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leela_ramdeen@hotmail.com
www.rcsocialjusticett.org
Sixty
years of service
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Holy Faith Sisters celebrate 60 years
in T&T.
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Faithful workers in Gods vineyard.
MANY
hands have helped to build T&T. Today
I will be joining others at my alma mater, Holy Faith
Convent, Couva, to mark the 60th anniversary of the arrival
of the Holy Faith Sisters in T&T. These dedicated
women have a noble sense of purpose and continue to minister
to us in many ways.
We owe them a debt of gratitude for their unstinting service
to our people since 1947. Margaret Aylward founded the
Sisters of the Holy Faith in 1857 in Ireland. Her mission
underpins the work of the Sisters today:
To
proclaim the love and the truth of Jesus to and with the
people of our day, especially the poor and the oppressed.
Humility, simplicity, faith and charity are the virtues
that characterise the spirit of the Holy Faith congregation.
When then Archbishop Finbar Ryan invited the Sisters to
assist with our education work in the archdiocese, they
responded favourably. At the end of 1947, eight Holy Faith
Sisters arrived from Ireland and assumed the educational
role at St Theresas in Woodbrook, Port-of-Spain.
This role was previously held by the Cluny Sisters.
Holy Faith Convent, Couva, was opened in 1951. The Sisters
ministry spread to Siparia (1954), Sangre Grande (1961),
Penal (1966), Matelot (1987) and Valencia (1988). One
of their goals was to create school communities
enlivened by the gospel spirit of freedom and charity.
The Sisters and my Trini teachers promoted our mental,
spiritual, moral, cultural, social and physical development.
They taught us to respect life and human dignity; to understand
our rights and responsibilities; to promote family life,
community and the common good; to stand in solidarity
with the poor and the oppressed; to care for Gods
creation; and to be active participants in our society.
I am who I am today mainly because of the positive influence
of my parents and teachersparticularly the Holy
Faith Sisters. In August I received a letter from Sr Baptista,
a Holy Faith Sister who returned to live in Ireland after
working here for over 40 years. She had read a piece
I had written in the Catholic News. The following extract
highlights the love that the Sisters have for their students:
Im
so happy to have had a tiny part in your education
and formation... May God fill you with wisdom and courage
to speak up and to speak out when necessary; to use your
gifts of education and natural ability for the betterment
of your sisters and brothers...
If
I have helped in any way to educate you and othersto
be alert, aware, courageous and vocal when necessarythats
reward enough for me. Sr Magdalena (past principal) would
be proud of you also... Dont let beautiful T&T
go down the drain. Have courage! God bless you and all
my past pupils in this school
But the Sisters are not only involved in education. They
say: In time we were called to expand our ministry
beyond the boundaries of the classroom into parish communities,
peoples homes, the seminary, hospital ministry,
catechetics, community development, the media, the streets,
and the prison system, as we sought to filter the gospel
and its values throughout the fabric of our societywith
a special preference for the poor, the oppressed and the
marginalised.
Mother Teresa said: We must convert our love for
Christ into deeds. We must express Christian love in concrete,
living ways. The Sisters have certainly been doing
so over the years. They have gone willingly wherever God
has called them to serve.
Today, Sister Janice Tam is head of the order in the Caribbean
and principal of St Bernadettes Private Primary
School in St Anns. Only three of the Holy Faith
Sisters in T&T are Irish. The rest are homegrown
and the principals of HFC schools include local lay people.
I have the honour to serve both as a member of the Holy
Faith Associates and as a director of Credo Foundation
for Justice (CFJ)an organisation run by the Sisters
to educate on social justice issues and to work towards
systemic change. They operate centres for socially displaced
children (street children). Sr Roberta OFlaherty
and Sr Juliet Rajah give yeoman service to our young children
at risk.
Since one of our homes, Credo Centre on Nelson Street,
Port-of-Spain, was destroyed by fire in May, efforts continue
to find another building that will serve the needs of
those who live and work on the streets. The young men
who lived at the centre are still sleeping on mattresses
in the annex at Aylward House, a transitional facility
that we run for older boys.
We need more advocates/carers for our children. NGOs,
such as CFJ, have a role to play, but so does the Government.
Our new ministers must step up to the plate and provide
the support CFJ needs to enable us to assist the nations
children.
Sr Juliet and Sr Marie Young are involved in Catechetics
in the North and East and work tirelessly with Sr Columba
Byrne, episcopal delegate for Catechetics in the archdiocese.
Sr Denise Thomas teaches at the Diego Martin RC Primary
School. Sr Emerentia Smith and Sr Pacelli Netto work with
people in need. Sr Mary Anthony is deeply committed to
prison ministry and retreat work. She also teaches religious
education at the HFC, Couva, where Sr Theresa Vialva is
vice principal.
Sr Theresa plays a major role in promoting the faith via
the media, eg as presenter of the Catholic Commission
for Social Justices Ask Why? TV programme. Sr Rosario
Hackshaw is a retired school principal and director of
Hope (Helping Ourselves Develop Economically) in Valencia.
She has been awarded a Chaconia Medal (Gold) for her work
in Matelotdrawing on economist Muhammad Yunus
(Nobel Prize winner) Grameen Bank initiative. Through
this micro-credit system, she has assisted countless poor
people, especially women, in obtaining credit so that
they can be independent and self-reliant by starting small
businesses without collateral.
The Sisters also run Credo Retreat House, Couva. This
facility is directed by Leonora De Verteuil.
In his recent encyclical, On Christian Hope, Pope Benedict
XVI reminds us that the Christian message is not only
informative but performative. That means
the gospel is not merely a communication of things that
can be knownit is one that makes things happen and
is life-changing.
May the Holy Spirit continue to work through the Holy
Faith Sisters as they live the gospel and make things
happen in T&T. These faithful workers in Gods
vineyard have said: The impetus behind our growth
has always been the ideal of nurturing, protecting and
sharing faith as we strive to become part of the Body
of the Lord in our land.
Happy anniversary, Sisters. May God richly bless you and
your work.
If anyone is interested in religious life, contact the
Sisters on 622-3243.
n Leela Ramdeen is a lawyer
and education consultant
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