Released with nowhere to go, dozens of undocumented immigrants flooded a church respite center in McAllen, Texas, after the Border Patrol set them free without bus tickets in July. The facility added an extra tent to accommodate the numbers. “We have had upwards of 60 to 65 people spending the night over the last few weeks,” said Deb Boyce, volunteer group coordinator for Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley. “Our numbers have almost doubled because they were being released without bus tickets. They had to stay overnight.”

This story appears in the Notes from the Field feature series. View the full series.

by Angela Mahoney

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Notes from the Field - “Live and Learn,” the saying goes, so I try to learn from where I live and observe my surroundings to gain knowledge from them. That said, there are a few things I have learned from living in a developing country that I didn’t know before I came to Ethiopia. For one, it's not easy to run a mission.

by Joachim Pham

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Sr. Mary Dominic Nguyen Thi Hao of the Congregation of Our Lady of the Missions has cared for sex workers in Ho Chi Minh City for 10 years. Her ministry focuses more on teaching about disease prevention than lecturing on moral lessons, since the women tend to be poor and uneducated. Hao, 73, also performs pro-life work by setting up houses for women experiencing unwanted pregnancies to live under her support until they give birth.

This story appears in the Mining feature series. View the full series.

Guatemala, a country about the size of the state of Virginia, is today in a particularly heightened crisis of corruption, government upheaval, militarization and community resistance. In the 1990s, the government lowered royalties on mineral wealth to 1 percent. Successive governments have granted hundreds of mining licenses as well as rights to flood farmland for hydroelectric power. As community resistance has grown to these and other injustices, the military has turned on its citizens while ignoring or even supporting the drug cartels.

by Joyce Meyer

International Liaison, Global Sisters Report

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GSR Today - This past April, as a board member of the Hilton Foundation Board I had the privilege of visiting early child development projects in Zambia, a special area of funding for the foundation. As a board we had received reports on progress being made by our various projects, but seeing children in person was a special experience.

When the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate started tracking the ages of women and men religious in the United States in 2010, it was already clear that fewer women were joining religious life. This made the average age of women in religious life higher and higher with each passing year, during a time when fewer and fewer young women were joining. But CARA data also showed that women professing final vows were themselves older — much older — than before.