There is great delight in Arklow and Dundalk with news of the launch
of the cause to have an Irish-born missionary, Mother Kevin, declared a
saint.
The cause was officially launched on Sunday 6 November, the Feast of
All Irish Saints and the Feast of All Africa Saints, at a Mass of
Thanksgiving in Kampala Cathedral, where Mother Kevin and two other
missionaries, Fr Mapeera Lourdel and Brother Amans were declared
‘Servants of God’.
There are now three more steps on the road to sainthood. First, there
must be a scrupulous investigation of every aspect of their lives
and they must be declared ‘venerable’ by the church. Second, it must be
found that their intercession resulted in a miracle in order to have
them beatified and declared ‘blessed’. Third, it must be found that
their intercession resulted in a second miracle to have them canonised
and declared official saints of the Church.
Mother Kevin died in 1957, so much of the investigation into her life
will be based on documentary evidence, but there are a few still alive
who met her and knew her, and they will be interviewed as a matter of
course.
“There are people who met her when they were in the novitiate in
Scotland, in England and in Boston, who can talk about what she was
like,” said Sr Cecilia Sweeney of the Franciscan Missionary Sisters of
Africa (FMSA), one of two orders founded by the Wicklow woman.
The headquarters of the FMSA congregation, which was founded in
1952, is in Mount Oliver in Dundalk, but an even bigger legacy is the
African congregation founded by Mother Kevin in 1923 – the Little
Sisters of St Francis – which has more than 550 members. The FMSA has
about 100 members, more than a third of whom are retired or
semi-retired, but new members are joining the order in Africa, with six
or seven young women expected to join the novitiate this year.
Between them, the two orders are active in Uganda, Kenya, South
Sudan, Zambia and Zimbabwe. They are involved in rural development,
education and healthcare.
Indeed, while there are many hospitals named
after saints, in Uganda the local word for a hospital or a charitable
institute is ‘Kevina’, derived from the name by which Mother Kevin is
commonly known: Mama Kevina.
Sr Cecilia, who is involved in producing a new prayer card featuring
an intercessory prayer to Mother Kevin, says that the Irish woman made a
profound impression on the people with whom she worked in Africa. “When
I started as a young missionary many years ago, when I went into the
classroom there were girls called Kevina sitting in the desks in front
of me.
During the Second World War, there was a supply plane named after
her, The Mama Kevina.”
When she died in Boston in 1957, Cardinal Richard Cushing, who
described her as ‘the greatest missionary of the 20th century’, paid for
her body to be returned to Ireland. But she was disinterred and
reburied in the grounds of the Little Sisters’ Mother House in Uganda
following an appeal from the people there, with Muslims and Sikhs among
those contributing to the fund organised to bring her remains back to
Africa.
In her native Arklow there is a road named Mother Kevin Crescent,
and one of the meeting rooms in the parish centre is named after
her. This weekend, between 11 am and 5 pm on Saturday and Sunday, there
is a craft fair being held in the parish centre to raise funds for the
work of the Franciscan Missionary Sisters of Africa.
“They are all professional craft stalls and it is a great event,”
said Anna Kearns of the Mother Kevin Group. “They pay us rent, we serve
teas and coffees and we have a raffle and that is how we raise funds.
Last year, we made €2,200 which was used to buy land to grow ground nuts
and other crops. Our group started out of a justice and peace project
that was held in the parish. Of course, we are very pleased with the
news. She is a great example for young people.
“Things are busy now here with the run-up to Christmas and the work
on this craft fair, but in the New Year we shall have a special mass in
Arklow to celebrate the launch of Mother Kevin’s cause.”
For more information about Mother Kevin, see http://www.fmsa.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=17&Itemid=16 or http://www.catholicireland.net/mother-kevin-a-prophetic-woman/.