
Our History in Brief
The School Sisters of
Notre Dame (SSND) began in Bavaria, Germany in 1833, under the leadership
of Blessed Theresa of Jesus Gerhardinger.
The
Beginnings in Canada
Mother Caroline Friess,
superior of the School Sisters of Notre Dame in North America, was
invited by Rev. Eugene Funcken CR to send Sisters to the orphanage
in St. Agatha, Ontario.
The Motherhouse
The Motherhouse was built in 1927 upon the Niagara escarpment, just outside of Hamilton in Ontario.
Western Missions
In 1927, a boarding school in rural Leipzig, Saskatchewan was built. This was the beginning of a continuous and blessed SSND presence in western Canada, providing opportunities for education in isolated rural areas. Sisters ministered at Leipzig for 50 years.
Northern Missions
In the 1970s and 80s, other missions were opened in native areas, including Nakina, Beardmore, Pine Point, Dryden, Fort Smith, Fort Resolution, Sioux Narrows and Grassy Narrows.
England
After lengthy negotiations
with the clergy, Mother Theresa accompanied six Sisters to Whitechapel,
London, England in 1864 to teach the German and Irish immigrant
children.
South America
In 1961, in response
to Pope Paul VI's request to religious congregations to send missionaries
to Latin America, four Sisters from the Canadian Province went to
Bolivia.
Africa
At present, one Canadian
Sister works with other SSNDs, both native African and
from the United States, as headmistress of a secondary school in Kiptere, Kenya.
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