Category Archives: Social Work

National Migration Week, DCs work with immigrants in El Paso

Las Americas Immigrant and Family Center

National Migration Week will be observed in dioceses around the country January 5-11. The theme is “Out of the Darkness,” and echoes the figurative darkness undocumented immigrants, children, refugees and victims of human trafficking must face when their ability to live out their lives is severely restricted, often due to violence and exploitation.

During the week, Catholics are called to participate through prayer and action to try and ease the struggles of immigrants, migrants and vulnerable populations and to reflect on the Church’s obligation to welcome the stranger.

Daughters of Charity are actively involved in service to, and advocacy for, immigrant populations. One such example, is the work of Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center, in El Paso, Texas. Two Daughters of Charity from the Province of St. Louise, Sisters Phyllis Nolan and Nancy Sullivan, currently serve there.

Las Americas was born on May 1, 1987 to answer the needs of a large influx of Central Americans who sought refuge in El Paso. By the mid-1990’s, Las Americas began to assist children and women detained by the Immigration and Naturalization Service through its Justice for Women and Children Project. Las Americas also started representing battered immigrant women under the Battered Immigrant Women Project. Today, Las Americas continues to be one of the only non-profit legal service providers to assist low-income immigrants in the El Paso region.

Las Americas’ vision is that of a country where all immigrants have access to high quality legal representation based on the principle of justice and human rights. Las Americas’ mission is to see this vision realized by providing high quality legal representation to immigrants and by advocating for human rights.Las Americas’ mission includes not only direct service to the most vulnerable of immigrants but also advocacy for the rights of immigrants and education on immigration issues.

Since 2000, Las Americas has assisted asylum seekers from over 25 countries, including Algeria, Dominican Republic, Bosnia, El Salvador, India, Burundi, Georgia, Mexico, and Colombia. Wars and repressive governments continue to create a flood of refugees to our shores. Las Americas continues to provide legal services for these refugees, works to prevent unjust deportations, and challenges Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) policies regarding the treatment of refugees and other detained persons in the area.

In 2008, drug-related violence began to tear apart Ciudad Juárez, El Paso’s sister city south of the border and Las Americas staff started to see an influx in Mexican asylum seekers who sought relief in the United States. Many Mexican refugees have received threats from cartels or criminal organizations with ties to corrupt Mexican government officials. Las Americas completes an average of 15 intakes a week of people fleeing the violence in Mexico.

Learn more about Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center at its website: http://www.las-americas.org

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Filed under Immigration, Ministries, Social Justice, Social Work

Christmas at St. John’s Asylum and School, ca. 1860s

The Provincial Annals of the Emmitsburg Province record this account of Christmas as celebrated by the children at St. John’s Asylum and School, in Utica, New York. The account is undated but probably dates from the 1860s.

The general atmosphere of the house is truly home-like. The civil and religious festivals of the year are celebrated with due honors; not one can pass unnoticed, there being too many voices to remind. Christmas, the children’s feast, is indeed a season of joy to the inmates of St. John’s; long before its arrival is it talked of, its pleasures enjoyed by anticipation. A large Christmas tree is early adorned and heavily laden with fruit, suited to the tastes of all, each gift bearing its owner’s number. This tree is not relieved of its precious burden until the feast of the Epiphany, 6th of January, when one the Wise Men wisely and happily dispenses the same. A very pretty custom of the house is to have its inmates awakened Christmas morning by the Venite Adoremus, sung by a select band of the children. The “babies stockings are always prepared for “Santa’s” visit, and great is their delight on seeing their plump proportions, when taken to the room where they hang side by side, and where the little ones seat themselves unceremoniously on the floor to examine their contents. In the afternoon Santa Claus visits the children in person, makes a little speech, and with the aid of his attendants, dispenses quantities of “goodies”, testifies his pleasure at seeing their bright, happy faces once more, promises that he will never pass them by as long as they are good children and withdraws amid the smiles and thanks of all. It may here be remarked that the many kind friends remember the orphan girls at this season of the year by suitable donations, which greatly aid the Sisters in this amusing and rejoicing the hearts of the children.

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Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe

Virgin of Guadalupe

Our Lady of Guadalupe

(Image reproduced by permission of the Provincial Archives)

Among the wonderful art works in our collections, the Provincial Archives boasts a painting of Our Lady of Guadalupe, whose feast is today, Dec. 12. According to a note attached to the back of the painting, a Mr. O’Conway of Philadelphia paid $200 for it in 1811 and presented it to Elizabeth Ann Seton. The donor, Mathias O’Conway, was the father of Cecilia O’Conway, first American Sister of Charity with Mother Seton. Another O’Conway daughter, Isabella, was a pupil at Mrs. Seton’s school on Paca Street, Baltimore.

During her time in the historic White House on our campus here in Emmitsburg, the painting was displayed over the altar in the chapel. At some point, the note concludes, the painting was hung in the Novitiate where it hung for years “with a lamp burning before it.”

About Our Lady of Guadalupe
In December 1531, on the hill of Tepeyac in present-day Mexico City, an Indian named Juan Diego witnessed five apparitions of the Virgin Mary. Speaking in Juan Diego’s native tongue, Mary instructed Juan Diego to tell the bishop to build a shrine on that spot. The bishop did not believe Juan Diego’s story, and asked for a sign that it was true. As a sign, Mary left her image on Juan Diego’s cloak. The original cloak can be seen today at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City. Pope Pius X proclaimed Our Lady of Guadalupe the patron of Latin America in 1910. Pope Pius XII declared her Queen of Mexico and Empress of the Americas in 1945, and Patroness of the Americas in 1946. Pope John XXIII invoked her as Mother of the Americas in 1961. Pope John Paul II beatified Juan Diego in 1990 and canonized him in 2002.

For more information on Our Lady of of Guadalupe see
http://www.catholic.org/about/guadalupe.php

http://www.queenoftheamericasguild.org/BriefHistoryNew.html

A present day sponsored ministry of the Province of St. Louise is Proyecto Juan Diego, founded in 2003 and based in Brownsville, Texas. Proyecto Juan Diego’s mission is to care for and improve the education and formation, social and health services for the families within a targeted area in Brownsville, Texas. For more information about Proyecto Juan Diego, visit their website.

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Filed under John Paul II, John XXIII, Ministries, Pius X, Pius XII, Popes, Social Work