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The first black Cathotic sisterhood in the United States; Founded
in Baltimore in 1828 by a French Sulpician priest and a mulatto
Caribbean immigrant, the Oblate Sisters of Providence formed the
first permanent African American Roman Catholic sisterhood in the
United States. It still exists today. Exploring the slavery-era
history of this pioneering sisterhood, which took as its practical
mission the education of black children, Diane Batts Morrow
demonstrates the centrality of race in the Oblate experience. By
their very existence, the Oblate Sisters challenged prevailing
social, political, and cultural attitudes on many levels. White
society viewed women of color as lacking in moral standing and
sexual virtue; at the same time, the sisters' vows of celibacy flew
in the face of conventional female roles as wives and mothers. But
the Oblate Sisters' religious commitment proved both liberating and
empowering, says Morrow. They inculcated into their communal
identity positive senses of themselves as black women and as women
religious, Strengthened by their spiritual fervor, the sisters
defied the inferior social status white society ascribed to them
and the ambivalence the Catholic Church demonstrated toward them.
They successfully persevered in dedicating themselves to spiritual
practice in the Roman Catholic tradition.
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