoría de colegio.

Después de diecisiete años de intensa participación en la vida y el crecimiento de su querida Littledale, la Hermana M. Perpetua estaba lista para un cambio.
Fue a la Universidad de Fordham en Nueva York, donde en 1923 obtuvo el título de Doctora en Filosofía, siendo la primera Hermana de la Misericordia de Terranova en recibir esta distinción.A su regreso a St. John’s desempeñó diversos cargos, entre ellos el de maestra de novicias.Murió a la edad de 56 años en el convento de Santa Novia el 22 de agosto de 1933, con su hermano, el padre Dan, a su cabecera.

Sor Mary Perpetua fue una fiel y celosa Hermana de la Misericordia, una mujer de extraordinario talento y energía, una gran maestra y mentora y una incansable defensora de la causa de la educación.

Remembering Our Newfoundland Mercy Story 8: Sandy Point Foundation

Sandy Point was a peninsula connected to the mainland at Flat Bay until the 1940s when coastal erosion made it an island. Through the 1800s it was the hub of the Bay St. George fishery and the largest year-round community on Newfoundland’s west coast, but its prominence decreased with the completion of the trans-island railway in 1897.

Photo of Sandy Point by Lloyd Pretty

It was here in this bustling but undeveloped settlement of Sandy Point that a historic event occurred 130 years ago. On July 28, 1893 four Sisters of Mercy arrived by ship from Providence, Rhode Island to establish a Convent of Mercy and a school in mission territory far removed from the advantaged life they had lived in the United States. The incredible story of their coming and their staying is a testament to the amazing mystery of God’s call and human response.

This prayer facilitates reflection on this special anniversary and will provide another opportunity to express gratitude to and for the Mercy women who have gone before us.

More about the story of the Sandy Point Foundation
Mary Antonio Egan, Founder of the First Convent of Mercy on the west coast of Newfoundland 

Celebration of Foundation at Sandy Point (2011)
120th Anniversary of Foundation at Sandy Point (2013)
Anniversary of the Founding of Mercy on West Coast of Newfoundland (2022)

 

Sandy Point fue una península unida a tierra firme por Flat Bay hasta los años 40, cuando la erosión costera la convirtió en isla. Durante el siglo XIX fue el centro de la pesquería de Bay St. George y la mayor comunidad de la costa oeste de Terranova, pero su importancia disminuyó con la construcción del ferrocarril transinsular en 1897.

Fue aquí, en este bullicioso pero poco desarrollado asentamiento de Sandy Point, donde se produjo un acontecimiento histórico hace 130 años. El 28 de julio de 1893, cuatro Hermanas de la Misericordia llegaron en barco desde Providence, Rhode Island, para establecer un Convento de la Misericordia y una escuela en un territorio de misión muy alejado de la vida acomodada que habían llevado en Estados Unidos. La increíble historia de su llegada y de su permanencia es un testimonio del asombroso misterio de la llamada de Dios y de la respuesta humana.

Esta oración facilita la reflexión en este aniversario tan especial y proporcionará otra oportunidad para expresar gratitud a y por las mujeres de la Misericordia que nos han precedido.

Más sobre la historia de la Fundación Sandy Point

Celebración de la Fundación en Sandy Point (2011)
120 aniversario de la Fundación en Sandy Point, Terranova (2013)
Aniversario de la fundación de Mercy en la costa oeste de Terranova (2022)

Remembering with Gratitude: Sr Mary Francis Creedon

On July 15 we remember with gratitude our Newfoundland Mercy foundress, Sister Mary Francis Creedon, who died on this day in 1855 at the age of 44 years.

Francis was, in the words of Sister Kathrine Bellamy “The Steadfast Woman,” a woman who trusted, loved and lived in the midst of seemingly insurmountable difficulties, setbacks, conflict, loss and suffering, as well as in the joys of loving companionship, shared hopes and dedicated service.

