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Deaconate Orlando Chavarría Gutiérrez Begins his Journey

Nestled deep in the heart of Panama is Volcán, a town where the members of the Congregation of the Mission have ministered for many years. A native of Volcán, newly ordained Deaconate Orlando Ariel Chavarría Gutiérrez is the youngest of the ten children of two devout parents, Carmelo Chavarría and Meivys Gutiérrez.

A Journey of Faith
Orlando’s faith journey began when he was eleven years old. “It was at that time that I presented myself to the parish in order to prepare myself for the sacrament of Baptism,” Orlando recalls. One year later, he prepared to receive First Communion.

It was at this time that the pastor began recruiting altar servers. “I had the desire to help and to serve at the altar,” Orlando says. Other pastoral opportunities also arose for him, including visiting the infirm and attending meetings in local communities of faith.

But it didn’t stop there. “As I began preparation for the sacrament of Confirmation, there was a request for catechists, so I became an assistant catechist preparing young people for First Communion and Confirmation.” Eventually, he became the catechist for the community.

Choosing the Vincentian Life
Orlando was familiar with the Vincentians because of their ministries in Panama. “I was attracted to the Vincentian’s charism as a young boy,” he says. “Kindness, simplicity, and humility are virtues that the members of the Vincentians live as they carry out their mission in Panama. Because there is a lay formation center in my parish, St. Mary’s Balboa, I came to know many priests who communicated those qualities.”

Hearing the Call
Calls from God are at times confusing and recognized in different ways. For Orlando, there was a sense of personal longing and a desire to serve others in and through the Church. He even received a personal invitation from a respected friend. “God’s call came through means of my pastor, who often asked me if I wanted to be a Vincentian missionary,” recalls Orlando. “I clearly remember that the first time my pastor posed this question, I empathically responded: ‘NO!’” After several months of prayer and discernment, Orlando told his pastor that he was ready to enter the Vincentian seminary. “God calls and yet so often one is not attentive to the call,” states Orlando.

Be Like Jesus
Orlando’s motto for his diaconal ordination is “He went about doing good” (Acts 10:38). “I want to engage in the same ministry as Jesus … and His ministry par excellence was that of doing good,” states Orlando. While he realizes the challenges he will face as a young man and a Vincentian missionary, he is determined to fulfill his commitment. “I am up for the challenge knowing Jesus walks the path with me.”

A Day in the Life of a Missionary
Orlando’s daily routine varies but a normal school day involves early morning meditation followed by reciting community prayers, eating a healthy breakfast, and attending classes at La USMA Universidad Santa Maria Antigua (translated in English: “Old” Holy Mary University).

“I have classes from 8:00 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. then I return to the house, have lunch and attend to administrative matters in the house and the parish,” says Orlando. Adoration before the Blessed Sacrament is held in the evening with other members of the house, followed by the celebration of the Eucharist. “We eat together at 6:45 p.m. and soon after I am in my room preparing for the next day’s classes.”

Orlando does find time to enjoy community life, and especially enjoys time spent with his fellow confreres. “I could list many different activities, but when we sit down and listen to one another, when we live as brothers during times of prayer, sharing a meal, seeing a movie, laughing together, this is when I value my Vincentian community,” reflects Orlando.

As Orlando continues his journey to priesthood, please keep this remarkable young man in your prayers.

St. Vincentian de Paul, pray for us!

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The deaconate ordination of Orlando Ariel Chavarría Gutiérrez, CM, at our Panama ministry, was celebrated on Saturday morning, February 11. Confreres and laity from all over the Region of Panama, as well as Daughters of Charity, priests and seminarians from the Archdiocese of Panama, confreres from the Province of Central America and the Vice-Province of Costa Rica and many members of Orlando’s family gathered in St. Mary’s Church, Balboa for the joyful celebration.

The ordaining celebrant was Bishop Rafael Valdivieso Miranda of the Diocese of Chitré, who is the president of the Bishop’s Conference in Panama and had been Orlando’s professor in the seminary. The choir from Orlando’s home parish in Volcan sang beautifully.

St. Mary’s Parish hosted the celebration, with a big assist from our Vincentian seminarians who spent most of Thursday setting up the hall before donning albs on Saturday to serve as liturgical ministers during the ceremony. After the festivities ended, the seminarians packed their bags and headed to Escobal, where they will participate in a weeklong mission in that sector.

Please continue to pray for Orlando, all the seminarians in Panama and the USA, and ask our Lord to call young men to the vocation of a Vincentian Priest and Brother.

St. Vincent de Paul, pray for us!

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What is a nation? What does it mean to belong to a nation? What does that belonging require? What is citizenship?

M. Shawn Copeland, Ph.D., Professor Emerita of Systematic Theology, the Department of Theology and the Program in African and African Diaspora Studies at Boston College, posed these questions during her lecture, “Competing and Changing Visions of Social Belonging,” held on November 21 in the D’Angelo Center on St. John’s University’s Queens, NY, campus.

Dr. Copeland is this year’s holder of the St. John’s University Vincentian Chair of Social Justice; the theme for her lecture series is “Visions of Freedom: A Political Theology for Our Time.” She will present three more lectures on similar topics throughout the 2022–23 academic year.

Dr. Copeland noted that the US Constitution has functioned as a social and racialized contract between and among free White persons as citizens constituting the republic. From the beginning, US citizenship was restricted to any free White person, tying citizenship to racial identity. It disempowered all women and ethnic minorities deemed as “non-White.”

A nation is an imagined political community, Dr. Copeland posed. “As both inherently limited and sovereign, it is imagined because the members of even the smallest nation will never know most of their fellow members. Yet, in the mind of each lives the image of communion.”

Because human beings are social creatures by nature, the desire to belong is integral to who we are, Dr. Copeland said. “Belonging implies an emotional attachment, a feeling of ‘at-homeness,’” she added. Human beings find meaning in participation and acceptance in certain groups, whether in a family, neighborhood, city, town, country, town, school, or religious group.

Through those associations, Dr. Copeland explained, group belonging often leads to comparison with others. “Too often it constructs identity through labeling some group or nation as inferior while defining ourselves as superior, or by stereotyping some person, group, or nation as flawed and deficient while presenting ourselves as flawless and exemplary. Such behavior undermines authentic values of human belonging.”

