© Latinas in History 2008 |
FERRÉ
AGUAYO, SOR ISOLINA (19142000)
Known
as the Angel of the Playa de Ponce, Sor Isolina was born into a well-to-do Puerto
Rican family in 1914. Her religious calling to forsake her comfortable life and
work with the poor came to her at the age of fifteen, but she did not reveal her
decision to the family until her twenty-first birthday. She joined the Missionary
Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity and in 1937 she professed as Sister Thomas
Marie.
An accomplished religious leader, Sor Isolina, a name she recovered following Vatican II, joined the faculty of Blessed Trinity College in Philadelphia, and earned a masters degree in criminology from Fordham University. An avowed community organizer, Sor Isolina created multi-service groups, worked with numerous grass-roots and government sponsored organizations in the U.S. and Puerto Rico, and helped the poor, at risk youth, and families to reach their potentials. Honored by numerous organizations for her humanitarian deeds, Sor Isolina received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President William J. Clinton, and seventeen doctorates honoris causa throughout her lifetime.
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