Francis was a newly professed sister living at Baggot Street when Catherine McAuley died in November of 1841. She was among the sisters named in the codicil of Catherine’s will, charged with the preservation of the charism of Mercy. This awesome trust Francis took to heart, as was evident in her whole-hearted embrace of the mission of Mercy to the people of St.  John’s. In the late 1840s and early 1850s she and her sisters became familiar figures in the lanes and alleyways of St. John’s, bringing food, comfort and hope to people, many of whom lived in deplorable poverty and wretchedness.

By the Spring of 1855 the struggles and hardships of the early days of the mission, school responsibilities, regular visitation of the sick even in times of epidemics, instruction of young women who were entering the Order, opening an orphanage and an infirmary to care for sick orphans at Mercy Convent all began to take a toll on Francis’ health. However, on July 2, less than two weeks before her death, she presided at a ceremony for the reception of Anastasia Tarrahan, the first Newfoundland-born woman to enter the community.

When Francis died on July 15, only four young sisters, one of them a novice, were left to carry on the mission. Undoubtedly inspired by her spirit and example, they created a legacy of compassion, commitment and courage that has characterized our congregation to this day. For this, we are grateful to Francis Creedon and to all our foremothers in Mercy. Having received Mercy, Francis did indeed become Mercy. This is our call, our challenge, our gift…

  • Read more Sisters stories documenting our Newfoundland Mercy Story

El 15 de julio recordamos con gratitud a nuestra fundadora de la Misericordia de Terranova, la Hermana Mary Francis Creedon, que murió un día como hoy en 1855 a la edad de 44 años.

Francis fue, en palabras de la Hermana Kathrine Bellamy “La Mujer Firme”, una mujer que confió, amó y vivió en medio de dificultades aparentemente insuperables, contratiempos, conflictos, pérdidas y sufrimientos, así como en las alegrías del compañerismo amoroso, las esperanzas compartidas y el servicio dedicado.

Francis era una hermana recién profesa que vivía en Baggot Street cuando Catherine McAuley murió en noviembre de 1841. Estaba entre las hermanas nombradas en el codicilo del testamento de Catalina, encargadas de preservar el carisma de la Misericordia. Francisco se tomó muy a pecho este impresionante encargo, como quedó patente en su adhesión incondicional a la misión de la Misericordia para el pueblo de San Juan. A finales de la década de 1840 y principios de la de 1850, ella y sus hermanas se convirtieron en figuras familiares en las callejuelas y callejones de St. John’s, llevando comida, consuelo y esperanza a las personas, muchas de las cuales vivían en una pobreza y miseria deplorables.

En la primavera de 1855, las luchas y penurias de los primeros días de la misión, las responsabilidades escolares, las visitas regulares a los enfermos incluso en tiempos de epidemias, la instrucción de las jóvenes que ingresaban en la Orden, la apertura de un orfanato y de una enfermería para atender a los huérfanos enfermos en el Convento de la Misericordia empezaron a hacer mella en la salud de Francis. Sin embargo, el 2 de julio, menos de dos semanas antes de su muerte, presidió una ceremonia para la recepción de Anastasia Tarrahan, la primera mujer nacida en Terranova que ingresaba en la comunidad.

A la muerte de Francisco, el 15 de julio, sólo quedaban cuatro hermanas jóvenes, una de ellas novicia, para continuar la misión. Inspiradas sin duda por su espíritu y su ejemplo, crearon un legado de compasión, compromiso y valentía que ha caracterizado a nuestra congregación hasta nuestros días. Por ello, estamos agradecidas a Francis Creedon y a todas nuestras antecesoras en la Misericordia. Habiendo recibido Misericordia, Francisco se convirtió en Misericordia. Esta es nuestra llamada, nuestro reto, nuestro regalo…

Elizabeth Davis, RSM to Participate in the Synod

Sister Elizabeth Davis has been selected to participate in the General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops to be held in Rome in October. Delegates representing bishops, priests, religious and laypeople from around the world will be present at the October session.

