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Women becoming nuns in UK `on the rise` | The number of women becoming nuns has increased significantly in Britain. In the wake of fears that more convents were due to close, it seemed that nuns
in the UK had fallen out of habit. But the number of new sisters has trebled in
the last three years, bringing hopes of a revival. In 2009 only six women had
joined a religious order but in 2011 the figure increased to 17. Out of that number
more than half (nine) were under 40. The majority (13) of them were previously
professionals with a university education. “It was something that I felt drawn
to. It offers a chance for someone to be totally themselves,” Sky News quoted
Sister Cathy Jones, who has been a nun for a year and a half, as saying. “Although
paradoxically we make a vow of obedience it offers a person the freedom to be
themselves. “A freedom to follow their hearts desires and where God and spirituality
can be at the heart of that life. In our over busy world it offers a different
way of doing things,” she said. The number of nuns is still way below what it
was in the early 1980s when more than a hundred women a year took vows as sisters.
Father Dominic Howarth, vocations director for the Diocese of Brentwood, said
that recruiting has changed. “I think the old model would see religious brothers,
sisters or priests going into schools to catch them for religious life,” he said.
“Now it’s accompanying, it’s discerning, it’s walking with a young person perhaps
all the way from the late teens and early twenties through maybe four, five, six
or seven years as they journey different ways in their life. “It is only then
that they can become more certain about who it is and what it is God is calling
them to be,” he added.
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