Different segments of a nation’s population may or may not have easier or more difficult access to these rights outlined in its constitution.

“Across our geographic landscape the very land upon which we live conjures memories of rejection and alienation—harrowing, violent stories of nation building in which Indigenous, African, Mexican, Hispanic Latino, and Asian peoples are driven to geographic, sociopolitical, economic, cultural, and religious margins,” Dr. Copeland explained, adding that the early years of this country promoted unity while disregarding diversity.

“Such unity is never simply given,” she stressed. “It must be forged in actions rooted in authentic respect for the life and dignity of other human persons.”

Prior to the lecture, a group of students majoring in Critical Race and Ethnic Studies had dinner with Dr. Copeland in the D’Angelo Center for a more in-depth discussion of the topics presented in her lecture.

“It was enlightening to see things presented from a theological perspective,” said student William Pierre-Francois. “People often ask ‘What does theology have to do with modern-day society?’, but theology, sociology, and psychology are all partners in this society of ours.”

“It was great to see how much Dr. Copeland cares about students’ voices, especially people who are devoted to learning about equity and inclusion in a true sense,” said student Sandyha Shyla Nath. “You can’t just say it’s a priority. You have to listen to what people’s needs are and incorporate them. In Dr. Copeland, we see someone who cares about what we want and what we’re doing.”

“Dr. Copeland continues to lead the St. John’s community along the path of political theology,” noted Rev. Patrick J. Griffin, C.M. ’13HON, Executive Director, Vincentian Center for Church and Society. “What becomes clear is that this valuable description of belonging becomes restricted to certain individuals of a particular color, social class, and religious background. ‘Americanization’ is that process of inclusion and exclusion. Dr. Copeland demonstrates that citizenship separates more than it unites.”


Learn More about St. John’s University: https://www.stjohns.edu/

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St. Vincent de Paul was filled with a passion to meet the material and spiritual needs of persons who were poor. With a talent for organizing others who shared his passion, he began a group of priests and Brothers—the Congregation of the Mission—for the evangelization of the poor and the formation of the clergy.

That Vincentian charism, celebrated annually during the liturgical year on January 25—the Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul the Apostle—was highlighted in a Foundation Day liturgy that marked the 406th anniversary of the founding of the Vincentian charism.

The principal celebrant and homilist, Rev. Aidan R. Rooney, C.M., M.Div., M.Th. ’78NDC, Executive Vice President for Mission, spoke to the congregants assembled in St. Thomas More Church and contrasted the age-old Vincentian question: “What must be done?” with the scripture reading for the day describing the conversion of St. Paul.

In his early life, Paul, known then as Saul, was a zealous persecutor of Jesus’ first followers. His conversion, described in the Acts of the Apostles, took place on the way to Damascus, where Saul was headed to arrest several disciples of Jesus. Struck to the ground by a divine light, he heard the voice of Christ calling on him and saying, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?” This vision temporarily blinded Saul, who regained his sight only when he was baptized by Ananias in Damascus.

“Regain your sight and what must be done? Life presents us with many questions,” observed Fr. Rooney. “On this, his day of conversion and foundation, how are you going to answer those questions?”

Immediately following the liturgy, a repast was held where Rev. Brian J. Shanley, O.P., President; several Vincentian priests; students; and employees mingled over sandwiches and enjoyed fellowship. The attendees reflected on how St. John’s mission, history, and identity are deeply linked to Vincentian values. The gathering was a sampling of the ever-growing network of people who provide spirituality and service on campus and beyond, thus enabling the founding Vincentian mission to endure.


Learn more about St. John’s University: https://www.stjohns.edu/

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Niagara University has been named as one of a select group of companies recognized by Buffalo Business First for its outstanding work in 2022. The publication cited the university’s investment in faculty and capital projects, its addition of programs and students at its Ontario campus, and its growing year-over-year enrollment–despite a national trend of enrollment declines–as highlights of the year.

By playing to its strengths and focusing on the future, Niagara has been able to advance the goals and objectives of its strategic plan during a year of unprecedented challenges for higher education. It also launched the largest and most impactful philanthropic campaign in its 166-year history, “Powering Transformation: The Campaign for Niagara University,” which seeks to raise $125 million by December 2023.

The university has also invested in facilities and capital projects, including an $11.5 million renovation of the Kiernan Center, $1 million of which was funded by a Higher Education Capital (HECap) Matching Grant. The new Kiernan Center, which is actively used by students, employees, alumni, and individuals from the community, was completed this fall.

Niagara’s recent purchase of a church building in the Bridge District of Niagara Falls, financed in part by a $1.1 million grant administered by Empire State Development, will support its efforts to create a community-based academic innovation hub and its commitment to the revitalization of the city. The hub aims to be a beehive of strategic university activity, where students advance their careers with real-world experiences while impacting the community.

While other institutions of higher education are facing declining enrollment, Niagara’s full-time enrollment has grown 5% year-over-year, as reported in Business First’s annual lists of largest area colleges. In 2022, enrollment increased by 161 to 3,432.

Alumni support has figured prominently in the university’s ability to attract students. A gift of $10 million from Jeff and Mary Helen Holzschuh, both members of Niagara University’s Class of 1982, supports the university’s Trustee Scholarship Program for students in the Holzschuh College of Business Administration and the College of Nursing, as well as the men’s and women’s basketball programs.

This fall, the university welcomed its first class of Lois Lyon Brennan Scholars, a group of talented, high-achieving students from under-resourced communities. The Brennan Scholar program was made possible through a $5 million gift from Niagara University alumnus Edward J. Brennan, ’78, and Deborah Brennan.

And students who were unable to take advantage of the career pathways provided through internships and professional experiences because they could not afford to accept unpaid placements will now be able to participate in these transformative opportunities, thanks to a $3.5 million commitment from William, ’61, ’07 (Hon.), and Nancy Gacioch.

Enrollment also received a boost due to the growth of the school’s Ontario campus, which opened in 2019 and has grown by about 150 students in the last 18 months, as well as the university’s focus on being “transfer friendly.”

