
WASHINGTON (CNS): It was 100 years ago, on 12 September 1921, when the Maryknoll Sisters assigned its first group of sisters to China, the congregation’s first mission.
One sister has been there nearly half that time, 49 years to be exact. To mark the 100th anniversary, Sister Michelle Reynolds spoke on a panel detailing the situation in China during the sisters’ general council in Maryknoll, New York.
“Many of the sisters were asking what is happening in Hong Kong,” where she’s served since 1972, Sister Reynolds said in a September 13 interview during a break at the general council.
Sister Reynolds, from Saugus, Massachusetts, said she was attracted to Maryknoll for two reasons: Her father always had a copy of Maryknoll magazine around the house and her own inclination toward religious education led her to discern a vocation with Maryknoll.
She has been a member of the congregation for 60 years, including four years teaching in New York City’s Chinatown district.
As with seemingly nearly everything else in life and society, so much has changed since she first was assigned to Hong Kong.
The people Sister Reynolds first worked with were “in a little village parish,” she said, noting, “Many of them had been refugees out of mainland China. They were extremely poor. Their living conditions were little one-room cottages. My first 10 years I worked in that parish.”

She said, “The people were very strong as a community and very close to the point that even now, after all those years, I will have contact with many of them.”
From that village parish, Sister Reynolds moved to an area where the government had “reclaimed the land and demolished all their homes so they were all relocated into high-rises—and so I moved with them, and continued in the parish for a couple of years and so got more or less stable,” she said.
“Then there was a request for someone to work in the New Territories,” living and working close to the border with mainland China, Sister Reynolds added. “For myself, I was initially open to whatever the needs were. So that’s why I said when I moved out to the New Territories, it was a whole area that was developing. So I was happy to be there.”
She fondly remembers the “pastoral sisters’ association” of Maryknollers and nuns from other institutes ministering in Hong Kong. “We used to make trips kind of regularly up to [mainland] China. We would connect with other religious communities there. We were a kind of support group, whether they needed support for their schools or what have you,” she recounted.
There are eight Maryknoll Sisters currently in Hong Kong, although one has been stuck on the Chinese mainland for the past year due to Covid-19 travel restrictions. Sister Reynolds said there also are five Maryknoll priests present, including one who teaches at a university in northern China.
“There was more communication back and forth with the pastoral groups. But now a lot of that has been stopped because of Covid,” she said.
As for her own communication methods, “I speak Cantonese and I’ve studied Mandarin, so sometimes I can follow conversations. But when I open my mouth Cantonese comes out instead.”
Now, at the age of 80, Sister Reynolds is retired. If you can call it that.
“Being retired, I’m responsible for a diocesan building. We have groups coming for activities,” she explained.
“We are open to the village using the space. We have a little chapel for occasional liturgies. We’ve got catechumen classes. Besides that, because of my previous connections with Catholic schools in the area, I’m on the board of the Independent School Management Committee. That’s being retired!” Sister Reynolds said with a hearty laugh.
She has been in the United States since July and expects to return to Hong Kong in mid-October.
Beyond the changes in ministry over the past half-century, much has changed in Hong Kong itself in just the past few years.
“The situation has very much deteriorated” since then, she said. The season of mass demonstrations in Hong Kong over a proposed extradition law and related issues “was a very difficult period,” she said. “When I left, things were still very much in a state of turmoil.”