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U.S.-based Foundation President Urges Catholic Nuns in Kenya to Foster Inclusivity

Conrad N. Hilton Foundation President, Peter Laugharn, at Strathmore University. Credit: Magdalene Kahiu/ACI Africa

Catholic Nuns in Kenya can become “important agents” of inclusivity, facilitating the narrowing of the gap between the rich and the poor as the country becomes a middle-income economy, the President of the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation (CNHF) has said. 

Addressing journalists at the Wednesday, July 12 dinner with CNHF grantees and partners at the Nairobi Serena Hotel, Peter Laugharn said, “Kenya is becoming a middle-income country; but as countries become more prosperous, often you see some people becoming wealthier and other people struggling.”

Catholic Nuns serving in Kenya, Mr. Laugharn said, are “some of the most important agents” in ensuring that no one is excluded “because of their interest in those who are most vulnerable, most marginalized, and most forgotten.” 

Catholic Sisters with Conrad N. Hilton Foundation President at Strathmore University. Credit: Magdalene Kahiu/ACI Africa

Expressing optimism in the “very bright” future of the Catholic Nuns’ apostolate, especially through partnerships that facilitate their empowerment, the President CNHF said, “Catholic Sisters are doing a tremendous amount of good work in this country, some of which we fund and some of which they do on their own."

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“Catholic Sisters are unsung and the work that they do, the people that they help are also unsung,” said the 88-year-old President of the foundation that supports, among other initiatives, the Sisters Blended Value Project (SBVP) and the Sisters’ Led Youth Empowerment Initiative (SLYI).

Some Catholic Sisters during Conrad N. Hilton Foundation's President visit to Strathmore University. Credit: Magdalene Kahiu/ACI Africa

In an interview with ACI Africa ahead of Mr. Laugharn’s visit, the Grant Manager of SBVP described SBVP that is being realized at the Kenya-based Strathmore University as a capacity-building project that has so far benefited 300 Catholic Nuns thanks to the US$3.2 million grant from CNHF.

“The grant has gone a long way to support us, to ensure that Sisters’ lives are transformed,” Anne Njoroge said July 11 about the CNHF aid that has been used to empower Catholic Nuns in Kenya, Uganda, Zambia and Tanzania.

In another interview, the Regional Project Coordinator of SBVP, Lucy Kuria, told ACI Africa that through the initiative, the challenges that were identified among Catholic Nuns in the four countries are being addressed in four ways: capacity building, conferencing networks, research and incubation, and financial inclusion.

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In an earlier interview, the Executive Secretary of the Association of Sisterhoods of Kenya (AOSK), Sr. Pasilisa Namikoye, acknowledged with appreciation the partnership with CNHF in facilitating networks among Catholic Sisters in Kenya.

Magdalene Kahiu is a Kenyan journalist with passion in Church communication. She holds a Degree in Social Communications from the Catholic University of Eastern Africa (CUEA). Currently, she works as a journalist for ACI Africa.