Skip to main content

Global Sisters Report a project of National Catholic Reporter

Translate this page

Advertisement

Search

Free Newsletters

Sign up now

Global Sisters Report logoGlobal Sisters Report logo
Subscribe
Renew
Donate
  • Menu

GSR Main Menu

  • Menu
  • News
  • Columns
  • Q&As
  • The Legacy of Pope Francis
  • Out of the Shadows
  • GSR in the Classroom
GSR EN ESPAÑOL
  • Subscribe
  • Renew
  • Donate

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 Dan Stockman

View Author Profile

dstockman@ncronline.org

Follow on Twitter at @danstockman

Join the Conversation

May 28, 2015
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Blog
  • Read more about Sisters join call to end family detention

GSR Today - Faith leaders met with White House staff May 21 and presented a letter signed by nearly 1,500 faith leaders from across the country. Among those in the meeting were Sr. Patricia McDermott, president of the Sister of Mercy of the Americas, Lawrence Couch, Director of the National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd, and Fr. Timothy P. Kesicki, President of the Jesuit Conference of the United States and Canada.

by GSR Staff

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

May 27, 2015
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Blog
  • Read more about May 27, 2015

"Be immersed in the dance of the trinity and all will be well."

by Hildegard Pleva

Contributor

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

May 27, 2015
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Columns
  • Read more about An older woman embraces contemplative life: A personal story

Americans are changing jobs, if not careers, more frequently than ever before. Statisticians and sociologists argue about the significance of this trend, but the effects are observable. Where once people remained in one job, plying one trade or profession, living in one town for most of their lives, it is not uncommon to see rapid, frequent and fluid movement from one career to another, one coast to another, or from one life style to its complete opposite.

by Camille D'Arienzo

NCR Contributor

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

May 27, 2015
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Columns
  • Read more about St. Joseph sister with entrepreneurial spirit works with victims of human trafficking

St. Joseph Sr. Margaret Nacke: "When I wake up at 2 a.m. or 3 a.m., I always say a prayer for the women who are being trafficked and abused. This may be my angel nudging me to say the prayer and remember what is happening to some girls and women."

by Jocelyn A. Sideco

View Author Profile

jocelyn@ingoodcompany.net.co

Join the Conversation

May 27, 2015
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
News
  • Read more about Romero, saint of the Americas

They may have waited 35 long years, but the many thousands who packed Savior of the World Plaza for the beatification of Óscar Romero took joy in the moment – and in the memory of the slain archbishop. Romero, who was martyred in 1980 as he said Mass in a hospital chapel near the start of El Salvador’s 12-year civil war, was beatified May 23. More than 250,000 people witnessed the ceremony, and spontaneous chants of “¡Viva Romero!” rang out through the crowd.

by GSR Staff

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

May 27, 2015
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Blog
  • Read more about Share your ideas about how sisters support their ministries

GSR Today - In its first year, Global Sisters Report has written about how sisters have tackled issues of financial sustainability, from raising goats in Uganda and selling traditional medicines in Vietnam to using public and private funds to build a new kind of community for farmworkers in Florida.

by Mary Ewens

Contributor

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

May 27, 2015
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Columns
  • Read more about Dollars and sense: Funding works on the margins

When I was studying the first sisters' communities in the United States, I became aware of the importance of economics in the success or failure of those sisterhoods. Sisters who came from Europe found a culture and economic situation very different from those in Europe. For centuries, convents and monasteries there were financed by wealthy, often noble, patrons, and by the sisters' dowries. In the U.S. there were few wealthy Catholics; most were immigrants on the bottom rungs of society. Few could afford dowries. Congregations that were going to survive had to adjust to the economic conditions in the new nation.

This story appears in the See for Yourself feature series. View the full series.

by Nancy Linenkugel

Contributor

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

May 26, 2015
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Blog
  • Read more about Self-service burglary

See for Yourself - “I called the cops on my own house,” a breathless friend, Elly, chirped into the phone. “I had to do something to prevent the wrong impression.”

by Adelaide Ndilu

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

May 26, 2015
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Columns
  • Read more about Kenyans in search of miracles

A majority of the Kenyan people have fallen prey to faith healers who charge for miracles, and chances are they do not intend to change in the near future, as long as good medical care is beyond their reach, as long as they can afford only one meal a day, as long as jobs are nowhere to be found despite people’s having an education. They are faced with myriad challenges in life so that they easily give in to what we call in Kenya “fake pastors,” who deceive them and persuade them they are cleansing them of their bewitchment. All these predicaments have left them with only one option of seeking God’s intervention in the face of hard economic times.

by GSR Staff

View Author Profile

Join the Conversation

May 26, 2015
Share on BlueskyShare on FacebookShare on TwitterEmail to a friendPrint
Blog
  • Read more about May 26, 2015

"Oh God of all, open the hearts and minds of all your children, that we may learn to nurture rather than destroy our planet."

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹ Previous
  • …
  • Page 506
  • Page 507
  • Page 508
  • Page 509
  • Current page 510
  • Page 511
  • Page 512
  • Page 513
  • Page 514
  • …
  • 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