Religious sisters share
stories from the frontline
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| Sr Yudith Pereira, Executive Director of Solidarity with South Sudan. |
The Vatican's foreign minister, Archbishop Paul Gallagher
attended a seminar, jointly organised by the U.S. embassy to the Holy See, the
Union of Superiors General and Solidarity with South Sudan, to pay tribute to
the corageous work of women religious combatting trafficking and promoting
reconciliation
By Philippa Hitchen
How can the work of women religious in justice, peace and
anti-trafficking efforts be more effectively included into policies at
government and international level?
That question was at the heart of a seminar on Wednesday
organised by the U.S. Embassy to the Holy See, together with the International
Union of Superiors General (UISG) and Solidarity with South Sudan.
Participants spoke of the work of sisters serving in Africa,
Latin America, Asia and the Middle East, seeking to build peace and to empower
other women in some of the most deprived and violent countries and
socio-economic contexts.
Combatting prostitution, pornography and trafficking
Sisters working to combat trafficking, prostitution and the
insidious cyber porn industry, talked of the need to educate girls and boys, as
well as working together with governments and all sectors of society to protect
the victims and prosecute the perpetrators.
Other sisters shared dramatic and moving stories of staying
alongside those who suffer in wars and conflicts, sometimes being targeted,
robbed, raped or even killed themselves.
Paying tribute to corageous witness
Also present was the Vatican’s ‘foreign minister’, or
Secretary for Relations with States, Archbishop Paul Gallagher. Speaking from
personal experience of the women religious he met as nuncio in Burundi,
Guatemala and Australia, he paid tribute to their courageous and selfless work,
which is often taken for granted and undervalued, both in the Church and in
wider society:
He said: “For me these are all examples of religious women
living […] and working on the front lines, living out their faith, having to draw
on all the resources of their faith and of the spirituality of their individual
congregations and giving enormous witness to the Church and to Christ”.
Helping women's voices to be heard
He added: “In all the 30 yers I’ve been doing this
diplomatic job on behalf of the Holy See, everywhere I’ve been there have been
women like this […] and I have no doubt they will continue to serve humanity
and to serve Christ in the future, and for that I give thanks”.
The sisters see their mission as a life-giving gift to
people and nations desperately seeking healing, reconciliation and peace. The
challenge to the Vatican, and to the Church hierarchy everywhere, is how to
help make these powerful voices from the grass roots heard more clearly in the
corridors of power and the places where political or economic decisions are
made.

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