Showing posts with label Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina. Show all posts

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Everyone Has a Story: A Reflection on 2012 Listening Sessions


Sometimes we meet people whose expressions and face momentarily stop us in our tracks, but we ignore the quiet invitation in their eyes to empathetically listen to their story. In the nonprofit and philanthropic world, this can too often be the case. Our tireless push to meet endless need, pressing deadlines and other urgent tasks which enable us to serve can pull our attention away from giving the person in front of us our undivided attention. Unfortunately, many people who experience poverty every day face marginalization within the various systems they encounter. Not only can this make them feel “invisible” when their voices are missing or intentionally overlooked, the organization loses out on important insights that can strengthen the effectiveness of their work. A recent Stanford Social Innovation Review Spring 2013 article Listening to Those Who Matter Most, the Beneficiaries states, “The views and experiences of the people who benefit from social programs are often overlooked and underappreciated, even though they are an invaluable source of insight into a program’s effectiveness” (p. 41).

Since 2010, the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina has listened directly to the voices of individuals and families through Listening Sessions. Our Listening Sessions engage families experiencing poverty by listening directly to their stories in the supportive presence of community stakeholders that walk alongside them each day. Structured differently than a grantee site visit, Listening Sessions create a collective space to engage individuals served with the primary focus on their perspectives. In 2012, three Listening Sessions were strategically designed to uplift the stories of individuals served by current Foundation grantees. The first Listening Session held in April 2012 in partnership with Helping and Lending Outreach Support (HALOS) in Charleston provided an opportunity to listen to the stories of kinship caregivers who live each day as the Unsung Heroes in the lives of children they care for. The second Listening Session in collaboration with the Puentes Project/PASOS in Columbia gave us the opportunity to hear from the Puentes Community Ambassadors who are compassionately leading as Bridges of Light in their communities. The third Listening Session held jointly with GRACE Ministries in Georgetown brought us face-to-face with home-bound and chronically ill senior citizens whose lives are Touched by Grace by the volunteers that serve them.

We listened deeply and empathetically to these statewide issues at a local level through the perspectives of individuals served, applying Grantmakers for Effective Organization’s (GEO) Widespread Empathy definition of empathy to our work. GEO defines empathy as “the ability to reach outside ourselves and connect in a deeper way with other people – to understand their experiences, to get where they are coming from, to feel what they feel” (p. 4). What we heard surprised us; and at times even moved us to tears as we listened to their struggles, hopes, and fears. We walked away reminded that everyone has a story. When we stop to listen empathetically to the experiences of those we serve, their stories can illuminate and inform the ways grantmakers and nonprofit organizations strategically respond to the remaining unmet need.

Read the 2012 Listening Session Summary, Everyone Has a Story.

Written By: Stephanie Cooper-Lewter, Ph.D., Senior Research Director


Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Latino Immigrant Families in South Carolina

Although South Carolina is a relatively new settlement area for Latino immigrants compared to other regions of the country, the State has experienced unprecedented growth in the Latino population over the past few decades. The most recent U.S. Census data show from 2000 to 2010, the South Carolina Hispanic population increased 148%. Between 2008 and 2010 in South Carolina, 88% of Latino children were citizens by birth, 65% lived in immigrant families, and 33% lived in linguistically isolated households. The Foundation hosted several Listening Sessions, site visits and meetings to inform our understanding of the impact of this trend, listening directly to the experiences of foreign-born and native-born Latinos from across the State.

Research shows Latino immigrant families in South Carolina often face economic hardship, educational challenges, and difficulty in accessing health care. In 2010, the median annual personal earnings for Hispanics in South Carolina was $18,000. During 2008-2010, 40% of South Carolina’s Latino families experienced poverty at the 100% poverty level, and 70% experienced poverty at the 200% poverty level. Of the more than 725,000 students enrolled during the 2010-2011 school year across South Carolina’s K-12 public schools, 6% were Latino. Although education is one of the greatest predictors for moving above the poverty line, Latino students across the State lag behind their white peers educationally, mirroring national trends in the majority of other states. 46% of Latinos are without health insurance in South Carolina; and nearly one out of every four Latino children go without adequate health care.

