Lessons in love from central Brazil
Image: BRAZILIAN and U.S. sisters and associates minister in Santa Helena de Goiás in central Brazil.
IN 1963, THE SISTERS of St. Francis of Mary Immaculate—the Joliet Franciscans—answered a call to work in Brazil. Today, both U.S. and Brazilian sisters make up the community in Brazil. They work in parishes, run a school, and train health workers.
“They taught us to be happy with less, says one sister who came to Brazil from the United States 40 years ago—before paved roads. “The people with whom we lived and worked taught us to keep only what we really need, to use everything, waste nothing, spend time visiting, talking, and learning their values and ways of doing things.
That’s why the sisters stay. They’ve learned to love the people and their ways.
![]() |
THE SISTERS train
health care workers to measure and weigh children and track their growth and development |
![]() |
A PRAYER at their water
wheel is part of the sisters’ annual missioning ceremony. |
![]() |
THE PEOPLE OF SANTO
ANTÔNIO da Barra live in simple houses close to the earth and the elements. |
![]() |
SISTER MARIA
Nubia Fegueiredo is a novice with the Joliet Franciscans. |
![]() |
SISTER ROSE
Maria Lim (above) congratulates Sister Rita Cristina after Sister Rita made her final vows. |
Tags
Related
- African dream: my 17 years in Kenya
- Missionary sister falls in love
- Sister Dorothy Stang: Her dying shows us how to live
- Refugee crisis 'a battle for our humanity' in Jordan
- Fighting gangs one youth at a time
- Starting over from scratch
- My mission: To be an instrument in God’s hands
- Beginning again in Ireland
- And Jesus said, “Feed my lambs.”
- Holy Toledo! How I wound up in Taiwan Read More
Most Viewed
- Find your spirituality type quiz
- Questions and answers about religious vocations
- Celibacy quiz: Could I be a nun? Could I be a brother? Could I be a priest?
- Resources for older discerners or those with physical and developmental differences
- About Vocation Network and VISION Guide