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Over 150 years of caring
The Sisters of Nazareth were founded in London by Victoire
Larmenier – Mother St Basil – at the request
of Cardinal Wiseman, to care for the aged poor. Later, the
apostolate of the Sisters extended their care to include homeless and
abandoned children.
The
Congregation was founded in the mid 1800s when Victoire Larmenier
was just 24 years old. She was born on 21 July 1827 in Brittany,
France and entered the group of 'Pious Women' later known
as the Little Sisters of the Poor.
Seven weeks after she took her final vows, she left her home,
the youngest of a group of five Sisters, to answer a calling
in London.
In 1881, a small group of Sisters arrived
in South Africa at the invitation of the Bishop of Cape Town.
Their mission was to care for indigent elderly and
orphaned children. Today, more than a hundred years later,
Nazareth House still provides a caring and compassionate
haven for more than 120 of the most vulnerable members of
our society.
Assisted by lay administrative and nursing staff, and a
small army of volunteers, the Sisters of Nazareth continue
to uphold the core values of Victoire Larmenier, which are
as timeless as humanity: justice, patience, love, respect,
compassion and hospitality.
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