Our Foundation is committed to sharing knowledge on a range of issues that families experiencing poverty in South Carolina face. Our recently released Research Brief, Latino Immigrant Families in South Carolina, explores the above demographic changes and highlights eight themes that emerged through our research conversations with Latinos. These themes include motivation to migrate, making the journey, acculturation processes, shifting family expectations, multi-status families, economic hardships, educational challenges and health concerns. Building upon cultural strengths, increased family support services are needed to improve outcomes of Latino families across the State. Strategies employed to foster family resilience and strengthen Latino families should be implemented in culturally responsive and appropriate ways.

Continuing in the tradition of the Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine, our Foundation remains invested in the future of South Carolina to ensure all families have the resources to live out of poverty. We apply our core values of compassion, courage, respect, justice and collaboration as we continue to work with our community partners to address multiple obstacles faced by Latino families across the state. We will continue to work towards solutions in partnership with the Latino community to reduce the barriers Latino families face in order to promote family economic well-being and improve the socioeconomic status of all South Carolina’s residents.

To read the Research Brief, Latino Immigrant Children in South Carolina, including citations for the above statistics, please go to: Sisters of Charity Foundation Research Brief

Written by: Stephanie Cooper-Lewter, Ph.D., Senior Director of Research

Friday, January 11, 2013

"Catalytic" Philanthropy

I want to update you on the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina's grantmaking implementation plan for 2013 which is the next phase of the Catalytic Philanthropy strategy.

The term “Catalytic” philanthropy refers to the opportunity for Foundation grants to become more intentional and more focused thereby having greater impact in our communities around the state. With great excitement, we have begun the next phase of our Catalytic philanthropy implementation strategy.

After 16 years of grantmaking, in 2011 the Foundation transitioned from Responsive Grantmaking to Strategic Grantmaking with the support of the Foundation’s Grants Committee. This transition was made to insure that going forward, the Foundation would have greater impact with the grant dollars we are investing.

Over time, we have learned that with limited resources for grants, it is extremely difficult and often unproductive to take too broad of an approach in awarding grants. In essence, we cannot be “all things to all people” and also have substantive impact. Looking back over the old responsive program, we were rejecting more than 80% of the applicants because they either did not meet our mission/focus or their programs/applications were too weak. This further justified the importance of the Carolina Academy and capacity building emphasis. The 2012 strategic grants were different. Our review team and the Grants Committee looked not only for good programs but for programs that have broader community impact, a strategy for partnerships, a viable sustainability plan, and have the ability to affect long term change.

In 2013, it is clear that the Foundation will have to be more focused than ever before. With limited dollars we will be better served to focus our efforts on current and/or past grantees that have demonstrated measurable success already. By investing more deeply and for a longer period of time on this identified pool of grantees that align with the Foundation's strategic direction, we can build on the investments we have already made. Doing so would allow the Foundation to make impactful strides in meeting goal three of our strategic plan: To sharpen the focus of our grantmaking to organizations that create opportunities for families to live out of poverty in South Carolina.

This year, our pool for consideration will be from current and/or past grantees that have demonstrated success through the Foundation’s investment. Following discussion with each of them and a completed organizational summary update, we will bring the best organizations forward for funding. These organizations will be positioned to move their programs to a greater level of measurable success. Moreover, the Foundation's investment will further strengthen the grantees capacity, support their strategic direction, connect them with other potential partners, foster sustainability, and position them for growth and success. The beauty of this change in direction is that the Foundation can be dynamic and flexible while learning valuable lessons that will have significant future benefit. 

This plan, for now, is for 2013 and the Grants Committee will re-visit this Strategic Grants program late next year to assess the process and determine how to proceed going forward.

 Our Caritas Grants will remain open and the Foundation expects to award 50-60 grants in this category next year.

We thank you for your interest in the work of the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina. We are excited about another fulfilling year as we continue to meet the Mission of the Sisters.

Thank you.


Tom Keith, President

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Foundations Must Rethink Their Priorities

Foundations today are in a tough spot and they have been in a tough spot for a few years. Since 2008, foundations have dealt with financial constraints they have not experienced in many years. From the outside looking in, most people feel that foundations have a large asset base and plenty of fluid resources to distribute into the community. This is not true. In 2008 and 2009, most foundations lost at least 25% of their asset value and some lost as much as 40%. This has a huge impact in many different ways. It causes a more conservative approach to grant making, less dollars to grant and likely fewer dollars in the coming years. It simply adds up to less and less money.
 