In order to support the increasing number of students, Niagara has hired an additional 18 faculty members. With a workforce of more than 770, Niagara continues to be one of the largest employers in Niagara County.

Learn more about Niagara University : https://www.niagara.edu/

Banner Photo Caption: This fall, Niagara University welcomed its first class of Brennan Scholars: (front row, l-r) Alannah Solomon, Lauren Ervolina, Violet Printup, and Heidi Pauta; (back row, l-r) Semira Vincent, Cristina Reina-Martinez, and Janasia Hayward. Missing from photo: Teosha William

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Fr. Aidan Rooney, CM, tells the Vincentian narrative to current and new audiences using modern-days tools and messaging.

Fr. Rooney doing push ups with a soccer team in Bolivia

On a cold, blustery day in March at Niagara University (a Vincentian institution) in Niagara Falls, New York, Fr. Aidan Rooney, CM, cannot help but poke fun at himself. “I was born in Staten Island a long time ago. I’m older than the Verrazano Bridge that gets you to Brooklyn.”

While he is technically older than that famed bridge, at only 63, he scoffs at the idea of retirement. “Vincentians don’t retire. We keep going in ministry, until we physically can’t anymore.” If Fr. Rooney’s youthful vigor is any indication (he is a proponent of physical fitness), he’s got many years of ministry left in him.

Serving as Vice President for Mission Integration at Niagara University, Fr. Rooney is tasked with ensuring that the university’s educational, Catholic, and Vincentian mission is seamlessly infused throughout the entirety of the institution—no small task. He collaborates with numerous departments and committees in this role, while also serving on the President’s Cabinet.

In addition, Fr. Rooney creates two weekly videos on VincentiansUSA.org: “The Vincentian Minute,” a quick reflection on living a Vincentian life, and “The Word: A Journey from Outside In,” a reflection on each Sunday’s scripture from the lectionary. As if video wasn’t enough, he is a frequent contributor to “The God Minute,” a daily Catholic podcast with a number of notable contributors. He also celebrates Sunday Mass at parishes in Niagara Falls and serves as the Superior of the Vincentian Community at Niagara University.

Fr. Rooney believes his many ministries give him strength, rather than take it. Yet, the fact that he is ministering at all, let alone serving for forty years as a Vincentian and thirty-five years as a Vincentian Priest, would be a big surprise to the young kid on Staten Island. “My vocation to the Vincentians and the priesthood took a circuitous route,” Fr. Rooney says. “I didn’t even meet a Vincentian until I was an adult.”

For his early education he attended parochial and Christian Brothers (C.F.C.) schools, and after high school, he enrolled in Cornell University. The Ivy League culture did not appeal to him, and he was back home in Staten Island without even completing his first semester. “I figured I’d go home, get a job to learn a trade, make good money,” Rooney recalls. “God had other plans.”

A friend , who was taking classes at St. John’s Staten Island campus, encouraged Fr. Rooney to join him there. Within months, he was enrolled and discovered the Vincentians for the first time.

The Vincentian calling wasn’t immediate, and his career plans were uncertain. He was active in the robust Catholic campus community and had a deep faith, but he envisioned a life in the theater. “To my own amazement,” he says, “after graduation and a summer internship at New York University’s (NYU) Educational Theater program, I became that theater’s technical director.”

It wasn’t until he attended NYU that he began to fully discern his call to become a priest, specifically a Vincentian Priest. Fr. Rooney says, “I was in grad school and still in touch with the Vincentians at St. John’s. My discernment had the encouragement of friends and Fr. Jim Smith, CM, who said, ‘You’ll never know unless you go and see if the life fits.’ Off I went. It fit!”

Instead of entering into a formal preparatory program as he would today, he began in the theology program at Mary Immaculate Seminary in September 1979. There, the curriculum was being redesigned and in flux, so Fr. Rooney took some upper-level theology courses during his first year. Fr. Peter Albano, CM, taught him a course that forever changed his life. “Fr. Albano’s course had me. I was sold,” Fr. Rooney recalls.

From there, his seminary formation began in earnest, and after Internal Seminary in 1980, followed by the completion of Major Seminary, he was ordained a priest. His first assignment was at the same campus he calls home today, Niagara University. He spent his first ten years there as a priest in campus ministry, teaching religious studies and eventually graduate-level research methods and statistical analysis.

His assignments over the decades have been varied: a young adult retreat center director in New Jersey, a parish pastor in Philadelphia, and the International Coordinator of FamVin (a multi-lingual network that unites branches of the Vincentian family), among other ministries.

In 2007, Fr. Rooney read a request by the Superior General of the Congregation of the Mission looking for priests and brothers to work in foreign missions. Two years later, he found himself in a rural sector of Bolivia, collaborating with two other Vincentians and local laity in the leadership of two parishes and eighty-three Catholic communities, while becoming fluent in Spanish and learning to live in the high altitude of Bolivia’s Andes Mountains. “I visited upward of fifty communities twice a year,” Fr. Aidan recalls, “to oversee the formation of catechists and to celebrate the sacraments.”

One of his most poignant memories of his service in Bolivia was also heartbreaking. “A woman had given birth to twins,” Fr. Rooney says, “and we knew one of them would probably die. So I administered the Anointing of the Sick to a two-week-old baby.”

However, most of his experiences in Bolivia were joyous. “I designed and supervised the building of three small village churches. To see the happiness of the people when we dedicated those churches was pretty awesome.”

By 2018, Fr. Rooney was back at Niagara University where his priestly ministry began. When asked if he is growing long-term roots at Niagara, he smiles and says, “I’m good for seven years in an assignment, and then I feel the need to move to another. That seems to be my way.” He pauses before adding, “I’ve only been back here for two years, so I’ve got plenty of time to accomplish what needs to be accomplished. And I’m a young guy—there is plenty more I plan to do.”


* Since this story was written, Fr. Rooney has left his ministry as Vice President for Mission Integration at Niagara University and is the current Executive Vice President for Mission at St. John’s University. We thank Fr. Rooney for his work Niagara University and wish Father well in his new ministry. Please continue to keep him in your prayers.

