Lucy Kurien

Sister Lucy Kurien
Sister Lucy Kurien (left)
Born (1956-06-01) 1 June 1956
Kolayad, Kannur, Kerala
Nationality Indian
Occupation Social Worker, Women's rights activist, Catholic Nun
Known for Founder of Maher (NGO)
Founder of Interfaith Association for Service to Humanity and Nature
Parent(s) Vacachalil Kurien (father)
Maria Kutty (mother)
Awards Nari Shakti Puraskar
Paul Harris Fellow - Rotary International
Vanitha Woman of the Year 2016
Global Women's Leadership Award 2011

Sister Lucy Kurien is the founder and director of Maher, a community and interfaith organization for abused and destitute women and children, headquartered in Pune, India.[1]

Life

Born in South India's Kerala province, Sister Lucy moved to Mumbai to access better education when she was twelve. The city's slums were her first introduction to the conditions of the poor. At the age of nineteen, she decided she wanted to become a nun and joined the Holy Cross order, which focused on teaching and nursing.[2]

However, she was inspired by Mother Teresa's work and felt called to be closer to the people she wanted to help, directly touching the lives of the poor. In 1989 she joined the HOPE organization, founded by Sr Noilline Pinto of the Holy Cross Convent to help abused women. In 1991, Sr Lucy still working at the Hope, she had an encounter that would inspire her life's work. A pregnant woman came to her asking for shelter from her alcoholic husband whom she thought would beat her. Sister Lucy did not know where to send her since the convent did not take laypeople. She had to send her away but promised to help the following day. That evening, the woman's husband had doused her in alcohol and set her on fire. Both the woman and baby died.[2]

Sister Lucy was absolutely devastated. For six years she struggled to come to terms with this heinous incident and how she couldn’t help. She realized that she had to do something for such women, and the result was the founding of Maher in 1997 in Pune, Maharashtra. She had to single-handedly start Maher as she did not receive the backing from anyone. A friend of Sr Lucy, Fr. Francis D'Sa helped her with advice and also helped her to find some donors to start a non-Christian organization. Maher is 100% secular. Since its inception, Maher has provided safe refuge and rehabilitation to women who were suffering from similar forms of unspeakable abuse, starvation, or neglect.

Founding of Maher

Sister Lucy established Maher to help destitute women regardless of caste, creed, or religion. It took almost seven years to get the needed support, but in 1997, the first Maher house opened in the small village of Vadhu Budruk, on the outskirts of Pune.

Currently Maher has 46 short-stay and long-stay homes in the Indian states of Jharkhand, Kerala, and Maharashtra. In total they house over 893 street children, more than 357 destitute women (including 126 mentally ill women picked from the roadside) and 82 aged/mentally ill destitute men.[3] In the short-term, Maher provides immediate shelter and interventions. In the long-term, the community focuses on upending India's systemic violence, exploitation, and segregation—of men and women, but also of rich and poor.[2] Maher has touched the lives of 85,000+ beneficiaries as of 2017.

Sr. Lucy's journey from one home and three residents to 43 homes with thousands of beneficiaries in a span of just 20 years have been dotted by exceptional courage and true love for the unfortunate ones of society. In recognition of her services, Indian President Pranab Mukherjee awarded Sister Lucy Kurien with the Nari Shakti (women empowerment) award on March 8, 2016, in New Delhi.[4] Other prominent awards include the DCCIA Award for Excellence in Social Service 2010 Global Women's Leadership Award 2011, Paul Harris Fellow and Vanitha Woman of the Year Award. Maher and Sister Lucy have featured several times on Indian television, including the popular show Satyamev Jayate hosted by actor Aamir Khan, and also on Vatican Radio. In 2015, Sister Lucy was invited to attend the Clinton Global Initiative. In May 2017, Maher was granted a "special consultative status" with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (UN-ECOSOC).

Sr. Lucy with Pope Francis

Sister Lucy has had the opportunity to meet with the Pope Francis, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and former US President Bill Clinton on different occasions.

Interfaith Association for Service to Humanity and Nature

In February 2017, Sister Lucy Kurien, founded the Interfaith Association for Service to Humanity and Nature in Pune, India.

We respect and love all religions. We never put down anyone’s religion, or uphold one religion to the exclusion of others. What we want is to believe and respect interfaith religion, inclusive of all faith traditions. In our community spiritual practices, we invoke our prayers to the Divine, rather than invoking any particular name or form of God to the exclusion of others."

-Sister Lucy

As of October 2017, this new community has 198 members from 8 countries.

Honors

  • 2018: Neerja Bhanot Award
  • 2018: Jijabai Achievers Award
  • 2017: Sri Sathya Sai Award for Human excellence- 'Unity Of Religions'
  • 2016: Nari Shakti award
  • 2016: Vanitha Woman of the Year
  • 2011: Leadership Award, Global Women's Summits
  • Paul Harris Fellow, Rotary International

References

  1. "Maher away from home for abandoned mental patients - Indian Express". archive.indianexpress.com. Retrieved 2017-01-29.
  2. 1 2 3 Hillstrom, Christa. "After This Indian Nun Witnessed a Woman's Murder, She Saved Thousands More from Domestic Violence". YES! Magazine. Retrieved 2017-01-29.
  3. "India's Sister Lucy Kurien: a life of self-less service - ucanews.com". ucanews.com. Retrieved 2017-01-29.
  4. "Nari Shakti awards for women achievers - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 2017-01-29.
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