Skip to main content

Global Sisters Report a project of National Catholic Reporter

Advertisement

Search
Global Sisters ReportGlobal Sisters Report
  • Free newsletters
  • Donate
Global Sisters Report
  • Menu
  • News
  • Columns
  • Q&As
  • Out of the Shadows
  • GSR in the Classroom
  • GSR EN ESPAÑOL
  • Free newsletters
  • Donate

Free Newsletters

Sign up now

GSR EN ESPAÑOL
Translate this page
  • Menu
  • News
  • Columns
  • Q&As
  • Out of the Shadows
  • GSR in the Classroom
  • GSR EN ESPAÑOL

Free Newsletters

Sign up now

GSR Mega-Menu

  • Publications
    • EarthBeat
      • Stories of climate, crisis, faith and action
    • National Catholic Reporter
      • The independent news source
    • GSR en español
      • Comunicación al servicio de la vida religiosa
    • About Global Sisters Report
  • Sections
    • News
    • Q&A
    • Arts and Media
    • Environment
    • Migration
    • Ministry
    • Religious Life
    • Social Justice
    • Spirituality
    • Trafficking
    • Horizons
  • Special Projects
    • Community News
    • GSR in the Classroom
    • GSR at 10 Years
    • Honoring Sisters Killed in Service
    • Hope Amid Turmoil: Sisters in Conflict Areas
    • Sustainable Development Goals
    • The Life
    • Witness & Grace Conversations
    • Special Series E-Books

by Karen Jean Zielinski

Contributor

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

January 23, 2019
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Columns
  • Read more about Begging like St. Francis

Francis of Assisi lived centuries ago, but his tradition of begging still applies to society today.

This story appears in the Notes from the Field feature series. View the full series.

by Julianna Lewis

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

January 23, 2019
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Blog
  • Read more about Transitioning from Colombia to Switzerland brings new challenges

Notes from the Field - The adjustment to my new placement site has not always been easy, due to the many differences I have encountered. The climate is much colder, there are language barriers, and the nature of the work here in Veyrier contrasts with my work in Bogotá, which was very hands-on.

by Dan Morris-Young

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

January 22, 2019
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Blog
  • Read more about Q & A with Sr. Sue Mosteller, on the 'school of life' at L'Arche Daybreak

When Sue Mosteller entered the Sisters of St. Joseph in Toronto, Canada, in 1952, little could she have realized that, 20 years later, her life path would merge with the nascent L'Arche Movement and spiritual luminaries Henri Nouwen and Jean Vanier.

This story appears in the Abuse of sisters feature series. View the full series.

by Gail DeGeorge

View Author Profile

gdegeorge@ncronline.org

Join the Conversation

January 21, 2019
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
News
  • Read more about Women religious shatter the silence about clergy sexual abuse of sisters

Women religious are now openly discussing a subject that was once taboo — sexual harassment, abuse and rape of sisters by clergy — in congregational motherhouses and national conference offices. Slowly, an era is ending in which Catholic women religious were silent victims of sexual abuse by priests and bishops.

by Dan Stockman

View Author Profile

dstockman@ncronline.org

Follow on Twitter at @danstockman

Join the Conversation

January 21, 2019
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Blog
  • Read more about Pauline sisters in Nairobi were near al-Shabab's latest attack

GSR Today - A Daughter of St. Paul sister reported in a group chat for sisters that everyone in their compound was safe but very frightened; Sudan looks at escalating violence; U.S. immigration policy separated more children than earlier reports indicated.

This story appears in the Abuse of sisters feature series. View the full series.

by Mary Lilly Driciru

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

January 21, 2019
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Columns
  • Read more about A wake-up call against sexual abuse

In the Great Lakes Region of Africa, consecrated women and men who have been exposed to the realities of sexual abuse were urged to address its horror through a wakeup call at two formation workshops. The first workshop was organized and hosted in 2017 in Goma, where sexual violence has been used as a weapon of war. As woman activist Lina Zedriga Waru says, "The body of woman is the battle field for the perpetrators."

by Tracey Horan

Contributor

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

January 18, 2019
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Columns
  • Read more about Hold onto hope and onto each other

Horizons - The first weeks of 2019 have been dreary and challenging: How can we keep momentum on a path that appears impossibly bleak and foggy? The answer for a new year is a new, prophetic hope.

by Joyce Meyer

International Liaison, Global Sisters Report

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

January 18, 2019
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Blog
  • Read more about Mother of Carmel Sisters in India carry on the charism of their revolutionary founder

GSR Today - The Congregation of Mother of Carmel Sisters are the first indigenous religious congregation for women in India, founded in Kerala in 1866 and now have nearly 7,000 members in five continents.

by Peter Feuerherd

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

January 17, 2019
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
News
  • Read more about Members of papal commission on women's diaconate make first public comments

The study that Pope Francis commissioned on the history of women deacons is complete and on the pontiff's desk. But members of the commission aren't making any promises. 

by Gloria Laker Adiiki Aciro

Contributor

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

January 17, 2019
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
News
  • Read more about Babies abandoned in Uganda find advocacy and love at sister-run home

Every day, Sr. Helen Nanzira wakes up to the sound of crying babies. Around 30 young children spend their first five years at the Nsambya Babies Home, run by the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary Reparatrix-Ggogonya in Kampala, the capital of Uganda. The Nsambya Babies Home traces its origin back to the early days of Uganda's independence, and in the 60 years since Nsambya Baby Home opened its doors, attitudes about adoption in Uganda have dramatically changed. 

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹ Previous
  • …
  • Page 121
  • Page 122
  • Page 123
  • Page 124
  • Current page 125
  • Page 126
  • Page 127
  • Page 128
  • Page 129
  • …
  • Next page Next ›
  • Last page Last »

GSR Footer Menu (Left)

  • GSR Sections
    • News
    • Q&A
    • Environment
    • Migration
    • Ministry
    • Religious Life
    • Social Justice
    • Spirituality
    • Trafficking

GSR Footer Menu (Right)

  • Explore More
    • GSR In The Classroom
    • The Life
    • Resources
  • GSR
    • About Global Sisters Report
    • Our Mission
    • Why Sisters?
    • How to write for Global Sisters Report
    • Instructions on how to film Wisdom videos
    • Job Opportunities
  • Ways to Give
    • Donate
    • Donor Tributes to Sisters
  • Get Connected
    • Contact Us
    • Sign Up For GSR Emails
    • Community News
    • Employment Opportunities
    • Advertise

Global Sisters Report

Follow

  • Bluesky
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
Advertising Guidelines / Web User Guidelines / Site Map