San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

App aiding nuns with ministry

- By Alejandra Molina

It took some getting used to, but Sister Maria Minerva Morales is now a faithful user of a cell phone app where she documents her interactio­ns with people to whom she ministers.

Through the app, Morales — who is part of the Catholic congregati­on Missionari­es of Charity of Mary Immaculate — documents the name, gender and age of the people she interacts with or those who seek her help. She notes whether it’s the first time she’s spoken to the person and whether they met up in person, over the phone or through Zoom. She also documents the nature of their meetings.

The app, which her fellow sisters began using around early March 2020, was developed by Catholic Extension — a nonprofit that invests in churches and ministries in working-class communitie­s — to track nuns’ interactio­ns and the kinds of resources they need to do their ministry. As COVID-19 struck the nation, the nuns’ recordings may have been scarcer at first because they were no longer publicly meeting people. But as they logged their virtual and phone interactio­ns, certain trends began to emerge.

Depression, anxiety, suicidal thoughts — especially among the Latino immigrant community — were common themes the nuns were documentin­g and encounteri­ng in their ministry.

This kind of documentat­ion has helped Morales, who is based in the Diocese of Little Rock in Arkansas, quantify the mental health needs of the people they were assisting.

“This has helped me see the amount of people who have suffered from depression through the pandemic,” Morales said.

The sheer trauma the sisters have encountere­d is palpable, said Joe Boland, vice president of mission at Catholic Extension.

“You can see in the numbers how much mental health was just a real concern,” Boland said. “That’s what the sisters were encounteri­ng. Our sisters are not psychologi­sts, and we’re not going to make them psychologi­sts overnight.”

The sisters are part of Catholic Extension’s U.S.-Latin American Sisters Exchange Program, which assists parishes in the U.S. lacking Spanish-speaking leaders in their churches. The sisters help congregati­ons address the spiritual needs of Latino immigrants in their neighborho­ods.

Since using the app, 30 sisters across the country, from Arkansas to California, have logged 18,000 interactio­ns.

Through her interactio­ns, Sister Zuly Cardenas has encountere­d issues dealing with unemployme­nt and people who are depressed and have expressed suicidal thoughts. Issues have emerged with more people being indoors during lockdown measures. “We can really see all the need that people require in this moment,” said Cardenas, who is based in the Diocese of Sacramento in California.

As a result of these trends, many of those sisters will undergo specific training to address the types of trauma they are encounteri­ng in their communitie­s.

Through Trauma Recovery Associates, a nonprofit created by Father Kenneth Schmidt and psychologi­st Sharon Froom, the sisters will undergo training that can help those to whom they minister "identify conflicts, unlearn specific distortion­s, develop self-awareness and regulate feelings related to trauma.”

The program emerged from a parish in Kalamazoo, Mich., as leaders sought to address trauma in the wake of the clergy sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church. More than 600 people in the Diocese of Kalamazoo have completed the program, according to Catholic Extension. This program has evolved to address different kinds of trauma, Boland said.

With added training, the sisters will also learn when to refer others to seek profession­al help, Boland added.

In addition, the sisters have taken courses on psychology as they work to earn degrees from St. Mary’s University of Minnesota, he said.

Boland said the app was created to help measure the sisters’ impact, but also ended up being a “diagnostic tool about how can we support the sisters’ work in their communitie­s.”

To Boland, it’s all about “how we as a church could be responding to the very human and real needs our people are facing.”

 ?? Religion News Service courtesy photos ?? A group of nuns pose with their phones during a 2020 training session for an app developed by Catholic Extension, a nonprofit.
Religion News Service courtesy photos A group of nuns pose with their phones during a 2020 training session for an app developed by Catholic Extension, a nonprofit.
 ??  ?? A nun utilizes a Catholic Extension app. The app was developed to track nuns’ interactio­ns and the kinds of resources needed.
A nun utilizes a Catholic Extension app. The app was developed to track nuns’ interactio­ns and the kinds of resources needed.

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