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The Miraculous Medal Shrine, a ministry of Vincentian Priests and Brothers, Eastern Province, USA, has been elevated by the Vatican to Minor Basilica status, a designation shared by only 91 other churches in the United States.


To learn more about this prestigious honor and read a message for FR. TIMOTHY V. LYONS, CM, Rector of the Basilica Shrine, click here: https://miraculousmedal.org/welcome/miraculous-medal-basillica/

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If you sit quietly, you can almost hear their hushed tones or feel their priestly presence. Their aura is palpable as they lay to rest once again as confreres. While they have transitioned from the physical to transphysical, the Vincentians of the Eastern Province, who are placed in The Miraculous Medal Shrine’s Crypt, impart a spiritual connection to visitors.

Hidden deep beneath the Shrine (yet accessible from the building’s Lower Level) the Crypt, also known as the Shrine’s Mortuary Chapel, is the final resting place of 71 Vincentian priests, brothers, and seminarians. All of them entered eternal life from 1900 until 1963, when Fr. Joseph A. Skelly, CM, founder of the Central Association of the Miraculous Medal, was laid to rest.

Fr. Joseph A. Skelly, CM (pictured at altar), supervised the improvement of the crypt, not knowing that he would have a special tomb there.

Originally, there were several locations where deceased Vincentians were interred, including present-day Niagara University in New York and the vault under the entrance of St. Vincent de Paul Church on Price Street in Philadelphia. In 1900, the Congregation moved the burial grounds to the seminary property in Germantown. Here, beneath the sanctuary of the Immaculate Conception Chapel, Vincentians found their final resting home.

By 1938, all the plots in the crypt were occupied except for one. The last space was used for Fr. William F. Groeninger, CM, who died on February 27, 1943, and was laid to rest in the crypt on May 3. However, twenty years later, a burial space was dedicated to Fr. Skelly; it was the only burial purposely placed.

When visiting the Crypt Chapel, visitors will notice a large number of deaths occurring in 1918. During the influenza pandemic of that year, the Vincentians responded heroically to the sick and dying, knowing that they were at risk of contracting the life-threatening flu infiltrating Philadelphia. As a result, nine succumbed to the disease between September and October of 1918. This is the largest number of Vincentians placed in the crypt during a one-year span. Open to the public, the crypt is more than an entombment of Vincentians. Kevin Flynn, who has been a frequent Shrine visitor since his early childhood, has found the crypt to be a serene spot for reflection. “I enjoy visiting the crypt because it is a quiet place to pray,” says Flynn, “and with Fr. Skelly and his confreres buried there, I imagine I am surrounded by saints.

Open to the public, the crypt is more than an entombment of Vincentians. Kevin Flynn, who has been a frequent Shrine visitor since his early childhood, has found the crypt to be a serene spot for reflection. “I enjoy visiting the crypt because it is a quiet place to pray,” says Flynn, “and with Fr. Skelly and his confreres buried there, I imagine I am surrounded by saints.”

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Sr. Michelle Loisel, DC, will give a presentation to anyone, anywhere, and anytime about the scourge of modern-day slavery, also known as human trafficking. When she speaks with groups in America, she is often asked, “Is slavery here?” Her answer is resolute: “Yes, slavery is here. Human trafficking exists here, and we all have a role in stopping it.”

Sr. Michelle Loisel, DC, knows about working to end human suffering.

As a Daughter of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul, Sr. Loisel describes herself as “an activist for the poor in this world.” In fact, she has spent most of her religious life serving in the Middle East (she speaks fluent Arabic), Africa, India, Haiti, and other areas of conflict. She then came to the United States and became the executive director of Dawn’s Place, a safe, residential, and holistic program for women who have been victims of sex trafficking.

Fast-forward to the 2015 General Assembly of the Daughters of Charity of America and Canada, when the Daughters (of Charity) decided to “…share commitments to end modern forms of slavery,” which include sex trafficking, forced labor, and migrant exploitation, among other forms of bondage.

The Daughters created a new position within the Province of St. Louise—Coordinator of Provincial Response to Migrants and Issues of Modern Human Slavery. Naturally, Sr. Loisel was the first Sister appointed to this position because of her experience leading Dawn’s Place.

Sr. Loisel, along with Sr. Mary Catherine Warehime, DC, want to educate the public about the scope of human trafficking, and communicate how each person can work to combat this extreme violation of human rights.

Yet, Srs. Loisel and Warehime were surprised to find that people didn’t want to know. “They don’t want to hear from us because they don’t want to hear the reality,” Sr. Loisel said from her office in Baltimore, Maryland.

“The reality,” Sr. Loisel emphasizes, “are real human beings are suffering unfathomable harm and trauma.” Take for example Rosy, an American girl. As detailed on the Daughter’s anti-trafficking website justfreedom.org

Between the ages of 4 and 13, her stepfather abused her. From the age of 8 until 14, she was also abused by her stepmother’s father. At 14-years-old, she [Rosy] was on a train and followed a man who acted interested in her as a boyfriend. He brought her to a motel and he became her first pimp.

When she gave birth to her daughter, he sold her to another pimp. The child was adopted and Rosy was forced to marry the new pimp’s friend. She had two more children, who were both adopted.

Rosy was assaulted many times. Traffickers abused her repeatedly, both emotionally and physically. She was gang raped at the age of 14. She was kidnapped and held in a room for weeks at a time, made to do drugs.

Eventually, Ros was forced to cash fraudulent checks and sell drugs by her pimp. She was found in possession of heroin. She was arrested and sent to jail. Once there, she reported to the police what had happened to her and the FBI got involved.

Rosy was referred to a safe, residential program. Rosy’s life had been saved.

To begin combatting such a large-scale plague that affects so many individuals, Sr. Loisel believes that “action follows awareness.” Therefore, the first step in creating that awareness is through education, collaboration, communication, and advocacy.

This happens on a number of levels.

Sr. Loisel gives presentations to parishes, educators, government agencies, non-government organizations, and anyone who will listen. She has created a digital infrastructure through social media and a website—justfreedom.org—that offers statistics, victims’ stories, resources, and other information related to trafficking and migration.

