Category Archives: Sisters of Charity Federation

Escape From Saigon, April 22, 1975

Guest post by Patricia Smith, public relations specialist, Daughters of Charity Province of the West, Los Altos Hills, CA

Sister Marie-Antoinette-yen-bui (courtesy Sister Fran Ciluaga)

Sister Marie-Antoinette-Yen-bui (courtesy Sister Fran Ciluaga)

Sister Therese Marie Pham

Sister Therese Marie Pham (courtesy Sister Fran Ciluaga)

Sister William Quyen

Sister William Quyen, D.C. (courtesy Sister Fran Ciluaga)


Sister Michael Truong

On April 22, 1975, forty-two polio-stricken orphans, aged five to young adult, were airlifted out of war torn Saigon on an unofficial flight under the supervision of four Daughters of Charity and Father Robert Crawford, a Vincentian Priest. Father Crawford arranged for the rescue mission through Edward Daly, president and owner of World Airways, a commercial charter airline. It was a harrowing flight out of war torn Saigon to the safety of the United States.

The United States had airlifted all military personnel out of Saigon. Panic overtook those still living in the war-torn city. As Saigon fell around them, a small group of Daughters of Charity and Father Robert Crawford, a Vincentian priest, did what they could in their sparse surroundings to bring security to the crippled children in their care. At the time, fifty handicapped boys were under Father Crawford’s care. Another one hundred girls, mostly polio victims, were under the care of the Sisters.

Fearful the Communists would see these disabled children as useless to their cause, decisions were made. After much prayer, it was decided that children with parents would be returned to their families. Father Crawford laid plans with Mr. Edward Daly, president of World Airways, and Mr. Frank Reidy, a financial donor, to transport the remaining polio-stricken orphans, four Daughters of Charity and several orphanage workers out of the country. Mr. Daly then sanctioned use of a DC9 to airlift refugees out of Saigon. To avoid any bureaucratic red tape, a covert mission was organized. The Daughters were told to secretly prepare the children for departure – day or night.

Sister William Quyen, Sister Thérèse Marie Pham, and Sister Michael Truong would accompany the children. Sister Marie Antoinette Yen-Bui would also be aboard the flight. On April 22, after receiving word, the Daughters collected the children and told them they were going on a picnic. The group was bused through the unsafe streets of Saigon to the Tan Son Nhut Airport where a World Airways DC9 flight #803 awaited. Fr. Crawford and the Sisters of Charity quickly and quietly boarded all of the children. It was nightfall when the plane departed.

Fearing the unauthorized plane might be detected, the pilot kept all lights off during take-off. The plane left Saigon just before the Viet-Cong overran the city. Following stops in Okinawa and Tokyo, the refugees arrived at Travis Air Force Base outside of Oakland. They were then transferred to the Presidio Army Base in San Francisco for immigration processing.

Many people were involved in helping the children and other Vietnamese refugees who accompanied them on Flight #803 to learn English and adjust to a new culture. Under the direction of Sr. Mary Elizabeth Reed at Maryvale, the girls received excellent care and eventually were sponsored or placed in loving homes. All of the children airlifted out of Saigon that fateful night survived and thrived.

Acknowledgement
This account of the escape from Saigon was written by Patricia Smith, Public Relations Specialist, for the 2012 LCWR Exhibit at the California Museum of History, Women & the Arts in Sacramento, California. Four Sisters who escaped from Saigon on April 22, 1975 became members of the Province of the West in Los Altos Hills, California that same year. Three of the Sisters are still living and one is deceased.

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Filed under Saigon, Sisters of Charity Federation, Viet Nam War

A Seton in New Jersey

Robert Seton portrait

Portrait of Robert Seton (courtesy Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth)

Guest post by Sister Noreen Neary, SC, Archivist, Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth, Convent Station, NJ

The Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth have a unique connection to Mother Seton’s family through her grandson Robert. Born in Italy in 1839, he was the fourth of William and Emily (Prime) Seton’s seven children. While he never knew his grandmother, clearly she had a strong influence on him. As a young man he studied at Mount Saint Mary’s College in Maryland, a stone’s throw from where his saintly grandmother lived, worked, died and was buried. Robert pursued his theological studies at the American College and the Academia Ecclesiastica in Rome where he was ordained to the priesthood in 1865. While in Rome he was made the Private Chamberlain to Pope Pius IX and dean of the Monsignori in the United States.