Sister Elizabeth was nominated through the Union of Superiors Generals (UISG).  When the call for nominees from North America came forth the different congregational leaders in Canada were invited to submit a name.  The ten chosen – five women and five men –represent religious orders from countries around the world.   Elizabeth is in section A and will be a voting member of the Synod.

The Synod in Rome follows diocesan, national, and continental phases of the Synod that began in October 2021. The Synod has as its theme “For a synodal church: communion, participation, and mission.”

More about the October 2023 Session can be found on our website here

La Hermana Elizabeth Davis ha sido seleccionada para participar en la Asamblea General del Sínodo de los Obispos que se celebrará en Roma en octubre. En la sesión de octubre estarán presentes delegados que representan a obispos, sacerdotes, religiosos y laicos de todo el mundo.

La Hermana Elizabeth fue nominada a través de la Unión de Superioras Generales (UISG). Cuando se hizo la convocatoria de candidaturas de América del Norte, se invitó a los distintos líderes congregacionales de Canadá a presentar un nombre. Los diez elegidos -cinco mujeres y cinco hombres- representan a órdenes religiosas de países de todo el mundo. Elizabeth pertenece a la sección A y será miembro con derecho a voto del Sínodo.

El Sínodo de Roma sigue a las fases diocesana, nacional y continental del Sínodo que comenzó en octubre de 2021. El Sínodo tiene como lema “Por una Iglesia sinodal: comunión, participación y misión”.

Puede encontrar más información sobre la Sesión de octubre 2023 en nuestro sitio web aquí

 

Remembering Our Newfoundland Mercy Story 7: Sister M. Joseph Nugent

Maria Nugent had the unique distinction of being the first Presentation postulant and the first Mercy postulant in Newfoundland and consequently in North America.

compassion

Known to us as Sister Mary Joseph, Maria died on this day in 1847, just five years after the founding of the Mercy mission in Newfoundland. Maria lived with her brother, Valentine Nugent and his family who had come to St. John’s from Ireland in 1833 at the invitation of Bishop Fleming.

Marianne Creedon, whose sister was Nugent’s wife, lived in the same household until she left for Ireland in 1839. For a number of years Maria and Marianne taught together at a school for young ladies on Water Street.

In 1834 Maria was admitted to the novitiate of the Presentation Sisters at Cathedral Square but later returned home because of ill health. Shortly after Marianne, now Sister Mary Francis, and her two companions came to St. John’s to begin their mission, Maria asked to join them. Bishop Fleming deemed her Presentation novitiate as fulfilling the requirements for entrance to the Mercy Order and she was professed as Sister Mary Joseph on March 25, 1843 in a ceremony held at the Presentation Convent.

Sister M. Joseph taught in the first Mercy school and was Sister M. Francis’ only companion when Sisters Ursula and Rose returned home in November of 1843. The two women, connected by bonds of family and love for the mission, faithfully carried out the responsibilities of school and visitation day after day in all kinds of weathers. An article in The Newfoundlander on June 24, 1847 gives a sense of their devotion and commitment:

Ever and anon might these two pious Sisters have been seen,
before or after the toils of the day at school, treading through
our snows and pelted by our sleet to smooth the pillow of the
death-bed of the afflicted, and pouring into the ear of the
infected words of promise and hope, either in the wretched
 hovels of the poor or in the hospital.

In June of 1847 when a typhus epidemic broke out in St. John’s, Sisters M. Francis and M. Joseph closed school and devoted themselves totally to those afflicted with the dreaded disease, visiting and caring for them in their homes and at St. John’s Hospital, located in present-day Victoria Park area. It was while Sister M. Joseph was caring for a young seaman who was dying from typhus that she herself became infected. After two weeks of intense suffering, she died on June 17 at the age of 48. She is buried with other victims of the disease on land which is now occupied by the Kirk.

We are the proud and grateful inheritors of this wonderful tradition of trust in God’s Providence, compassionate care and faithful service.

Maria Nugent tuvo la distinción única de ser la primera postulante de la Presentación y la primera postulante de la Misericordia en Terranova y, por consiguiente, en América del Norte.