She also collaborates with other groups and persons involved in ending trafficking, including FamVin (Vincentian Family Network), the United Nations, state task forces, Catholic Charities, Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), and local organizations in her Baltimore area. The Daughters are also members of USCSAHT (U.S. Catholic Sisters Against Human Trafficking) and CCOAHT (Coalitions of Catholic Organizations Against Human Trafficking).

While Sr. Loisel is working on local, national, and international efforts to end the many forms of human trafficking, people often ask her what they can do in their own lives to combat modern slavery. First, she reminds us that what drives trafficking is consumer demand—demand for paid sex, for pornography, for cheap labor, for inexpensive goods. Eliminate demand and trafficking will dissolve.

Next, she says to be aware of red flags that someone might be a victim of exploitation, and to speak up about it. Signs of someone who is being trafficked include (among others):

  • Being fearful of police and authorities
  • Having no passport or ID or mentioning that someone else is holding his/her documents
  • Exhibiting signs of physical and/or psychological trauma (anxiety, lack of memory of recent events, bruising, untreated conditions, etc.)
  • Avoiding eye contact and/or social interaction
  • Having very few possessions

Additionally, she reminds us to be responsible consumers by being aware of the products we purchase and to be diligent in buying only fair trade certified products when available. Fair trade products ensure no forced labor was used in producing the product, and that fair and equitable prices are being paid to workers. Fair Trade products also monitor for safe social conditions and environmental stewardship.

Equally, Sr. Loisel points out that traffickers exploit vulnerable people (teens, runaways, migrants, etc.), and entice them into situations that aren’t what they seem. Today, this often happens online. Therefore, we all need to practice internet safety, but we especially need to teach children the dangers of being lured into dangerous situations on websites that seem harmless, or by predators posing as peers. For example, from justfreedom.org:

“…a 15-year-old girl walked into Cardinal Glennon Children’s Hospital in St. Louis, Missouri, and asked for help. Along with four other girls between the ages of 12 and 18, she had been sold for sex at truck stops across Missouri, Florida, Texas, and New Mexico for almost two months. She was lucky to be alive. According to her police report, another girl traveling with her during those months had died in her arms. The 15-year-old girl who walked into Cardinal Glennon, like the majority of children who are sold for sex in the United States today, was trafficked using [the website] Backpage.”

While the website “Backpage” has been shut down after numerous trafficking cases were associated with it, other similar sites continue to exist and predators continue to pose as teenagers or friendly adults on many social platforms.

Sr. Loisel, however, remains hopeful and prayerful that with an increase in awareness leading to action, we can—and will—stop the violence of trafficking. She believes it is worth repeating: “Yes, slavery is here. Human trafficking exists here, and we all have a role in stopping it.” She adds, “If all of us start repeating that message to our family, friends, faith communities, neighbors, coworkers, elected officials, and so on, we can each play a role in stopping this violation of human rights.”

 

If you or someone you know needs assistance, call the toll-free National Human Trafficking Resource Center (NHTRC) at 1.888.373.7888 or text BeFree to 233733.

Homelessness – Our Heritage and Challenge

Sep 22, 2022   /   Around the Province, Home

As we approach the feast of St. Vincent de Paul we can draw strength and be challenged by all that St. Vincent did.

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“He has sent me to evangelize the poor” (Luke 4:18)

Give Me 5: Brother Alfred Smith, CM

Nov 10, 2022   /   Around the Province, five, Home

A monthly series in Vincentian Voices where we ask five random questions to an Eastern Province Priest or Brother. This month, we talk with Brother Alfred Smith, CM.…

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A Vincentian Minute: Vincentian Educational Values 6

Oct 05, 2022   /   Vincentian Minute

Fr. Rooney explores the Values of Vincentian Education proposed by Daughter of Charity Sr. Louise Sullivan. This week: Vincentian education is Person-oriented!

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As part of the Sixth World Day of the Poor, which will be celebrated next Sunday, Nov. 13, Pope Francis today blessed “Sheltering”, a sculpture depicting the plight of the homeless.

The work was given to the Vincentian Family’s, FamVin Homeless Alliance (FHA), with the goal of ending homelessness and changing the lives of the 1.2 billion people who live without a place to call home around the world.

13 Houses Campaign

The “Sheltering” sculpture was conceived to shed light on the problem of homelessness in the world and to promote practical solutions in line with the mission of the 13 Houses Campaign, an initiative of the worldwide Vincentian Family. The Vincentian Family is a movement of different religious congregations, lay associations and, charitable organizations inspired by the life and work of St. Vincent de Paul, who “called together as many as he could, rich and poor, humble and powerful, used every means to inspire them with a sense of the poor – a privileged image of Christ – and urged them to help the poor directly and indirectly”

The Vincentian Family has joined together to form the FamVin Homeless Alliance (FHA) to end homelessness and change the lives of the 1.2 billion people without a place to call home around the world.

After participating in the blessing of “Sheltering”, Mark McGreevy, FHA coordinator and President of the Depaul International Group, said that the goal of the 13 Houses Campaign “is to house 10,000 people around the world, in the 160 countries where the Vincentian Family works. This is just the first step in an ambitious plan to change the lives of many of the 1.2 billion people who are currently homeless around the world through practical projects and pressure for systemic change”.

For Father Tomaž Mavrič, Superior General of the Congregation of the Mission of St. Vincent de Paul and the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul, “it is remarkable that 400 years after our founder St. Vincent de Paul provided 13 houses for abandoned children in Paris, the Vincentian Family Homeless Alliance can commemorate this past initiative by building similar houses for homeless people in different countries around the world. As Vincent said – “we must put our words into action”.

The Sculpture

“Sheltering” is a life-size bronze sculpture depicting the figure of a homeless person covered by a blanket pulled by a pigeon in flight. The sculpture is the work of Canadian artist, Timothy Schmalz.

“With Sheltering I wanted to highlight the plight of the homeless, offer them comfort and promote practical solutions such as the Vincentian Family 13 Houses Campaign”, Schmalz said of his reasons for creating the sculpture. He added: “It is everyone’s job to provide the homeless with a roof over their heads. To make them visible and address their needs”.

Schmalz already has an established track record in religious statues around the world. His work “Angels Unawares”, about migrants and refugees, was installed in St. Peter’s Square in 2019, when it was also blessed by the Holy Father.

