Monday, May 23, 2011

Sisters Make Impact in South Carolina; Leave Legacy

In 1937 a group of Catholic nuns mortgaged their Motherhouse in Ohio and traveled to Columbia, South Carolina―an unfamiliar place―to establish a Catholic hospital. What started as a request from then Diocese of Charleston Bishop Emmet Walsh to the Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine, has developed into a thoughtful array of ministries responding to community needs in Columbia and throughout the state.

In 1996 the Sisters used funds obtained through the sale of half of the hospital to create the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina. (The Sisters have since bought back this half and wholly own the hospital.) The Sisters could have done a number of things with this money, but recognizing the need, they started the Foundation to address community challenges at the core of poverty.

This year, the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina celebrates 15 years in philanthropy. As a statewide funder, with initial assets of $85 million, the Foundation has provided financial support in all 46 counties of South Carolina. Since inception, the Foundation has awarded over 1,400 grants, totaling more than $42 million, to nonprofit, faith-based, academic and governmental organizations. Some of these funds have been leveraged to account for $21 million in additional resources. In the midlands alone, the Foundation has funded more than $23 million to organizations providing services in this area. 

The Sisters of Charity Foundation has impacted nonprofits beyond grantmaking. Through its Carolina Academy for Nonprofits, created in 2008, the Foundation has provided training and technical assistance to hundreds of nonprofit staff and volunteers at no cost.

Furthermore, the Foundation has spearheaded the start of several new organizations to meet targeted needs and foster collaboration. The Foundation was instrumental in the creation of the South Carolina Grantmakers Network, formed in 1997. The South Carolina Grantmakers Network is a group of more than 40 philanthropic grantmaking organizations across the state who come together to discuss current issues and common concerns. The Foundation aided in forming the South Carolina Center for Grassroots and Non-Profit Leadership at Clemson University, the South Carolina Afterschool Alliance and the Fatherhood Policy Project Office. The South Carolina Center for Fathers and Families was created in 2002 as an outgrowth of the Foundation’s Fatherhood Initiative, a statewide initiative working to strengthen relationships between low-income fathers and their families in South Carolina. All of these examples impact our state and its citizens in different ways.

With the vision that families in South Carolina have the resources to live out of poverty, the Foundation serves as an advocate for the poor. Through community listening sessions, representing the interests of the underserved to elected officials and serving as convener, the Foundation is a voice for the poor in our communities.

The Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina is celebrating 15 years in philanthropy. Fifteen years of strategically using resources to reduce poverty. Fifteen years of practicing collaboration, compassion, courage, justice and respect to fulfill its mission. None of this would be possible without the vision of the Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine; a group of women―through faith―who risked their home to begin a new journey here in South Carolina. Their legacy will continue through their ministries and with the lives they have touched.

Similar article published in The State Newspaper.

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