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Visiting the poor

Scene 4: Mary and Alicia visit a poor household in 1816


Family pressures kept Mary in Cork, but she kept in close contact with Anna O' Brien. Within two years of their first meeting, Daniel Murray became coadjutor Bishop of Dublin and asked Mary to take responsibility for a new order of nuns, looking after the poor. She accepted and travelled with Alicia Walsh to the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary in York to receive spiritual formation in an established religious order. Mary and Alicia returned to Dublin in 1815. Because the new order had not yet been formally established, they could not assume a formal religious habit so they dressed in a simple black dress and muslin cap. They took over an orphanage in North William Street and they, and the postulants who joined them, were kept busy with the orphanage, the orphanage school, and visiting the poor and sick in their own homes. By holding to her conviction that there can be no charity without respect for the poor, Mary and the sisters earned respect, even in the toughest of neighbourhoods.

 

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