About the World Day of the Poor

The World Day of the Poor was established by Pope Francis in his Apostolic Letter, Misericordia et Misera, published on November 20th, 2016 to celebrate the end of the Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy. Since then, it has been celebrated every year on the 33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time since 2017.

More information: Click Here

Homelessness – Our Heritage and Challenge

Sep 22, 2022   /   Around the Province, Home

As we approach the feast of St. Vincent de Paul we can draw strength and be challenged by all that St. Vincent did.

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“He has sent me to evangelize the poor” (Luke 4:18)

Give Me 5: Brother Alfred Smith, CM

Nov 10, 2022   /   Around the Province, five, Home

A monthly series in Vincentian Voices where we ask five random questions to an Eastern Province Priest or Brother. This month, we talk with Brother Alfred Smith, CM.…

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A Vincentian Minute: Vincentian Educational Values 6

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Niagara University announced the public launch of the largest and most impactful philanthropic campaign in its 166-year history. “Powering Transformation: The Campaign for Niagara University,” seeks to raise $125 million by December 2023.

Aligned with the university’s strategic plan, “Powering Transformation” will provide the critical academic, capital, and programmatic resources Niagara students need, while elevating the university’s commitment to advancing social change through higher education.

“The success of this ambitious campaign will support our vision for the future,” said the Rev. James J. Maher, C.M., Niagara University president. “It will ensure that Niagara University continues to provide an outstanding living-learning environment grounded in service to develop mission-driven leaders who contribute in powerful ways to their communities and around the world.

“Our Catholic and Vincentian heritage calls us to go beyond the campus, as well, advocating for and facilitating social justice and fostering economic development with the community,” he continued. “‘This campaign will highlight the true potential of the power of Niagara.”

Niagara University’s “Powering Transformation” campaign will enable NU to not only compete in a changing academic environment, but also take the lead among its peers, while providing students with the confidence, clarity of direction, and a heightened sense of purpose to realize their full potential. The campaign focuses on six priority areas:

  • Elevating academic excellence and reputation through student-centered, collaborative, experiential, and integrative approaches to learning in preparation for 21st century careers.
  • Cultivating a culture that fosters excellence in all our experiences, including development of the campus, support services, and technologies.
  • Advancing impactful collaborations that focus on mission and civic engagement to benefit the Greater Niagara Region and Niagara University.
  • Enhancing a diverse, inclusive, values-based learning environment designed to graduate global citizens and promote civil discourse.
  • Expanding Niagara University as the premier bi-national university within the Province of Ontario, Canada, through mission-based academic programs, improved branding, and the growth of our Ontario campus.
  • Diversifying revenue generation and strengthen fiscal sustainability.

More than $103.5 million has been raised since the quiet phase of the campaign began June 1, 2016. This includes two $10 million gifts—the largest alumni gifts Niagara University has ever received—23 individual seven-figure commitments, and nearly 8,000 contributors giving $5,000 or less.

Niagara University was awarded a $1 million Higher Education Capital Matching Grant (HECap) to kick-start upgrades and renovations to the Kiernan Center. The new Kiernan Center will be actively used by students, employees, alumni, and individuals from the community. The $11.5 million Kiernan Center renovation project is expected to be completed this fall.

Jeff and Mary Helen Holzschuh, both members of Niagara University’s Class of 1982, made a $10 million gift commitment to support the university’s Trustee Scholarship Program for students in the Holzschuh College of Business Administration and the College of Nursing, as well as the men’s and women’s basketball programs.

“Niagara University is a special place for Mary Helen and me, and we are grateful for the experience of our Vincentian education,” said Holzschuh, who also serves as chair of the campaign. “We feel very fortunate to be able to share our experience and give back to support student scholarships for business and nursing students, as well as Purple Eagle student athletes.”

A $5 million gift from Niagara University alumnus Edward J. Brennan, ’78, and Deborah Brennan, established the Lois Lyon Brennan Scholars program to enable talented, high-achieving students from under-resourced communities the opportunity to access the transformational education that Niagara University provides.

“Debbie and I are extremely pleased to build upon our mission of providing education to the underserved,” said Brennan. “The Lois Lyon Brennan scholarship program builds upon our commitment to helping the underserved. As an alumnus of Niagara University, I welcome the opportunity to bring our Vincentian values and inclusive excellence to high-achieving students who may not have this access to college and the engaging experience that leads to success.”

“As we have moved through the campaign, one thing has become abundantly clear: Our alumni and friends believe deeply in the Power of Niagara University,” said Jaclyn Rossi Drozd, ’08, M.S.Ed. ’10, vice president of Institutional Advancement. “Their support is transformational as we make improvements to facilities, enrich the academic programs, and enhance the overall living-learning environment of our students. As we move forward, we ask you to join our historic campaign, ‘Powering Transformation,’ for our students today, and for decades to come.”

Niagara University officials and Father Maher will be sharing the campaign vision with alumni and friends throughout the coming months at events in New York City, Philadelphia, Dallas, Rochester, and Western New York. Other events will be scheduled across the country throughout the duration of the campaign.

Homelessness – Our Heritage and Challenge

Sep 22, 2022   /   Around the Province, Home

As we approach the feast of St. Vincent de Paul we can draw strength and be challenged by all that St. Vincent did.

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“He has sent me to evangelize the poor” (Luke 4:18)

Give Me 5: Brother Alfred Smith, CM

Nov 10, 2022   /   Around the Province, five, Home

A monthly series in Vincentian Voices where we ask five random questions to an Eastern Province Priest or Brother. This month, we talk with Brother Alfred Smith, CM.…

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A Vincentian Minute: Vincentian Educational Values 6

Oct 05, 2022   /   Vincentian Minute

Fr. Rooney explores the Values of Vincentian Education proposed by Daughter of Charity Sr. Louise Sullivan. This week: Vincentian education is Person-oriented!

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A monthly series in Vincentian Voices where we ask five random questions to an Eastern Province Priest or Brother. This month, we talk with Brother Alfred Smith, CM. In 1955, Brother Al entered the Congregation of the Mission: Vincentians of the Eastern Province and just celebrated his 65th Anniversary of his life in ministry exercising various roles at St. Vincent de Paul Parish in the Germantown community of Philadelphia. “I just celebrated my eighty-seventh birthday. I’ve had a wonderful life. I have had many reasons to celebrate God’s amazing grace. Read more about Brother Al by reading his answers below.

