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Congregation grows
Scene 9: The congregation thrives


After a period of relative ease, Mary's health deteriorated again. She was forced to leave her beloved hospital and move to Harold's Cross, and the novitiate soon followed her there. She was forced to rule the congregation largely by correspondence. During the famine the congregation did what it could for the destitute from the countryside who flooded into the towns. While the health of the foundress deteriorated, the congregation thrived. In 1838, five sisters made the four-month voyage to Australia, to work in the Penal Colonies.

Mary Aikenhead departed this life in July 1858. For her congregation she remains a living presence. Her living of Gospel values and her faith in Divine Providence are the inspiration of the Religious Sisters of Charity. As her daughters in religion, they struggle to renew her charism in our own time, to dedicate themselves, in Christ's name, to joyful service of the poor, to be advocates for the weak, to be afire with Justice.
 

Life of Mary Aikenhead

Mary Aikenhead - Her Life & Work

© Religious Sisters of Charity (2009)