Sisters of St. Louis

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Sisters of St. Louis
Founder
Louis Marie Eugène Bautain
Religions
Roman Catholicism
Website
www.stlouissisters.org

The Sisters of St Louis (SSL) is a Roman Catholic religious order of nuns. It traces its origins back to Strasbourg in 1997, when three religious signed a spiritual act of union and vowed to remain united together in the heart of Christ until death;[1] Father Louis Eugene Marie Bautain was influenced by this union and he and Mère Thérèse de la Croix officially founded the SSL in Juilly, France in 1842;[2] the order was originally established to promote Christian education for young people and has set up a number of schools around the world. It originally included men as well as women but subsequently became a women-only order.[3]

In 2024, it is a relatively small order with a total of 380 members around the world; members follow the motto of “Sint Unum - May they be one”.[1]

Sisters of St Louis around the world[edit]

Brazil[edit]

The first SSL in Brazil was established in 1978.[1]

Belgium[edit]

The first SSL in Belgium was established in 1903.[1]

Benin[edit]

The first SSL in Benin was established in 2001.[1]

Canada[edit]

The order has 13 branches in Canada (mainly Quebec).[4]

Ethiopia[edit]

The first SSL in Ethiopia was established in 2013.[5]

France[edit]

The order has 5 branches in France. [4]

Ghana[edit]

The first SSL in Ghana was established in 1947.[6]

Haiti[edit]

The order has 26 branches in Haiti.[4]

Ireland[edit]

Former St. Louis Convent in Ramsgrange, County Wexford, built in 1912.[7]

The mother house of the order in Ireland was founded in Monaghan in 1859.[8] The second house followed in Bundoran in 1870.[9] By papal decree, the Irish province became autonomous in 1921. It returned to the mother-congregation (in Juilly) in 1952.

The order was involved in the establishment of several schools. These included

However, the order has since withdrawn from involvement in these schools.

Madagascar[edit]

The order has 9 branches in Madagascar.[4]

Mali[edit]

The order has 3 branches in Mali.[4]

Martinique[edit]

The order has a centre in Martinique.[4]

Mexico[edit]

The order has a house in Mexico.[4]

Nigeria[edit]

The first SSL in Nigeria was established in 1948.[1] In 2024, the leadership team is led by Sister Christiana Kure.[15]

Senegal[edit]

The order has a house and a school in Senegal.[4]

UK[edit]

The first SSL in England was established in 1912;[1] it was merged with the Irish SSL in 1952. In 2024, the order has an Apostolic Community in Surrey.[16]

USA[edit]

The first SSL in the US was established in California in 1949.[1] They also have a centre in New York.[4]

Child sexual and physical abuse in Ireland[edit]

The Northern Ireland Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry of 2014 investigated historical physical and sexual abuse of children at St Joseph's Training School, Middletown, N.I., run by the Sisters of St Louis. There were many instances of physical abuse, and some of sexual abuse, but the inquiry did not find evidence of systemic sexual abuse.[17]

Apology[edit]

On 11 March 2022 ministers from the five main political parties in Northern Ireland and six abusing institutions made statements of apology in the Northern Ireland Assembly. [18]