What are you thankful for today?

Today and everyday, I am thankful of being able to serve God and others especially the poor in our community.

What piece of advice would you share with your younger self?

I would take the same path I was able to take many years ago.

One fact about me that might surprise you is…

I worry a lot about making wrong decisions on helping others.

If you could have the power of teleportation right now, where would you go and why?

I have no desire to go any place but right here in the Germantown community and do God’s

What is an easy way to do something nice for someone?

My daily prayer is to do God’s will, serving others in some way each and everyday.

Homelessness – Our Heritage and Challenge

Sep 22, 2022   /   Around the Province, Home

As we approach the feast of St. Vincent de Paul we can draw strength and be challenged by all that St. Vincent did.

Continue Reading
“He has sent me to evangelize the poor” (Luke 4:18)

Give Me 5: Brother Alfred Smith, CM

Nov 10, 2022   /   Around the Province, five, Home

A monthly series in Vincentian Voices where we ask five random questions to an Eastern Province Priest or Brother. This month, we talk with Brother Alfred Smith, CM.…

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A Vincentian Minute: Vincentian Educational Values 6

Oct 05, 2022   /   Vincentian Minute

Fr. Rooney explores the Values of Vincentian Education proposed by Daughter of Charity Sr. Louise Sullivan. This week: Vincentian education is Person-oriented!

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The full measure of the Vincentian commitment to social justice was brought to light for a group of St. John’s University students during a visit to the United Nations in Manhattan on Wednesday, October 26.

Student leaders from the University’s Ozanam and Catholic Scholars programs and its chapter of Catholic Relief Services toured the headquarters of the international agency, thrilled to discover how closely aligned the goals of the UN are with the mission of the Vincentians.

“To see how people decades ago made history in this very room, it does make you think, what can I do?” said senior Raphael Civil, a member of the University’s Catholic Scholars program. “The UN does so much, not only for world peace, but for sustainability, development, and human rights around the world.”

Nine students accompanied Victoria O’Keefe, Residence Campus Minister for Social Justice, on the trip to Manhattan’s East Side, home of the UN since the building’s completion in 1951. The organization was established in 1948, three years after the end of World War II. The St. John’s group toured the facility exactly 60 years after the Cuban Missile Crisis played out on the floor of the General Assembly, a signature moment in 20th-century geopolitics.

“It is impressive to see all these parts of history you can relate to,” said first-year student and liturgical minister Daniel Sullivan from Hicksville, NY.

But the trip was about more than history. The group also met Jim Claffey, the Congregation of the Mission’s (Vincentians) Representative to the UN. He explained how the order collaborates with UN member nations on matters of common interest, including homelessness, the rights of women and girls, environmental stewardship, and more.

Acknowledging 400 years of the Vincentian mission to the underprivileged, the order in 2017 embraced homelessness as its chief UN campaign, a message Mr. Claffey shared with the St. John’s group during its visit, which included a stop at the Vincentian mission to the UN on East 46th Street.

“What is at stake here?” he asked, responding to a student inquiry. “Nothing less than the fulfillment of our vocation. This is our evangelization, our good news, that God loves poor people and we can change the dynamics of homelessness and poverty.”

Also joining the group were alumni Joliz Claudio ’22CCPS and Gracie Bagdon ’22C, who both are interning with the Vincentians’ UN mission while attending graduate school. Speaking to the St. John’s students, Ms. Claudio stressed the need for continued action against violations of human rights.

“Doing nothing in a period of repressive violence is itself an act of violence,” she said. “You learn at St. John’s, and it is reinforced at the UN, that everyone deserves a seat at the table, so what can we do to make sure we all have a voice on world issues?” The Vincentian mission is one of about 4,000 nongovernmental organizations, or NGOs, that lobby the UN and its 193 member states. Also included in the Vincentian family of NGOs are arms of the Daughters of Charity, the International Association of Charities, Sisters of Charity Federation, and the Society of St. Vincent de Paul.

Mr. Claffey, the Vincentians’ primary voice at the UN, said the order provides an essential service, educating member nations on the plights of the poor and socially marginalized, and even on proper care of the environment. While advocating for change can be challenging in an organization as large as the UN, he views it as essential to the mission of the Vincentians, calling the UN “the one indispensable organization in the world.”

“If it didn’t exist, we would have to invent it,” he added.

The mission of the UN seemed quite real to the group from St. John’s. Siobhan Kelly, a Catholic Scholar and first-year student from Rockville Centre, NY, was particularly impressed with The Golden Rule mosaic, a gift from the United States government to the UN that features people of near every race and way of life in a display of dignity and basic human rights.

“That is the whole mission of the United Nations,” Siobhan said. “It is that spirit of service that empowers us to help those who need it most.

 

* Story courtesy of St. John’s University:
https://www.stjohns.edu/about/news/2022-10-31/st-johns-students-tour-un-vincentian-ngo-representative

Homelessness – Our Heritage and Challenge

Sep 22, 2022   /   Around the Province, Home

As we approach the feast of St. Vincent de Paul we can draw strength and be challenged by all that St. Vincent did.

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“He has sent me to evangelize the poor” (Luke 4:18)

Give Me 5: Brother Alfred Smith, CM

Nov 10, 2022   /   Around the Province, five, Home

A monthly series in Vincentian Voices where we ask five random questions to an Eastern Province Priest or Brother. This month, we talk with Brother Alfred Smith, CM.…

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A Vincentian Minute: Vincentian Educational Values 6

Oct 05, 2022   /   Vincentian Minute

Fr. Rooney explores the Values of Vincentian Education proposed by Daughter of Charity Sr. Louise Sullivan. This week: Vincentian education is Person-oriented!

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Planting the seeds of hope in a parish community
From Brooklyn to Central America to Spain and locations in between, Fr. Astor Rodriguez, CM, has lived, ministered, and studied in myriad places as a Vincentian. Brooklyn, though, is home, and where he often finds himself returning to serve.

