St Katharine Drexel was the second of three children - all daughters - of Francis Drexel, scion of the Drexel banking empire. With the death of their parents, the sisters - known collectively as the "All Three" - inherited a fortune worth hundreds of millions of dollars in today's money. In keeping with the practice of their devout parents, the Drexels contributed to a wide variety of charitable and philanthropic enterprises, but Katharine went one step further than the others, abandoning wealth and comfort for a life of poverty and hardship as the foundress of the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, a religious order dedicated to staffing schools for Native American and African-American children. By the time of her death in 1955 at the age of 97, there were over five hundred SBS sisters staffing 49 elementary schools, 12 high schools, and Xavier University in New Orleans, as well as 37 missions.
In this biography, Cheryl Hughes does not detail the minutiae of the saint's struggles to found and grow her order, only briefly passing over St Katharine's struggling with floodwaters in Arizona and catching typhus in Harlem. The focus of this book is exactly where it should be - on Katharine's inner life and motivation. Hughes finds the center of Katharine's life and work in her devotion to the Eucharist, the sacrament of total divine surrender that inspired her own total pouring out of self for others and thus transformed her into a source of inspiration for generations to come.
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