U.S.

Catholic Extension: $1,000 each for 1,000 nuns to allay COVID-19 impacts

By Mark Pattison | Catholic News Service
Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Sister Gabriela Luna Diaz, a member of the Eucharistic Missionaries of St. Teresa, chats on a cellphone in this undated photo. She is part of Catholic Extension’s U.S.-Latin American Sisters Exchange Program that helps Hispanic populations in northwestern Wisconsin as they face the hardships of the coronavirus crisis. (CNS photo/courtesy Sister Gabriela Luna Diaz)

WASHINGTON — After the success of a pair of pilot programs this spring, a nationwide “Sisters on the Frontlines” fundraising effort aims to give 1,000 sisters $1,000 each to help blunt the negative effects of the coronavirus on some of the United States’ most vulnerable people.

The program was unveiled June 22 by Catholic Extension, which will administer the grants. To date, six foundations have formed an alliance to pledge funds — but not the entire $1 million needed — to give $1,000 each to 1,000 sisters — to get the initiative started.

“We’re inviting all of the sisters who are on the front lines to make a simple request to participate in the program — not an application process,” said Joe Boland, vice president of mission for Catholic Extension. He added the sisters may serve anywhere, not just the 87 U.S. dioceses in Catholic Extension’s territory.

“The thought is, let’s get some money into the hands of sisters, and there doesn’t need to be an enormous vetting process, because all of the funders who are funding this have a conviction that sisters are trustworthy,” Boland told Catholic News Service in a June 23 phone interview.

“If they’re engaged in some ministry that is serving the poor — or have access to the poor — they determine how the money will be spent,” Boland added. “They know the ones in their communities, they know the names, the faces, the families. They will be able to deliver it or organize it in such a way that support goes to those who have the greatest need.”

The foundations forming the alliance in partnership with Catholic Extension are the Conrad N. Hilton Fund for Sisters, Foundations and Donors Interested in Catholic Activities, GHR Foundation, Raskob Foundation for Catholic Activities, Sisters of Charity Foundation of Cleveland and Sisters of Mercy of the Americas.

The Sisters of Mercy did one of the pilot programs, said Mercy Sister Deborah Troillett. The nuns who were given grants “spoke of how humbling it was,” she told CNS in a June 24 phone interview. “The difficulty was deciding who, because the need was so great. That was a challenge for a number of our younger sisters. You can’t do everything. How do you decide when there’s so much need?”

Troillett said 85 Mercy sisters were identified in the first round of pilot program grants, with funds being sent as early as Holy Week. Of the $100,000 allotment by the GHR Foundation — which is good for another $100,000 for the expanded program — all but $1,000 has been spent, and that last grant is spoken for by a Mercy sister in the Philippines who applied for a second-round grant.

Troillett said the Mercy sisters spent their grant money on “everything from what you would imagine — food, medicine. Sadly, in one way we were able to help with funeral expenses. There were simple things like somebody didn’t have enough money to repair their car so they could get to work, so it was a car repair bill. It was rent. It was utilities. In the Philippines, in Peru, the sisters sent me very dramatic pictures of just taking food to the rural countryside, just delivering these bags of food — these very basic staples of rice and beans.”

Kathleen Mahoney, a senior program officer for the GHR Foundation, said the concept developed while in conversations with the Mercy Sisters’ leadership team. “We came up with this idea, the GHR board approved this and said, ‘Let’s try it!’” Mahoney said.

From the pilot program, she said, the nuns did “just a beautiful job in using those smaller grants,” she added, each sister sending along “very touching stories about how they supported people in need.”

The foundation has an extensive portfolio of charitable works both domestically and internationally, according to Mahoney, but through it all runs “a long and deep regard for Catholic sisters. We have a high regard for the life and ministry of Catholic sisters.”

Alexia Kelley, president and CEO of Foundations and Donors Interested in Catholic Activities, said $200,000 has been committed by the participating foundations thus far. Donations can be made online at give.catholicextension.org/page/20195/donate/1.

Catholic Extension, which is based in Chicago, supports the work and ministries of U.S. mission dioceses. It raises and distributes funds to support these dioceses, many of which are rural, cover a large geographic area, and have limited personnel and pastoral resources.

Topics:

  • catholic extension
  • women religious
  • coronavirus
  • covid-19

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