This is Women’s History Month, and while it is great to note women of the past who have influenced who we are today, it is also imperative that we note women who are today making a difference in the lives of many, less fortunate than ourselves.
SISTER ALICIA VACAS MORO, a Spanish missionary sister and registered nurse, was one of 14 women to receive this year’s International Women of Courage Award, an annual honor from the U.S. Department of State for women who have demonstrated leadership in their human rights work.
The State Department’s annual award for women around the world began in 2007 by U.S. Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, and to date it has recognized more than 155 women from more than 75 countries.
The award goes to women around the world who have shown leadership, courage, resourcefulness, and willingness to sacrifice for others, especially in promoting women's rights.
The
49-year-old woman religious, who is the Jerusalem-based Middle East provincial
superior of the Comboni Sisters, has provided medical care to the poor in Egypt
and training to women and children in the West Bank.
Last March,
she volunteered to go to
Sister
Vacas ran a medical clinic in
In an
online symposium last June called, “Women Religious on the Frontlines,” Sister
Vacas said the women religious caring for people during the coronavirus
pandemic are not superwomen but women with great faith, compassion, generosity
and determination.
They are
“very vulnerable women, sometimes exhausted, most of the time powerless because
they are burdened with the brokenness of their people.”
.
The women’s
awards were presented during a virtual ceremony at the State Department March
8, International Women’s Day. Seven women from
It’s easy
to think of these women as “mythical heroes or angels among us,” said first
lady Jill Biden, speaking of all the honorees at the ceremony. “What else could
explain such herculean acts of fortitude and fearlessness?”
“Your fight is our fight, and your courage calls us to come together again and again and again,” she said.
Among the
other honorees were: Maria Kalesnikava, imprisoned in Belarus for fighting for
the democratic movement after the country’s disputed election; Wang Yu, a
Chinese human rights lawyer; Shohreh Bayat and Iranian woman who championed for
women’s rights after being accused of violating her country’s strict Islamic
dress code; Ana Rosario Contreras, a Venezuelan labor rights advocate; and
Julienne Lusenge, a Congolese human rights activist.
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