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"I
love This Ministry!"
As
a member of two small, poor central city parishes,
nurse Sister Rita Vogelsang addresses serious
health and social issues. Social issues
include: families shattered and in pain; major
addictions with drugs and alcohol; and a creeping
poverty that invades the homes of young and
old. For six years she has seen children parented
by grandparents because of these addictions,
children struggling academically, and elderly
alone and unsure of how to access the services
they need to survive.
Today this Salvatorian
Sister continues to respond to the needs
of a small neighborhood in Birmingham, Alabama.
In this community that some call "the projects,"
she has helped establish a Health Center. She
ministers with members of the Salesian religious
community as a parish nurse and health center
coordinator. The Salesians also sponsor a Legal
Aid Clinic, Youth Center and Food Pantry. The
two parishes are St. John Bosco and Holy Rosary.
The area is a high crime
district and it is not uncommon to hear gunshots.
But it also here that Sister Rita finds many
people deeply connected to God and their families.
"As we confront HIV, drugs, crime, unemployment,
I do not get discouraged, only tired sometimes.
The problems are real and we try to offer hope,"
she explained.
As a parish nurse and
pastoral member, she visits people in their
homes as well as the Health Center. Many a Sunday,
she visits elderly when they aren't at Church,
making sure they are okay.
"We try to assist
with the every day challenges of their lives.
We offer regular clinic hours and workshops
on nutrition and diabetes. Doctors volunteer
their services and prescribe medications after
assessments. I routinely visit parish members
in hospitals and nursing homes. We have found
that people always cope better when they feel
loved and cared for," Sister Rita stated.
The Salesians also sponsor
an after school tutoring program for area children.
Sister Rita also helps in this capacity and
in the religious education programs of the parishes.
"One of the gifts of religious life is
the freedom to serve the poor in this way and
to be living here in the central city,"
she explained.
Sister
Rita is also inspired by those she serves. "One
of our parish regulars is a street person. One
day we offered him a nearly-new outfit but he
declined. 'Give it to someone who needs it more,
Sister,' It's people like this man who give
us hope in return. I love this ministry,"
she concluded.
Sister Rita acts out daily :
"As women of faith striving to be given over to
the Father and open to all peoples, we
collaborate to promote justice and to improve
the quality of life in our world with a
preferential option for the poor."
(from the SDS Mission Statement)
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