|
The Sisters of
the Holy Family, an African American congregation of pontifical
status, was founded by a free woman of African descent,
Henriette Delille, in New Orleans, Louisiana some twenty years
before the Emancipation Proclamation. Henriette Delille and her
friend, Juliette Gaudin, born in Cuba of Haitian parents,
dedicated their lives to God and began their work of educating
the children of slaves, caring for the sick, the poor, and the
elderly. Because of social customs and legislation regarding
persons of African descent, the Sisters of the Holy Family were
not officially recognized until 1842. Josephine Charles, also a
free woman of color, joined them the following year.
The
Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Family have maintained
their original ministries of educating youth and caring for the
aged, the poor, and the most abject of society. They own and
operate the oldest continuous Catholic home for the aged in the
United States, and operate two independent facilities for
low-income senior citizens in New Orleans, Louisiana. The
sisters are administrators and educators of two pre-school child
development centers, one primary free school for the poor, two
high schools, and seventeen elementary schools in the United
States; have an on-going involvement in the Diocese of Benin
City, Nigeria West Africa; and founded the first vocational
school in Belize, Central America for those students who are
unable to attend regular high school classes.
The Sisters
have missions in Louisiana, Texas, California, Washington, D.C.,
and Belize, Central America. Jesus continues to call today's
women to share in this spirit-filled life. If you are between
the ages of 18-40 and would like to live a life of prayer,
dedication, and service to God and His people as a Sister of the
Holy Family, we invite you to join us as we meet the challenges
of the twenty-first century.
|