The six institutions that apologised for carrying out abuse were De La Salle Brothers, represented by Br Francis Manning; the Sisters of Nazareth, represented by Sr Cornelia Walsh; the Sisters of St Louis represented by Sr Uainin Clarke; the Good Shepherd Sisters, represented by Sr Cait O'Leary; Barnardo's in Northern Ireland, represented by Michele Janes; and Irish Church Missions, represented by Rev Mark Jones.[18] In live reporting after the apology, BBC News reported that Jon McCourt from Survivors North West said "If what happened today was the best that the church could offer by way of an apology they failed miserably. There was no emotion, there was no ownership. ... I don't believe that the church and institutions atoned today." He called on the intuitions to "do the right thing" and contribute to the redress fund for survivors, saying that institutions have done similar for people in Scotland.[19]: 15:11  McCourt praised the government ministers' apologies; they had "sat and thought out and listened to what it was we said.", but said that the institutions had failed to do this, leading to some victims having to leave the room while they were speaking, "compound[ing] the hurt."[19]: 15:22  Others angry at the institutions' apologies included Caroline Farry, who attended St Joseph's Training School in Middletown from 1978-1981, overseen by nuns from the Sisters of St Louis,[19]: 15:04  Pádraigín Drinan from Survivors of Abuse,[19]: 14:55  and Alice Harper, whose brother, a victim of the De La Salle Brothers, had since died.[19]: 14:55  Peter Murdock, from campaign group Savia, was at Nazareth Lodge Orphanage with his brother (who had recently died); he likened the institution to an "SS camp". He said "It's shocking to hear a nun from the institution apologising ... it comes 30 years too late ... people need to realise that it has to come from the heart. They say it came from the heart but why did they not apologise 30 years ago?"[19]: 14:34 

The order issued a statement in January 2017 where they accepted the report, issued an apology and gave a promise to address the recommendations.[20]

A board was set to represent all six institutions with a view to paying compensation to abuse victims; however, by April 2024, SSL had not taken any action towards making payments.[21][22]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h St Louis Sisters website, Our History, retrieved 2024-05-15
  2. ^ Le Chéile Schools Trust website, Sisters of Saint Louis
  3. ^ "Sisters of Saint Louis". Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Soeurs de la Charite St Louis website, Where we are, retrieved 2024-05-15
  5. ^ Global Sisters Report website, St Louis Sisters’ mission in rural Ethiopia has adventures, challenges, and beauty, article by Melanie Lidman dated August 25, 2016
  6. ^ St Louis Sisters website, Sisters of St Louis Ghana celebrate 70 Years of St Louis presence, article dated November 29, 2017
  7. ^ "Saint Louis's Convent once Saint Catherine's Convent, Ramsgrange, County Wexford". National Inventory of Architectural Heritage. Department of Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht. Retrieved 27 January 2019.
  8. ^ Encyclopedia.com website, St Louis, Sisters of
  9. ^ "Review: GOD WILLS IT!". Clogher Record. 2 (3). Clogher Historical Society: 554–557. 1959. JSTOR 27695496.
  10. ^ "St. Louis Secondary School, Monaghan". Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  11. ^ "St Louis Secondary School, Carrickmacross". Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  12. ^ "St Louis Secondary School, Dundalk". Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  13. ^ Founded on 25 June 1871 as Boarding School for Young Ladies: "Opening of St. Catherine's Convent, Ramsgrange". Freeman's Journal. Dublin. 29 June 1871. p. 3, col. 8.
  14. ^ Opened as Ramsgrange Community School in September 1977: "Whole School Evaluation Report: Ramgsgrange Community School". Department of Education. 21 June 2007. Retrieved 27 January 2019.
  15. ^ St Louis Sisters Nigeria website, Contact magazine; February 2023
  16. ^ UK Government website, Charity Commission section, English Mission of the Sisters of St Louis, retrieved 2024-05-15
  17. ^ "18: Module 11 – St Joseph's Training School, Middletown; sections Physical Abuse, Sexual Abuse, Peer Abuse" (PDF). Report of the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (Report). Vol. 5. Northern Ireland Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry. 2017. ISBN 978-1-908820-91-4.
  18. ^ a b McCormack, Jayne; Andrews, Chris (11 March 2022). "Abuse survivors hear Stormont public apology". BBC News.
  19. ^ a b c d e f Connolly, Gráinne; Glynn, Niall; McCauley, Ciaran (11 March 2022). "Abuse survivors apology delivered at Stormont (reported live)". BBC News.
  20. ^ St Louis Sisters website, Statement on the Report by the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry in Northern Ireland
  21. ^ BBC website, Barnardo’s and the Good Shepherd Sisters to make abuse payment, article by Jayne McCormack dated April 16, 2024
  22. ^ Irish News website, Historical Institutional Abuse: Religious orders and charities still have not given money to compensation scheme, article by Claire Simpson, dated October 9, 2021