Stanislaus Kennedy
Template:Short description Template:Use Hiberno-English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox religious biography Stanislaus Kennedy (born Treasa Kennedy; 19 June 1939 – 3 November 2025), popularly known as Sister Stan, was an Irish nun, social activist and member of the Irish Council of State. She authored several books including an autobiography. Her honours included multiple honorific doctorates.
Kennedy joined the Religious Sisters of Charity at age 18 and was mentored by Bishop Peter Birch who believed that the Catholic Church had to "identify more with the poor". She graduated in social science from the University of Manchester. Kennedy was in 1974 the first chair of the National Committee to Combat Poverty. She became best known as the founder of the homelessness charity Focus Ireland in 1985, but also initiated The Sanctuary, a centre for meditation and spirituality in central Dublin, and the Immigrant Council of Ireland in 2001.
Life and career
Treasa Kennedy was born on 19 June 1939 near Lispole on the Dingle Peninsula in County Kerry,<ref name="rteobit"/> the fourth of five siblings growing up on a small farm. Her parents spoke Irish when it was seen as a sign of being uneducated.<ref name="itobit" /> She described her childhood as carefree and remembered that she felt early that she wanted to help people less advantaged.<ref name="rteobit"/> In 1958, she left home at age 18<ref name="rteobit"/> to join the Religious Sisters of Charity<ref name="Ryan 2017"/><ref name="Smyth" /> and was given the religious name "Sister Stanislaus".<ref name="itobit"/>Template:Efn She made her profession in 1963<ref name="Smyth" /> and was then sent to Kilkenny to help Bishop Peter Birch;<ref name="itobit"/><ref name="Smyth" /> they set up a network of social services including a meals on wheels program believed to have been one of the first in Ireland.<ref name="rteobit"/> Birch was her mentor, passing his then controversial view that the Catholic Church had to "identify more with the poor".<ref name="itobit"/>
Kennedy was a founding member of the Kilkenny Social Services in the 1960s. As a member of the National Federation of Youth Clubs, she was in 1969 the first woman to address the annual congress, regarding provision for youth in Ireland. She was a founding member of the School of Social Education in Kilkenny in 1970 which provided the first professional courses for residential child care workers in Ireland.<ref name="Smyth" /> In 1972 she said: "I deal with all kinds of families, they may be materially in need or emotionally in need."<ref name="rteobit"/> She was a co-founder of the National Association of Child Care Workers, and of the Campaign for the Care of the Deprived Children. In 1974 she was appointed the first chair of the National Committee to Combat Poverty (later called Combat Poverty Agency).<ref name="rteobit"/><ref name="Smyth" /> In the late 1970s, she was described by the Minister for Health, Charles Haughey, as "the most intransigent woman I've ever met".<ref name="itobit">Template:Cite news</ref> She attended University College Dublin, graduating with a social science degree in 1980. She later completed a master's degree at the University of Manchester.<ref name="UCD">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In 1983, two years after the death of Birch,<ref name="rteobit"/> she worked in Dublin in research at the University College Dublin, and began to work with homeless women, living with them in a building in Eustace Street.<ref name="Smyth" /> As a result of that work, she founded the charity Focus Ireland in 1985 which is dedicated to finding housing for homeless people,<ref name="Smyth" /><ref name="Mirror">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> not only food, shelter and money, but personal support.<ref name="Smyth" /> It became the largest voluntary organisation in Ireland,<ref name=Friend>Template:Cite news</ref> expanding beyond Dublin to Cork, Limerick, Sligo, and Waterford.<ref name="Smyth" />
From 1995 to 2007, Kennedy was a member of the general leadership team of the Religious Sisters of Charity. In 1998 she founded The Sanctuary, a centre for meditation and spirituality in Dublin, as a place for people "to explore and develop their inner world and wisdom and find stillness".<ref name="UCD" /> In 2001, she set up the Immigrant Council of Ireland (ICI) as a response to the social needs of new immigrants living in Ireland.<ref name="rteobit"/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 2018, in response to protests against the congregation's involvement in healthcare, she said that "The negativity is directed at nuns. Everything is thrown together, the orphanages, the Magdalene homes, the Tuam babies, Vincent's hospital – it is all thrown together and mixed up, and it is all anti-nuns."<ref name="macdonald">Template:Cite news</ref>
A 2009 report revealed that two lay workers at St Joseph's residential home in Kilkenny, where Kennedy lived and worked, had abused children in the 1970s. She said that she had not heard of sexual abuse there until an investigation in 1995. In 2020, she said in a documentary, Being Stan, a Life in Focus: "I was accused of being complicit with it, in the sense that it was alleged that I knew about the abuse and did nothing about it. ... I knew nothing about the abuse, absolutely I didn't know. But, nevertheless the allegation really upset me. It questioned everything I was about. ... I had to realise what I was suffering was nothing compared to what the boys had suffered."<ref name="rteobit"/>
Kennedy published several books, from empirical analysis to works with a spiritual focus such as Gardening The Soul.<ref name="Smyth" /> She authored six books published by Transworld Ireland, including her autobiography, The Road Home, which contains a foreword written by President Mary McAleese.<ref name="Ryan 2017">Template:Cite news</ref> Her 2023 book Finding Hope featured contributions from the Dalai Lama, Colum McCann and Orla Guerin and was dedicated to Charlie Bird.<ref name="macdonald"/> Some works became bestsellers.<ref name="Smyth" />
Kennedy was ill from 2017, but did not use the word cancer until 2020.<ref name="itobit" /><ref name="Mirror"/> She was in hospice care at St Francis Hospice in Blanchardstown.<ref name="rteobit"/>
Kennedy died there on 3 November 2025, at the age of 86. Following her death, President Michael D. Higgins said she was a "fearless advocate for human rights and equality". McAleese said: "All the things that she set up have a longevity because she forward planned. She's left a phenomenal engine behind her." The former Archbishop of Dublin, Diarmuid Martin, said he knew her as "a joyful, elderly nun, physically slowed down, intellectually, extraordinarily sharp".<ref name="rteobit">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Honours
McAleese appointed Kennedy to the Council of State in 1997, and she served until 2004. In 2014, she was awarded the UCD Alumni Award for Social Sciences.<ref name="UCD"/> Kennedy received honorary doctorates from the National University of Ireland (2003),<ref name="Smyth" /> Trinity College Dublin, University College Dublin, the Open University and the Dublin City University (2017).<ref name="McGee">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="DCU">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Writings
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Notes
References
External links
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