"One of the remarkable thins about nuns is that they did all this in a seemingly endless, often-losing battle of the sexes with Cathlolic bishops, many of whom were accustomed to treating them as subjects. Nuns versus bishops, perhaps the nation's oldest gender war, has endured for over 150 years.
Here is an event that sociologists and historians still puzzle over: In 1968 there were 179,974 sisters--convents had filled to an all-time high. The following year the flow of young women into the sisterhood nearly stopped. It was as if someone had turned off a tap. The causes are many and complex...Membership...was being replaced by a cynicism bred by the Vietnam War about government and all authority...In the outside world, professional opportunities for young women in business, law, medicine, and the arts had begun to appear. For the first time many doors were opening for the woman who wanted something more.
One other cause: The all-male officialdom of the Catholic Church convened in Rome...to rewrite the rules of the Church." pg. 15
"The bishop once chided Mother Russell in a letter, once saying "your heart is bigger than your purse." She might have lacked the money to properly support some of her causes, but when it came to courage, that was a different matter.
Mother Russell came to live there [the Pest House] until Bishop Alemany ordered her back to the convent, saying that a "general's place was at headquarters directing operations, not exposing herself as a common soldier." pg. 88
PAGE 89 (TOP) REFERENCE TO AN EARLIER CHAPTER???
"[Segregated cemeteries] Despite over a century of efforts by Mother Elizabeth Langer, Saint Katherine Drexel and many other individual Catholics to defeat intolerance; despite the fact that the Civil Rights had been brewing in the South and in the media since 1955, the Catholic Church had still not roused from its self-induced torpor about racial matters." pg. 196??
"Our intention throughout this was to always remain, but to change whatever makes it difficult for us to operate in the modern world. But her faction...couldn't live with the decrees from Rome. in 1970, they asked to be dispensed from their vows. ...The unthinkable was allowed to happen...Monsignor Weber points out in his brief for the cardinal, "there was never any groundswell of support for the sisters in many other [religious] communities locally or nationally. That appears to be true...This may have more to do with American than Rome. The shocks the 1960s delivered were profound. A parade of demonstrations, riots, assassinations and rebellious rhetoric had left the nation divided but in a distinctly conservative mood." pg. 223
"The legacy of more than 400,000 women who have been Catholic sisters in America is a peculiar kind of gift. They educated millions of us, healed millions more. They inculcated the spirit of giving ans built the schools ans hospitals that make healthy comunities, and in that sense, they have given us living reference points that help define the quality of American life.
They have been a source of care and hope in nearly every American crisis, from the War of 1812 to the attack on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. Theu were there for us in the Chicago fire, the San Francisco Earthquake. They stood fast among the chaos and superstition of the yellow fever outbreaks in New Orleans and pitched in when others preferred to ignore the AIDS outbreak in the 1990s. Along the way they shaped our history. Without sisters it is fair to say our frontier cities and the Wild West wod habe been mich wilder places. It is also fair to say that without them the American Catholic Church would be but a shadow of its current self. Their gift is peculiar because it is largely unexamined. Older Cathlolics seem to have to take it for granted. Younger Catholics don't know much about it. This is partly because of the odd experiences of growing up in a church that was built on the faith, courage, idealism, self-sacrifice and sweat equity if young women. Yet in parochial school when we read church history, we read about the pronouncements and the activities and opinions of elderly men.
Part of the reason for this is that, historically, sisters have been trained to be self-effacing. Their mission was to give attention, not to receive it; to cure poverty, not to complain of their own. Another part of the reason is that thr American Catholic Church...is one of the country's most poorly understood institutions.
Because of the sheer breadth of the experience of Catholic sisters in America, this book--with a few excursions--uses the journey of the Sisters of Mercy to tell the larger story. There is great diversity among the nation's four hundred orders of sisters, but members of most of them will see much in the adventures of the Mercies that is similar to their own experiences, including the more recent years." Pp. 325-326