California Dominicans' land use looks after well-being of wildlife, people

Dominican Srs. Barbara Hagel, left, and Jeanette DeYoung examine a beehive on their motherhouse property in Fremont, California. (Melanie Lidman)

Dominican Srs. Barbara Hagel, left, and Jeanette DeYoung examine a beehive on their motherhouse property in Fremont, California. (Melanie Lidman)

by Maxine Kollasch

Contributor

View Author Profile

Clip from "In Good Faith"

Sr. Maxine Kollasch talks with Srs. Barbara Hagel and Jeanette DeYoung about how their community, the Dominican Sisters of Mission San Jose in Fremont, California, has worked to improve the well-being of wildlife and people — particularly, through creative use of land the sisters own in the Santa Cruz Mountains.

Click here to listen to the full "In Good Faith" podcast where this clip is from.

GSR shares clips from our friends at A Nun's Life Ministry. Check out full episodes of all their podcasts (Ask Sister, In Good Faith, Random Nun Clips and more, like the archived Motherhouse Road Trips) on their website, ANunsLife.org.

Latest News

Nicaea anniversary inspires faith, strengthens mission, theologians say

First-of-its-kind sensory room at church welcomes neurodivergent parishioners

(Unsplash/LeeAnn Cline)

We need a theology of abundance

Pope Francis greets immigrants at the port in Lampedusa, Italy, during his first papal trip outside Rome, on July 8, 2013. During that visit, Francis urged people not to be part of the "globalization of indifference" to the world's immigrants and refugees. Francis' call for mercy toward all summarizes his vision of the church, writes Diego Mauro. (CNS/CPP/L'Osservatore Romano)

After illness, can Pope Francis consolidate his vision of church?

CAPTCHA
3 + 10 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.