So foundations today must operate differently. No longer can they provide grant dollars at the level they have before. No longer can they count on a growing investment portfolio to sustain their current level of giving, let alone grow. 
 
So how do we meet our goals and mission with less money to offer? The answer is that we must find ways to maximize the dollars we have to work with to garner the best possible outcomes. We must rethink our priorities. Here is what the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina is doing to deal with fewer dollars at a time when the demand for support is at its highest level.


Leverage. Through partnerships with other funders, businesses and government, we try and leverage our money to make more collective dollars available for a common program our project. Collaboration is key, and pooled resources mean more dollars and a higher probability of success.

Policy.
There are many issues that affect the poor that we address and advocate for oftentimes voiceless. The individuals and families that benefit from the grants we award can also benefit from our voice with government, community leaders and multiple stakeholders. Public awareness and education is a key component of this effort. Whether it is weighing in on the homeless issue, undocumented immigrants, low income fathers, TANF reauthorization or other important concerns, the Foundation can use its influence to affect public perception and thinking. It is an important role that we play, and can create positive outcomes. Taking a stand on issues affecting our mission is necessary and extremely valuable to us and to others.

Capacity Building and Leadership
. Teaching and training nonprofit practitioners to be better at their jobs has become a hallmark strategy, beyond grant making, of this Foundation. By strengthening board and staff’s ability around governance, fund raising, marketing, strategy and leadership, the whole organization benefits and has a strong chance of being more successful and vibrant. It is a small financial investment with the potential for a large return for the nonprofits that participate.

Community Convening.
Meeting with community leaders and individuals living in poverty gives us a whole different understanding of how life truly is, in a poor neighborhood or town. Sometimes a Foundation can be the voice of reason and thoughtfulness in a community where leaders have become polarized or the social and political dynamics have become too strong to overcome. Learning from others and sharing with others can be a valuable and important role for the Foundation to play. What you learn can also help drive grant making decisions in the future. Important issues rise to the top at many of these community convenings.
Foundations today must choose their priorities carefully and if they only focus on grants then they are missing an opportunity to have broader impact and greater results. There are not enough dollars available to accomplish what needs to be done to meet our mission and earn the greatest results. Casting our net wider using tools other than grant making makes sense. If we don’t use them, then our results will be limited just like our dollars.

Tom Keith is the president of the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

2012 Presidential Election: Tracking the Candidates on Poverty

More people are living in poverty now than ever before, at least since records were kept. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, more than 46 million Americans were living in poverty in 2011, which for a family of four means an annual income of less than $22,100 a year. All this, and in four weeks citizens across the country will hit the polls to vote in the 2012 presidential election. Incumbent President Barack Obama is running for a second and final term during this election. His major challenger is former Massachusetts Governor, Republican Mitt Romney.
 

Released in January, Poverty, the Media and Election 2012: What Do Voters Think?, reveals the results of a survey of likely voters’ views on poverty and opportunity in the context of the 2012 presidential campaign. The report provides a snapshot of opinions provided by the survey, as well as by other public opinion polls on similar topics. Within this context, the report discussed five key findings in particular:
  1. Voters strongly said candidates’ views on poverty are important in deciding their vote for president. 
  2. Nearly half of voters said they have not heard enough from presidential candidates about reducing poverty.
  3. Half of voters said they have not heard enough from the media about reducing poverty during the presidential campaign.  
  4. Voters strongly said candidates’ positions on equal opportunity for children of all races are important in deciding their vote for president.  
  5. Voters tended to say children of all races do not currently have equal access to opportunity.
While poverty may not be a significant electoral issue, the findings in this poll suggested that voters are interested in hearing more about poverty and equal opportunity from candidates and the media, and that poverty and opportunity may play a role in their vote.
 

This was welcomed news to the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina which serves as an advocate for the poor and underserved in South Carolina. Educating and serving as a resource for both the community and public policy makers on issues affecting the poor is one way the Foundation engages in the public policy process. As we approach the November election, it is important to know the candidates’ views on poverty issues.
 
There is one organization tracking and sharing this information. Over the past few months, Spotlight on Poverty and Opportunity was tracking all candidates on poverty-related issues, from quotes to policy statements to media interaction. It is now covering the official nominees from the Democratic and Republican parties, Obama and Romney. Spotlight on Poverty and Opportunity is a non-partisan initiative that brings together diverse perspectives from the political, policy, advocacy and foundation communities to find solutions to reduce poverty in America.


