"I discovered that you do not go to the margins to rescue anyone. But if we go there, everyone finds rescue."
On Oct. 28, 1992, I sat at my computer in St. Louis Missouri, with the radio on for background noise. I heard snatches of phrases about "Liberia … five nuns … missing." Snapping to attention, I realized this had to be us. We had five sisters in Liberia. They were: Srs. Shirley Kolmer, Mary Joel Kolmer, Kathleen McGuire, Agnes Mueller and Barbara Ann Muttra.
GSR Today - After a recent experience in Tanzania and Malawi of electrical blackouts, cold showers, limited or no internet, cooking with charcoal, and the sight of mountains stripped of trees, I was reminded of a project I had started to research how sisters in sub-Saharan Africa use solar energy.
The sisters of Congrégation de Notre-Dame didn't want to give up the same coffee they had been drinking for decades. But paying a fair wage to the poor farmers who grew the coffee beans was something they could get behind — one of 12 actions they're undertaking to lessen their environmental footprint.
"I believe that training is the only way to bring about individual and collective transformation toward gender equality. We aim to enhance gender consciousness and to ensure the rights of women, their security, well-being and sustainable development."
Sometimes the things that control us the most are the things about which we are the least conscious. I'm haunted by the idea that we all may blindly, unknowingly sacrifice our freedoms.
"And to that I give a rousing 'Holy catoot'!" So ended a phone conversation with my sister, who was channeling Mom, now in heaven, and one of her favorite phrases.
"Even if you are not familiar with how to use a smartphone and don't understand Twitter, you have an invaluable gift to offer the young: your presence."
Immigration activists say they are committed to passing a Dream Act without anti-immigrant measures, despite Trump's recent insistence that any legislation protecting DACA recipients be paired with his policy demands.
About 160 women religious convened for the 2017 national assembly of the Council of Major Superiors of Women Religious, which represents 12 percent of U.S. sisters. Formed in 1992 with a commitment to the preservation of "traditional" religious life, CMSWR has had a busy quarter-century.