Upon his return to the U.S. Monsignor Seton was granted faculties in the Diocese of Newark, headed by Bishop James Roosevelt Bayley, Mother Seton’s cousin. Having spent two years as a curate at Saint Patrick parish in Newark – the site of the founding of the Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth – he was named the chaplain at our Motherhouse in rural Morris County and served in that capacity from 1867 to 1876. Then Monsignor Seton left the countryside to work with the Sisters of Charity at Saint Joseph parish in Jersey City. He recalled later:

God favored me in letting me find a small but exemplary community of Sisters already established in the Parish and conducting a school alongside the Church. They were angels of kindness and efficiency and a comfort in my long years of trial and discomfort.

His long tenure (1876-1901) as pastor was marked by the building of the rectory, convent and parish school hall. Monsignor Seton returned to Rome in 1901 and was appointed Archbishop of the titular See of Heliopolis in Phoenicia by Pope Leo XIII in 1903.

Upon his retirement in 1921 Archbishop Seton returned to Convent Station. A student at Saint Elizabeth’s Academy recalled the elderly gentleman: “We were also honored with Archbishop Seton’s presence in his retirement years. He was a grandson of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton. To escort his Grace on an afternoon stroll usually ended with the gift of a large red apple and a ‘thank your girls.’” (Adria Winser Walsh ’22)

Archbishop Seton wrote a number of books, including Memories of Many Years 1839-1922 (1923), Memoirs, Letters, and Journal of Elizabeth Seton (1869) and An Old Family, the Setons of Scotland and America (1899), a privately published, well researched genealogy of his father’s family.
Archbishop Seton’s generosity led him to donate his grandmother’s desk and footstool to the Sisters who cared for him until his death in 1927. Ave Maria magazine (April 2, 1927) noted that his funeral was attended by representatives of the Daughters of Charity and the Sisters of Charity from Cincinnati, New York, New Jersey and Greensburg, PA, although the Halifax, Nova Scotia, congregation was unable to send representatives in time for the service. Archbishop Seton’s body is buried in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Newark.

Mother Seton desk

Mother Seton’s desk (courtesy Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth)

Robert Seton tombstone

Tombstone of Robert Seton (courtesy Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth)

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Filed under Elizabeth Ann Seton, Sisters of Charity Federation, Sisters of Charity of Convent Station

Two Iconic Sisters of Charity of New York

Guest post by Sister Maryellen Blumlein, archivist, Sisters of Charity of New York

Sister Immaculata Burke

Sr. Immaculata Burke, S.C. (Image courtesy of Sisters of Charity of New York)

Sr. Thomas (Trude) Collins, S.C.

Sr. Thomas (Trude) Collins, S.C. (Image courtesy Sisters of Charity of New York)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Within the space of twelve days, two iconic women, both Sisters of Charity of New York, who served the people of God on different continents went home to their loving God. Sr. Marie Immaculata Burke, a nurse, served in Guatemala for 43 years. She began and ministered in several different clinics and served the Mayan people in many different ways. She was beloved by the people, and she loved them in return. She brought the healing touch of Jesus to so many as well as comforted those families who lost loved ones during the Civil War. Nothing was too difficult for Sr. Immaculata to do for “her people.” She recognized needs and did her best to meet them, at times placing herself in possible danger. With the help of other missionaries she worked to help the people regain their health, receive an education, and return to their villages to serve their own people. Her death brought sadness to all who knew and loved this Sister of Charity who clearly practiced “every service in her power.”

Sr. Thomas, a.k.a. Trude, Collins left the classroom in 1967 to work among the people of St. Athanasius Parish and the surrounding area in the South Bronx. Sister’s bright smile and exuberance made her beloved by all of the residents and business people as well. She was a hard worker and staunch advocate for the needs of the people of the South Bronx. She served on various boards and was elected to the Community Board which she remained a member of for many years. Sr. Thomas saw the needs of the people around her and offered them whatever assistance she could. No task was too great, or too small; she was available day or night. Her fun-loving nature was equal to her compassion. She could burst into song at any moment and entertained the senior sisters every year around St. Patrick’s Day at the Convent of Mary the Queen’s annual party. Noted for her large earrings and often colorful clothing, Sister Thomas was a Sister of Charity to her very fingertips. Ask anyone in the South Bronx about her, and they will tell you she was the kindest, funniest, and most loving person they had ever met.

These two women, daughters of Elizabeth Ann Seton, though working thousands of miles apart, were fulfilling Jesus message to go and preach the gospel to all of my people. Their preaching was through their many actions of love and kindness to all whom they met. The Sisters of Charity and the world have lost two marvelous ambassadors of God’s love.

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Filed under Sisters of Charity Federation, Sisters of Charity of New York