Tuesday, November 6, 2012, marks the conclusion of the 57th presidential race with voters heading to the polls to cast their vote for the next president. Before you visit the polls, find out where each candidate stands on issues of both poverty and economic opportunity.

Please note that the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina does not support or oppose any candidate for public office. This resource is one means to assist voters in analyzing some of the significant poverty and opportunity issues of the campaign so that they can exercise their rights in a most effective manner.

Brooke Bailey is the senior director of communications

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

In the Business of Transformation

“Many managers and executives are voicing their fears that the talent they have is not the talent they need,” states Jean B. Leslie, manager of product development research at the Center for Creative Leadership in Greensboro, N.C. “Businesses, government agencies, nonprofits and educational organizations need leaders who can effectively navigate complex, changing situations and get the job done. The questions that need to be asked at the organizational level are: who do we have, what do they need to do and are they equipped to do it?”  The Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina has taken on the task of answering these questions.

Current leadership skill gaps, as well as fears of gaps for the future, present opportunities and creative space to examine positive leadership and the processes by which strong, authentic and highly-skilled leaders are developed. It is critical that a new generation of positive leaders is prepared to lead in the 21st century and beyond. To facilitate this, we must provide leaders with the knowledge and skills needed to fill the leadership gaps for current leaders and to diminish fears regarding what emerging leaders are able to offer for the future.

 In the fall of 2010, a partnership with the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina’s Carolina Academy for Nonprofits and Columbia College was formed. As a result of the partnership, a graduate level Nonprofit Leadership Training Certificate program was developed and implemented. Following the inaugural year of the certificate program, a Nonprofit Leadership Development Program was created. Both leadership programs were designed for nonprofit leaders who were recognized as having great potential and who were ready to enhance their knowledge, skills and framework to lead nonprofit organizations in an ever-changing and diverse society.

Now after three cohorts of leadership certificate graduates and one cohort of leadership development graduates, The Foundation’s Carolina Academy for Nonprofits has become a leader in courageously charting a course of leadership education for nonprofit organizations in South Carolina. To date, 30 nonprofit leaders have emerged with greater knowledge, more confidence and increased capacity to lead in his/her organization. One graduate stated,
My experience as an Academy student has equipped me with an array of information, tools, and knowledge. I have gained a deepened understanding of, and appreciation for, interacting with agency stakeholders including co-workers, staff, administrators/board members, funders and other external partners. Establishing a set of best practices that can be used to improve agency processes has supported my goal of enhancing project design, implementation and partnerships. Most importantly, my Academy participation helped me to find my voice, and valuing the significance it brings. As a result, my passion has been reignited to improve the lives of my constituency.
As we begin our 2012-2013 cohorts of students, we do so with a certainty that we are doing our part to continue to answer the questions, “who do we have, what do they need to do and are they equipped to do it?” We are in the business of transformation and we are doing it one leader at a time.

Katrina Spigner is the senior program officer at the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Feast of St. Augustine

Today, August 28, is the Feast Day of St. Augustine, Bishop of Hippo in North Africa and one of the doctors of the Church. St. Augustine overcame strong heresies, practiced great poverty and supported the poor, preached very often and prayed with great fervor.

In 1851 four Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine (CSA) Sisters embarked on a two week voyage from France to Cleveland, Ohio. This began 156 years of service by hundreds of dynamic religious women responding to unmet needs of people in Ohio and South Carolina. Long before the American workplace widely accepted women in professional roles, these Sisters were directing major health care institutions, teaching in schools and developing new programs to provide needed human services. The first CSAs in America served as the first public health nurses in Cleveland, Ohio. Led by a mission to continue Christ’s healing ministry, the Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine have built a legacy of caring that continues today.

The health and human service ministries of the CSA Congregation are now overseen by the Sisters of Charity Health System. The Health System embodies the values and philosophy of the Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine and their mission to continue the healing ministry of Jesus Christ. The Health System provides oversight, leadership and strategic direction to more than 20 ministries in Ohio and South Carolina. In South Carolina there are five ministries: Providence Hospital, Providence Hospital Northeast, South Carolina Center for Fathers and Families, Healthy Learners and Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina.

The Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina continues the mission of the Sisters by strategically using resources to reduce poverty through action, advocacy and leadership.

St. Augustine's Prayer to the Holy Spirit
Breathe in me, O Holy Spirit, that my thoughts may all be holy. Act in me, O Holy Spirit, that my work, too, may be holy. Draw my heart, O Holy Spirit, that I love but what is holy. Strengthen me, O Holy Spirit, to defend all that is holy. Guard me, then, O Holy Spirit, that I always may be holy. Amen.

In Catholicism,  Feast Days, or Holy Days, are days which are celebrated in commemoration of the sacred events recorded in the history of our redemption, in memory of the Virgin Mother of Christ, or of His apostles, martyrs and saints, by special services and rest from work.  Catholic saints are holy people and human people who lived extraordinary lives. Each saint the Church honors responded to God's invitation to use his or her unique gifts. God calls each one of us to be a saint. 



(This was post originally appeared on the Foundation's blog in August 2010.)

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Looking at Poverty Differently


One often wonders about how to best serve the poor and marginalized in our communities. We wonder whether we are maximizing our resources to have lasting results. Recently, I met “Toxic Charity” author Robert Lupton at a meeting in Myrtle Beach, S.C. Lupton shed tremendous light on some of the concerns around serving the poor.  

At the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina, we recognize a distinct separation between generational poverty and situational poverty, and how we address them both. We view generational poverty as chronic, with many variables that have caused a person to live in poverty, including family structure, community structure, educational attainment, access to health care, life skills, culture, value and attitudes. We view situational poverty as crisis poverty. A person is without food, clothing or shelter or in need of medical attention now but has no health insurance coverage.  These two distinctions are very apparent and both are worthy of the Foundation’s attention and resources. In the Foundation’s case, more than 85% of our grant funding goes to addressing generational poverty. We feel we have greater impact in South Carolina addressing generational poverty, but we also realize that situational and crisis poverty exists and needs support.

Lupton explained the dilemma faced with providing services through our government, churches and nonprofit organizations. Lupton believes, and I agree, that we often apply crisis tactics to chronic problems, even when the situation is clearly persistent. Applying crisis intervention to a chronic issue can be harmful to a person or a family and it fosters dependency, which perpetuates poverty. This is why people who are poor remain poor.

The question becomes “what can we do differently?” Lupton feels the most important factor missing in most service programs for the poor is that the recipient has no “skin in the game.” You give them something the first time and they appreciate it. You give them something a second time and they anticipate it. You give them something a third time and they expect it. You give it a fourth time and they depend on it. If you really look closely at a person in poverty, odds are that they would much rather be a partner or participant than a charity case.  That is why free clothes closets are not good but thrift stores work. That is why free food banks foster dependency but inexpensive food co-ops allow the person to become a customer.

A lot of organizations are trying very hard to do the right thing for others. This is in no way to criticize the good intentions that organizations have or the work that they do. This is about looking at those we want to help, differently. This is about respecting the client and building their ability to be self sufficient. As Lupton said, “We never do for someone else what they are capable of doing for themselves.”

Communities and organizations dealing with issues around poverty must be willing to shift. The United States gives away more food, money and services than any other country in the world. But rather than just giving it away, can we find new ways to partner or help individuals become more independent? If so, they will become respected and confident consumers with a greater sense of self worth. It will also create an environment where individuals are no longer viewed as “charity” and where chronic issues are addressed more strategically and more collegially.

These kinds of changes will have a positive impact on the entire community. I invite you to read Lupton’s book, “Toxic Charity: HowChurches and Charities Hurt Those They Help (And How to Reverse It).” It will change the way you look at those you are trying to help. It sure makes sense to me. 


Tom Keith is the president of the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina



Note: Learn how one Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina grantee puts Lupton's thoughts into practice. Reverend Bill Stanfield, co-founder and chief executive officer of the Metanoia Community Development Corporation of North Charleston, shared a first-hand example of how to build a strong community using the strengths of the community rather than the deficiencies.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

KIDS COUNT Releases Report on Kinship Care

More than 2.7 million children in the United States are cared for by extended family members, with more than 5.8 million children living in grandparents’ homes. This represents an increase close to 18 percent in the last decade. According to the 2010 U.S. Census, 13.1 percent of South Carolina’s children under the age of 18 live in households led by grandparents or other relatives.