“As a pastor or just a priest serving in [Bedford–Stuyvesant], Brooklyn, you realize that the greatest treasure we have is our people,” Fr. Astor says. “They are so caring and supportive. And they truly help mold you as you minister to them, as you are ministered by them.”

St. John the Baptist, a diverse, multi-lingual parish in a low-income neighborhood where Fr. Astor is pastor, is seeing the signs of gentrification, which threatens to dislocate its longtime residents. “We try to respond as best as we can. St. John the Baptist has always been a Vincentian parish. The Vincentian charism has been ingrained in the community.”

Outreach remains integral to the parish’s identity. “If you have things for people and you are community based, people respond,” says Fr. Astor. “We have a lot of needy people in the neighborhood, and the challenge of providing for them continues to grow. People don’t venture out of their neighborhoods unless they have to, so we try to offer outreach programs that will supply them with food and clothing.

Some of these donation-based social service ministries at St. John the Baptist Parish include the Parish Thrift Shop, managed Ms. Beatrice Estwick. She is assisted by a team of dedicated workers who volunteer their time to help provide clothes to anyone in need. These volunteers also staff the Emergency Food Pantry which is open on Tuesdays. During the pandemic, the parish served 300 people daily. Although the pace has slowed down a bit, the community is now experiencing a surge
of immigrants coming in from Venezuela.

These two programs are costly to support and during the pandemic, public assistance was at an all-time low. “I had to get creative. I went online and said, “Hi, I’m Fr. Astor from St. John’s, I just want to tell you about our needs and how you can help us.” The neighbors responded and so did local construction crews. “They would see the lines of people in need of help in front of the church and the crews would tell their bosses who responded with donations,” says Fr. Astor. “I think when you make the need known, people respond.”

Both outreach programs are no cost to those in need. “If people come to our door, no one leaves without food or clothing,” said Fr. Astor, “It’s the Vincentian way.”

For the time being, the economic hardships and challenges of running an inner city parish remain. But being a Vincentian Priest working in that neighborhood is exactly where Fr. Astor wants to be.

Share Christ’s Love with the Poor

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For more than 100 years, the Vincentian Priests and Brothers of the Eastern Province have served the poor people throughout the East Coast and Panama, bringing the Gospel—and hope—to everyone they encounter. Whether in social services, parish ministry, or education, they collaborate with the people they serve to create effective and long-term changes. Support us and help transform the lives of those who live in poverty. Your donation will ensure the work continues for generations to come.

Photo Highlights

Homelessness – Our Heritage and Challenge

Sep 22, 2022   /   Around the Province, Home

As we approach the feast of St. Vincent de Paul we can draw strength and be challenged by all that St. Vincent did.

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“He has sent me to evangelize the poor” (Luke 4:18)

Give Me 5: Brother Alfred Smith, CM

Nov 10, 2022   /   Around the Province, five, Home

A monthly series in Vincentian Voices where we ask five random questions to an Eastern Province Priest or Brother. This month, we talk with Brother Alfred Smith, CM.…

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A Vincentian Minute: Vincentian Educational Values 6

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Fr. Rooney explores the Values of Vincentian Education proposed by Daughter of Charity Sr. Louise Sullivan. This week: Vincentian education is Person-oriented!

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Parish to host Community Open House on Saturday, October 22

St. Vincent De Paul Church, a 173-year-old Catholic parish in the heart of Germantown, recently completed an ambitious $1.5 million interior rehabilitation project. Partners for Sacred Places in collaboration with the National Trust for Historic Preservation awarded the parish a prestigious and highly sought grant to complete the project. To celebrate the completion of the extensive renovation, the parish is hosting a community open house on Saturday, October 22, 2022, at 5:30 PM.

The celebration will include a blessing of the church, tours of the revitalized parish interior, unveiling of new Stations of the Cross by local artist Cavin Jones, and light refreshments. All community members are encouraged to visit.

Fr. Sylvester Peterka, CM, Pastor of St. Vincent De Paul Parish, said, “The completion of this project is a significant moment in the history of our parish. It represents years of effort by parishioners, contractors, and community members. We are excited to publicly unveil our revitalized interior.”

The rehabilitation project took place after an aging and leaking roof caused extensive water damage to the structure and aesthetics of the church interior. After the roof repair concluded, the current revitalization included four new murals, the addition of four culturally diverse depictions of Mary to the nave ceiling, restoration of existing artwork, new Stations of the Cross, and new flooring.

The full collection of new and restored art is the highlight of the project and can’t be missed, providing a unique and inspiring environment for worship. St. Vincent De Paul Parish conducted numerous outreach meetings to ensure the interior art aligned with the perspectives of parishioners and reflected the faith community’s values. The new murals include a rich history of Catholic figures, who reflect the diverse nature of the congregation and the Germantown community while representing the social justice values of the parish. Cavin Jones’s Stations of the Cross layer Catholic theology and history with modernity.

About St. Vincent De Paul Parish

St. Vincent De Paul is a Catholic faith community striving to live Jesus’ gospel message of love, peace, and justice for all peoples. In the spirit of St. Vincent de Paul, our inclusive community welcomes, affirms and serves both the poorest of the poor and those who are alienated and most vulnerable among us. St. Vincent De Paul Church has stood in Germantown since its founding in 1849. Please visit https://www.saint-vincent-church.org/ to learn more about this dynamic community.

Homelessness – Our Heritage and Challenge

Sep 22, 2022   /   Around the Province, Home

As we approach the feast of St. Vincent de Paul we can draw strength and be challenged by all that St. Vincent did.

Continue Reading
“He has sent me to evangelize the poor” (Luke 4:18)

Give Me 5: Brother Alfred Smith, CM

Nov 10, 2022   /   Around the Province, five, Home

A monthly series in Vincentian Voices where we ask five random questions to an Eastern Province Priest or Brother. This month, we talk with Brother Alfred Smith, CM.…

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A Vincentian Minute: Vincentian Educational Values 6

Oct 05, 2022   /   Vincentian Minute

Fr. Rooney explores the Values of Vincentian Education proposed by Daughter of Charity Sr. Louise Sullivan. This week: Vincentian education is Person-oriented!

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