22 July 1858: Mother Mary Frances Aikenhead died on this
day. She set up the Religious Sisters of Charity in Ireland. She was a frail
child and was adopted out in her native city of Cork to a woman called Mary
Rourke. Though baptised into the Church of Ireland it is thought that Mary was
secretly baptised a Catholic from an early age by Mary Rourke who was a devout
Catholic. However she was not formally received into the Catholic Faith until
she was 15 years old on 6 June 1802. She was a devout disposition and wished to
pursue a religious Life.
In 1808, Mary went to stay with her friend Anne O’Brien in
Dublin. Here she witnessed widespread unemployment and poverty and soon began
to accompany her friend in visiting the poor and sick in their homes. From this
experience she believed it would be her vocation to help the sick and the poor
as a member of a religious Community. She trained for 3 years (1812-1815) in a
convent in York, England in order to become a Nun. When she returned to Dublin
she set up the Religious Sisters of Charity in Ireland.
On 1 September 1815, the first members of the new institute
took their vows, Sister Mary Augustine being appointed Superior General. Added
to the traditional three vows of poverty chastity & obedience, was a fourth
vow: to devote their lives to the service of the poor. For the next 15 years
Mother Mary worked very hard to alleviate the sufferings of the less well-off
but it took a terrible toll on her own Health.
However she did not let her own personal misfortune get her
down:
“Low spirits and dreads of evil to ourselves or
Congregation, or even to the church, are actually the beginnings of despair. If
all the rest of the world goes wrong, we should still persevere in trying to
serve our God with faith and fervour.” (7 November 1834)
Confined to bed or a wheelchair she continued to direct her
charges and set up new institutions both at home and abroad. Her Sisters were
particularly active during the great Cholera outbreak in 1832. She died in
Dublin, aged 71 in Our Lady’s Mount Harold’s Cross and was buried in in the
cemetery attached to St. Mary Magdalen's, Donnybrook, Dublin 4.
Her cause for canonization as a saint has been progressing
in Rome. On 18 March 2015, a decree was issued proclaiming her heroic virtues.
This entitles her to be referred to as the Venerable Mary Aikenhead.
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