Kinship care refers to grandparents and other relatives who have stepped up to raise children whose parents can no longer care for them. Kinship care givers help keep families together and keep children from entering the foster care system. However, these relative caregivers and the children they are raising are often isolated. They lack the knowledge on the support services, resources, programs, benefits, laws and policies available to help them successfully fulfill their caregiving role.

In April the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina held a listening session focused on the perspectives of kinship care providers, a growing and vulnerable population across South Carolina. The Foundation partnered with one of its current grantees, Helping and Lending Outreach Support (HALOS), which provides resources and special opportunities to abused and/or neglected children and their caregivers through partnerships with faith-based and other community organizations in Charleston and the surrounding area.

Read the report summarizing the Kinship Care Listening Session.

Today, the Annie E. Casey Foundation KIDS COUNT released a report, Stepping Up for Kids: What Government and Communities Should Do to Support Kinship Families. In this report, the Annie E. Casey Foundation Foundation explores the increased number of children living with kinship care providers, including the latest state data and recommendations on how to support kinship families.

The Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina continues to explore the issues affecting these families and how they can receive the resources and support needed.


Brooke Bailey is the director of communications and public policy for the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Your Voice Matters: Reflecting on 2011 Listening Sessions

Sometimes the most meaningful and humbling human encounters we have with each other is when we pause and step away from the distractions of emails, smart phones and our “to do” list, to listen to the heartfelt concerns of others that can only be experienced in conversations together. In 2011, the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina hosted four Listening Sessions across the state with over 200 community members representing nearly 100 organizations participating. Each person present lent their unique voice and perspective to the challenges and opportunities families experiencing poverty currently face. 

In April, Foundation board and staff listened first-hand to more than 20 college students from Claflin University in Orangeburg, some of whom were first generation college students and participants in the federal TRIO program. These students shared some of the struggles they faced in completing high school, their dreams for their future, the importance of positive role models and the many steps of faith they took in order to pursue higher education. One young adult shared, “It’s not how much you have; it’s what you do with what you have.” We also met with committed community advocates and leaders working each day to address poverty in their community.

In celebration of Father’s Day, the Foundation partnered with the South Carolina Center for Fathers and Families, in June, to hear the perspectives of fathers from each of the six fatherhood programs throughout the state. Becoming a father was transformational, as one father expressed the sentiments of all the fathers in the room, “My kids inspire, uplift and motivate me to be a better man and father.” The fathers shared from their heart life circumstances before joining the fatherhood program, how they were able to move forward with the support of fatherhood program staff and the many ways hope has been rebirthed in their lives. 

 In July, Foundation representatives met with community service providers and homeless individuals and families to hear from those experiencing poverty and homelessness in Greenville. The Foundation heard multiple stories of the importance of treating all individuals with dignity and respect, as one individual shared, “There is more to me than my present circumstances.” All of the families desired to keep their family unit together, were working to overcome the multiple barriers faced in order to move ahead and relayed how having people who truly cared about their well-being made the biggest difference in their life. 

In October, Women Religious in South Carolina gathered for a Listening Session, as part of the Foundation’s Collaboration for Ministry Initiative, which assists and supports Sisters in their efforts to meet the needs of the poor and underserved members of society. The Sisters reflected upon their journeys, past and present, and the future dreams they hold for their ministries. One Sister emphasized, “Start with a dream and worry about the money later. God always gives you what you need.” Their stories illustrated the many ways they acted in faith, serving as bridge builders and anchors of faith to community members.

Given the high levels of poverty in South Carolina, there is a lot of work ahead for the Foundation to achieve its vision for all families in South Carolina to have the resources they need to live out of poverty. Throughout each Listening Sessions, we are reminded of the importance of continuing our work by listening to the voices individuals of directly impacted by the issues we care deeply about. They know what is most needed to support their journey. When we stop to listen, we often hear the answers to some of our most pressing challenges today. Let us continue to listen, their voices matter.

Read the full summary of the 2011 Listening Sessions.


Stephanie Cooper-Lewter is the senior director of research for the Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Easter Greetings

The Lord is Risen.


May the glory of the Lord’s miracle
strengthen your faith
and renew your hope.
May you rejoice
in the triumph of the Lord,
and may your life be blessed
with His love
on Easter and always.



"Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In his great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead," -1 Peter 1:3