Sisters of the Good Shepherd - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Mon, 20 Feb 2023 08:05:22 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Sisters of the Good Shepherd - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Dutch women sue Good Shepherd convents over forced labour and abuse https://cathnews.co.nz/2023/02/20/dutch-women-good-shepherd-convents-abuse/ Mon, 20 Feb 2023 05:06:53 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=155758 Good Shepherd sisters

Nineteen Dutch women have taken the Sisters of the Good Shepherd to court. The women have accused them, condemning them to years of forced labour, while keeping them locked up in convents. They were "abused on industrial scale," the women say. The case before the Haarlem district court relates to about 15,000 teenage Dutch girls. Read more

Dutch women sue Good Shepherd convents over forced labour and abuse... Read more]]>
Nineteen Dutch women have taken the Sisters of the Good Shepherd to court.

The women have accused them, condemning them to years of forced labour, while keeping them locked up in convents.

They were "abused on industrial scale," the women say.

The case before the Haarlem district court relates to about 15,000 teenage Dutch girls.

They were the wards of the Sisters and lived in convents across the Netherlands from 1951 to 1979.

The women, now aged between 62 and 91, said as troubled teens they were taken in by the order.

They were put to work, often for hours on end, six days a week. Their tasks would include sewing material, which was sold for profit, and grafting in laundries or ironing.

"The Good Shepherd is responsible for the violation of one of the most fundamental human rights known to us: the prohibition of forced labour or compulsory labour," their lawyer Liesbeth Zegveld said.

"Ostensibly the Good Shepherd was doing society, the government and the girls a favour by giving a home to what it called ‘fallen women'," she told the judges.

"In reality, it locked up hundreds of women and forced them to work."

One woman told judges she became a "robot, following the nuns' every instruction and working day after day without rest".

"If I die and land up in hell I won't be afraid, because I've already been in hell," another woman said.

The claimants' lawyers told the court their clients were among "thousands of young women in various countries who were seriously abused by the order by being subjected to forced labour on an industrial scale".

Lawyers representing the Good Shepherd denied the accusations.

They argued the nuns' method was "being seen outside of the context of the time.

"There was no question of physical or psychological abuse just because they were asked to work," lawyer Esther Dubach told the judges.

She said at the time the alleged abuse occurred, labour was seen as a reasonable method of rehabilitation.

"None of the claimants individually proved how they were abused," she said.

Furthermore, she added, the women's claim was invalid: it fell outside the statute of limitations for certain civil claims.

Judges now have to decide whether the order had indeed abused the claimants and, if so, whether compensation should be paid.

A verdict is expected in mid-April.

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Singapore nun named as an inspiration to the world https://cathnews.co.nz/2020/02/27/inspiring-global-women-singapore-nun-bbc/ Thu, 27 Feb 2020 07:08:36 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=124506

A nun from Singapore is on this year's BBC list of 100 influential and inspiring global women. Good Shepherd Sister Gerard Fernandez, who has led the Catholic Church's prison ministry in Singapore for four decades, was startled by her nomination. "The Lord has many surprises. This was one of them," the 81-year old said when Read more

Singapore nun named as an inspiration to the world... Read more]]>
A nun from Singapore is on this year's BBC list of 100 influential and inspiring global women.

Good Shepherd Sister Gerard Fernandez, who has led the Catholic Church's prison ministry in Singapore for four decades, was startled by her nomination.

"The Lord has many surprises. This was one of them," the 81-year old said when she learned of her nomination.

I have not done anything for fame or glory or awards. But I'm happy that a Good Shepherd is selected. Our work is to be with the abandoned".

Fernandez started visiting prisoners as a young nun. In 1997, when the Singapore Archdiocese began its prison ministry, she was chosen to lead it. The job continued until she relinquished it in 2017.

In her service to prisoners, she counseled hundreds and "walked with" at least 18 inmates on death row until their execution, the BBC said.

The BBC selected women from over 50 countries aged from 15 to 98 for its list, according to this year's theme: "The Female Future."

"A female future, like any other, would be one filled with kindness, dignity and equality, a world without discrimination or hate, one that's driven by compassion," Fernandez is quoted as saying.

The list has six categories of earth, knowledge, leadership, creativity, sports and identity. Fernandes was named in the leadership category.

The series began in 2013 after the Delhi gang rape of a 23-year-old paramedic in December 2012. The woman died of her injuries 13 days later.

A group of BBC journalists who covered the rape case decided to create a series to help examine the role of women in the 21st century, focusing on the issues and achievements of women.

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