The word “Mercy” written in isolated vintage wooden letterpress type on a white background.

Conocida por nosotros como la Hermana Mary Joseph, María murió un día como hoy en 1847, sólo cinco años después de la fundación de la misión de la Misericordia en Terranova. María vivía con su hermano, Valentine Nugent y su familia, que habían llegado a San Juan desde Irlanda en 1833 invitados por el obispo Fleming.

Marianne Creedon, cuya hermana era la esposa de Nugent, vivió en la misma casa hasta que se marchó a Irlanda en 1839. Durante varios años Maria y Marianne enseñaron juntas en una escuela para señoritas en Water Street.

En 1834, María ingresó en el noviciado de las Hermanas de la Presentación en Cathedral Square, pero más tarde regresó a casa por motivos de salud. Poco después de que Marianne, ahora hermana Mary Francis, y sus dos compañeras llegaran a St. John’s para comenzar su misión, María pidió unirse a ellas. El Obispo Fleming consideró que su noviciado en la Presentación cumplía los requisitos para entrar en la Orden de la Merced y profesó como Hermana Mary Joseph el 25 de marzo de 1843 en una ceremonia celebrada en el Convento de la Presentación.

La Hermana M. Joseph enseñó en la primera escuela de la Misericordia y fue la única compañera de la Hermana M. Francis cuando las Hermanas Ursula y Rose regresaron a casa en noviembre de 1843. Las dos mujeres, unidas por lazos de familia y amor a la misión, cumplieron fielmente con las responsabilidades de la escuela y la visitación día tras día en todo tipo de climas. Un artículo publicado en The Newfoundlander el 24 de junio de 1847 da una idea de su devoción y compromiso:

Estas dos piadosas hermanas han sido vistas una y otra vez,
antes o después de los trabajos del día en la escuela, atravesando
nuestras nieves y aguanieve para alisar la almohada del lecho de muerte de los afligidos.
lecho de muerte de los afligidos, y vertiendo en el oído de los
infectados palabras de promesa y esperanza, ya sea en las míseras
de los pobres o en el hospital.

En junio de 1847, cuando estalló una epidemia de tifus en St. John’s, las hermanas M. Francis y M. Joseph cerraron la escuela y se dedicaron por completo a los afectados por la temida enfermedad, visitándolos y cuidándolos en sus casas y en el hospital de St. John’s, situado en la actual zona de Victoria Park. Fue mientras la hermana M. Joseph cuidaba a un joven marinero que se estaba muriendo de tifus cuando ella misma se infectó. Tras dos semanas de intenso sufrimiento, murió el 17 de junio a la edad de 48 años. Está enterrada, junto con otras víctimas de la enfermedad, en el terreno que hoy ocupa el Kirk.

Somos los orgullosos y agradecidos herederos de esta maravillosa tradición de confianza en la Providencia de Dios, cuidado compasivo y servicio fiel.

Newfoundland communities are ‘most Irish’ outside Ireland, genetic study finds

Parts of the Canadian province of Newfoundland have a majority population which is genetically Irish going back almost 200 years, new research confirms.

“Newfoundland is almost unique in having a settler population which has been barely diluted by further waves of migration.

Approximately 25,000 Irish and English emigrants came to the province in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, mostly due to the rich fishing grounds off the coast. As a result of its geographical isolation and economic setbacks, most of the descendants of people now living in Newfoundland are related to the original settlers.

Newfoundland has a population of just 500,000, though it is larger than the island of Ireland. A large majority of the population is based on the Avalon peninsula, which includes the capital St John’s. By and large, the English settled on the north of the Avalon peninsula, with the Irish on the south…”

Read the rest of the article here. Source: The Irish Times

Read the stories of the Irish women in Valiant Women who crossed the Atlantic between 1842 and 1907 to the Mercy mission in Newfoundland.

Un nuevo estudio confirma que en algunas zonas de la provincia canadiense de Terranova la mayoría de la población es genéticamente irlandesa desde hace casi 200 años.

