These nuns spent a lifetime helping others. In their last years, who will help them?
Sister Mary Consolata Nakawooja assists an elderly nun as she takes tea at the Little Sisters of St. Francis premises in Nkokonjeru, Uganda. Stuart Tibaweswa for NPR hide caption Nkokonjeru, Central
Sister Mary Consolata Nakawooja assists an elderly nun as she takes tea at the Little Sisters of St. Francis premises in Nkokonjeru, Uganda. Stuart Ti
Read Full Story at NPR News โWhy This Matters
The plight of aging nuns in Uganda reflects a quiet but growing crisis across the global Church: the abandonment of those who dedicated their lives to serving others. These women, who often forewent marriage, family, and personal wealth, now face institutional neglect in their final yearsโa stark contradiction to the moral authority their orders once wielded. Their struggle underscores the erosion of community-based care systems that have historically sustained religious life.
Background Context
In Uganda, where religious congregations have long played a central role in education, healthcare, and social services, economic shifts have left many orders financially strained. Decades of colonial-era missions expanded rapidly after independence, but declining vocations and donor fatigue have weakened their sustainability. Meanwhile, government social safety nets remain patchy, leaving older nuns with few options beyond relying on the very communities they once served.
What Happens Next
Without structural intervention, aging nuns may increasingly fall through cracks in welfare systems, forcing dioceses to either consolidate resources or seek external funding. Some orders are exploring partnerships with secular NGOs to provide elder care, but such models risk diluting their religious identity. The Churchโs responseโwhether through policy shifts or grassroots mobilizationโwill set a precedent for how aging religious workers are treated across the continent.
Bigger Picture
This issue mirrors broader demographic trends in religious life worldwide, where shrinking and aging populations challenge traditional models of institutional support. As secularization accelerates in many former mission fields, the Churchโs moral responsibility to its most vulnerable members is being tested. The Ugandan case may foreshadow similar reckonings in Latin America and Asia, where religious orders once thrived but now grapple with survival.
