The author unveils the heroic life and holy death of Mother Luisita, foundress of the Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart of Los Angeles. During the revolution and religious persecution in Mexico of the 1920s, she became a light in the darkness.
In 1927, during the murderous anti-Catholic reign of Mexican president Plutarco Elias Calles, Mother Luisita and two members of her Carmelite community cast off their religious habits, donned secular clothes, trembling all the while, started out on a perilous flight from the brutal, atheistic government intent on killing them.
Neither their forced exile nor those death squads broke these brave nuns, suddenly thrust into the barren American Southwest. For in addition to the meager possessions they carried with them, they bore deep within their hearts a confident love of Jesus as well as a devotion to that principle by which Mother Luisita had directed their steps: "Adelante! Onward! God will Provide!"
Strangers in a strange land they were now...but not for long!
Mother Luisita's beautiful, prayerful presence soon won these nuns friends and patrons in America, where she and her companions continued their mission. In the decades since then, Mother
Marie Kennedy O. C. D., Timothy