“Terranova es casi única por tener una población de colonos que apenas se ha diluido por nuevas oleadas migratorias.

Unos 25.000 emigrantes irlandeses e ingleses llegaron a la provincia a finales del siglo XVIII y principios del XIX, sobre todo por los ricos caladeros de la costa. Debido a su aislamiento geográfico y a los contratiempos económicos, la mayoría de los descendientes de los habitantes actuales de Terranova están emparentados con los colonos originales.

Terranova sólo tiene 500.000 habitantes, aunque es mayor que la isla de Irlanda. La mayor parte de la población vive en la península de Avalon, que incluye la capital, San Juan. En general, los ingleses se asentaron en el norte de la península de Avalon, y los irlandeses en el sur…”

Lea el resto del artículo en inglés aquí. Fuente: The Irish Times

Lea en “Valiant Women” en inglés las historias de las irlandesas que cruzaron el Atlántico entre 1842 y 1907 para llegar a la misión de la Misericordia en Terranova.

 

St Patrick’s Mercy Home: 1958-2008

Through the inspiration and efforts of Archbishop Patrick Skinner, St. Patrick’s Mercy Home, a long-term care facility located in St. John’s, opened in 1958 under the administration of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy. Its mission is to provide quality and compassionate care for its residents.

St. Patrick’s offers its residents a homelike décor, large rooms that are available to residents and family members for special gatherings; a patio garden is easily accessed while the auditorium provides space for concerts, parties and special large group gatherings. Many of the activities of the Home are supported by St. Patrick’s Mercy Home Auxiliary. The pastoral care department is welcoming to people of all faiths with many religious services being held in the large chapel. Medical, nursing, palliative, and respite care is available through its physician and nursing staff while social workers, physiotherapists, recreation and music therapists provide services that enhance the life of each resident in a particular way.

In January 1986 a renovation and extension project for the Home was completed so that it could continue to provide a safe, comfortable and attractive atmosphere that speaks of its focus on residents.

In September 1999, the Board of Directors of St. Patrick’s entered into an Agreement with the St. John’s Nursing Home Board in a process of regionalization along with other nursing homes in the area. In 2005, it became a member of the Eastern Health Authority.

The year 2008 marks the 50th anniversary year of St. Patrick’s. Many and varied activities and celebrations involving staff, residents, church and government officials and the general public took place throughout the year. The chapel was rededicated to Archbishop P. J. Skinner in recognition of his untiring efforts toward the opening of a home for the aged and infirm; St. Patrick’s Mercy Home Foundation displayed a beautiful Donor Appreciation Window, acknowledging all who contribute to the care and well-being of the residents in any way.

Sister Mary Fabian Hennebury

Sister Mary Fabian Hennebury (1916 -2009) was the Public Face of St. Clare’s Mercy hospital for nearly three decades.

It is fitting that having celebrated the one hundredth anniversary of the founding of St. Clare’s that we profile a woman who was the public face of St. Clare’s for twenty-six years.

Mary Hennebury, known to us as Sister Mary Fabian, was born in Bonavista in 1916, the eldest of eight children. Her mother died when she was nine and Mary learned to accept responsibility at an early age. During the two years she spent at St. Bride’s College after leaving Bonavista, she was inspired by the sisters’ lives and their dedication to helping others, and it was here that she began to think about religious life as an option for herself. In 1935 at the age of nineteen, Mary entered the Sisters of Mercy.

A year after her profession, in 1939, she began nursing studies at the newly opened St. Clare’s School of Nursing. She went on to do post­graduate work at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, and upon her return to St. John’s was appointed supervisor of pediatrics at St. Clare’s. Her excellent academic qualifications and her Toronto experience had prepared her well for this ministry, which remained dear to her heart all through her life.

