"Brett has crafted a meticulously researched study which he effectively situates within three streams of scholarly discourse: United States foreign mission history, African American Catholic history, and the history of women religious. Utilizing previously ignored archival documents as well as a substantial body of personal correspondence and interviews conducted with a broad, balanced spectrum of informants, he has produced a lucid study of an African American sisterhood’s evolving concept of mission during a century of service." —Diane Batts Morrow, University of Georgia
“The Holy Family Sisters made a large contribution to the education of women in the Belizean mission, and work with the poor eventually drew the sisters back to their original charism. The book will interest students and scholars in women’s studies, Afro-Caribbean history, regional history of the South, the history of missions, education, and American Catholic history.” —Angelyn Dries, O.S.F., Saint Louis University
“This short, informative text tells the little-known story of the foreign missionary efforts of one of the two oldest Catholic orders for African American women in the US, the New Orleans-based Sisters of the Holy Family.” —Choice
“Edward T. Brett engages extensive archival research, interviews with Holy Family sisters, and testimony by Garifuna community members to provide a compelling and comprehensive overview of the contributions of this pioneering group of women religious. He expertly contextualizes the work in the understudied history of African American Catholicism, U.S. mission history, and the history of women religious. . . . This is, in short, an important contribution to Catholic history that establishes the crucial role played by an African-descendent congregation in mission history.” —The Catholic Historical Review
“Extensive interviews with and letters from the nuns authenticate the humanity in the Belize mission story. This narrative calls for additional work in the records of the Holy Family Sisters, whose voices must be more fully heard in American Catholic history.” —American Catholic Studies
“This is an institutional narrative whose strength is Brett’s analysis of religious missionary life by black Catholics to black Catholics. . . . This volume is a welcome addition to the study of Black Catholic history, the examination of missiological approaches, insights into the lives of women religious, and Caribbean Catholic culture.” —Theological Studies
“The New Orleans Sisters of the Holy Family: African American Missionaries to the Garifuna in Belize by Edward T. Brett is a significant contribution to Black Catholic history. Brett presents the history of the first overseas mission taken on by African American Catholic sisters. . . . Brett reveals the influence of the Second Vatican Council on the SSF women’s identity and ministry.” —Journal of African American History