Missionary Sisters of St. Peter Claver
The Missionary Sisters of St. Peter Claver are a Catholic religious congregation of women dedicated to serving the spiritual and social needs of the poor around the world, particularly in Africa.[1] They were founded in Austria by Mary Theresa Ledóchowska[2] and received their first official apporbation in 1893.[3] They are devoted to the legacy of Peter Claver.
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The beginnings of the sodality are in Salzburg, Austria, although the headquarters of the Claver Sisters is now in Rome, Via Olmata 16. There was also soon a central office for the United States in St. Louis, located in the Fullerton Building. In Salzburg there was a "Claverianum" with an ethnographic Africa museum at Dreifaltigkeitsgasse 19. Today the Salzburg operations are based in the Mission House in Maria Sorg in Bergheim.[4]
The sisters became known for editing and distributing several missionary publications, among them Echo aus Afrika and Das Negerkind, which soon appeared in eight languages. They also published a small series of polyglot African resources.[4]
All the work is done by women, some of them religious sisters, some of them lay volunteers. Today they serve worldwide.
References
- Streit, Karl (1913). Atlas hierarchicus (in German). Paderborn. p. 47.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - "Death of Countess M. Theresia Ledochowska". The Catholic Tribune. St. Joseph, Missouri. July 15, 1922. p. 1.
- Baumgartner, Jakob (1981). Jedin, Hubert (ed.). The Expansion of Catholic Missions from the Time of Leo XIII until World War II. p. 529.
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ignored (help) - "Great International Missionary Organization". The Catholic Tribune. St. Joseph, Missouri. April 26, 1919. p. 7.