Meanwhile, Sister Mary Fabian was asked by the Congregation to enroll in a two-year correspondence course in hospital organization and management, given by the Canadian Hospital Association. She enrolled in a similar program with the American Hospital Association and received certification in both programs. Well-equipped academically and professionally, she was more than ready to assume the role of administrator of St. Clare’s in 1955. This marked the beginning of a period of unprecedented growth for the hospital, not only in the size of the physical plant, in the services offered, in its outreach programs, but also in the qualifications, expertise and reputation of the people who staffed the hospital.

Sisters and lay staff were given opportunities to pursue studies at home and in other parts of Canada in order to get the required competencies for the hospital’s expanded services. Sister Fabian herself was a lifelong learner, always keeping abreast of new approaches and developments in the delivery of health care.

Sister Mary Fabian oversaw two extensions to the hospital and initiated many new programs and services. Among these were hospital accreditation, pastoral care, social work, respiratory services, physiotherapy, and a rheumatology unit. As one department was established, new needs presented themselves and Sister Mary Fabian was quick to recognize and respond to these changing needs.

Almost immediately after assuming her position, Sister Mary Fabian began working on setting up a Board of Directors and a Medical Advisory Committee, both of which she saw as absolutely necessary for the growth of St. Clare’s into a first-class hospital. From the beginning the new Board worked tirelessly with  Mary Sister Fabian to continue the tradition of Mercy and to ensure quality care for the patients. The incorporation of the hospital in 1960 not only gave St. Clare’s legal status, but the means to ensure that its mission and values were sustained. Sister Mary Fabian also made and maintained connections with many organizations and groups in the city with a view to enhancing the reach of the hospital into the broader community. One such negotiation resulted in St. Clare’s being recognized as a teaching hospital with a formal affiliation with the Medical School of Memorial University.

Sister Mary Fabian’s role as administrator of an inner- city hospital made her keenly aware of the helplessness of many people suffering from addiction to alcohol. In the mid-1970s the Department of Health approached St. Clare’s with a proposition that could respond to this pressing need, which was being recognized as a priority in the city. Government was prepared to finance a detoxification center, if St. Clare’s would find a site for it and administer it. Sister Mary Fabian, her Board and the Congregation, wholeheartedly accepted the challenge. The Sisters purchased a property on Deanery Avenue in St. John’s and turned it over to St. Clare’s. Talbot House, under the guiding hand of Sister Mary Fabian, provided treatment, self-help programs and a safe haven for people fighting the disease of alcoholism.

Another huge venture initiated by Sister Mary Fabian was the establishment of a Palliative Care Unit at St. Clare’s. The groundwork for the project involved several years of intense negotiation and planning, a process in which Sister Mary Fabian played a major role. On October 1, 1979, largely as a result of her vision and with the financial assistance of the Sisters of Mercy, St. Clare’s opened the first Palliative Care Unit east of Montreal. In the ensuing years, this unit gave comfort, hope and dignity to hundreds of patients and their families in their darkest hours. The first Sister of Mercy to die in Palliative care was Sister Mary Mark Hennebury, Sister Mary Fabian’s sister.

Although Sister Mary Fabian received national and international recognition for her progressive stance and her contributions to health care at home and abroad, she always insisted that she did not do it alone.  Invariably, she credited her Board of Directors, her congregation and the staff with whom she worked as her invaluable support system, enabling her to carry out her part of the overall mission of St. Clare’s. Undoubtedly however, she played a major role in ensuring the position of St. Clare’s as a general hospital with the highest accreditation, while at the same time ensuring that it held firmly to the mission and values of our founding charism. In her ministry of 38 years at St. Clare’s, Sister Mary Fabian embodied the spirit of Mercy and by her visionary, wise and energetic leadership, established at St. Clare’s a standard of excellence in the delivery of compassionate care that was a model for her successors.

On her retirement from the health care system, Sister Mary Fabian ministered at McAuley Convent, sitting with the elderly sisters, watching and praying with the dying, answering the door, welcoming visitors and doing the many small routine tasks that needed to be done. Throughout her whole life, she lived the motto of St. Clare’s “Mercy Above All”.  She entered into eternal life on March 31, 2009.

 

        (Article written by Sister Charlotte Fitzpatrick, RSM)