From Spain to South America
Ascensión Nicol was born in Tafalla, Navarre (Spain),
on 14 March 1868. At baptism she was given the name of Florentina.
Her early education was typical of Christian families of the
time in that environment. She was the youngest of four children.
When she was 14 she entered Saint Rosa of Lima boarding school
in the town of Huesca. This contact with Dominican religious
life raised questions within her about her vocation. When
she decided to become a religious, at the end of her studies,
she preferred to return to her family for a year so as to
be sure of her choice. She returned to the school in 1885
ready to begin the novitiate. A year later she made her first
vows and started to work as a teacher, a job she did for 28
years. She shared with other Sisters a desire to serve the
poorest, even those in the most distant places, news of whom
reached them by means of the missionary magazines of the time.
The poor – criterion for choices
She was happy to be on mission, her option for the little
ones filled her with abundant joy. A few days after their
arrival in Maldonado they opened a school for girls. Not long
afterwards, they put up buildings to receive the poorest girls
and those from the most remote parts of the forests. The first
girls from the Baraya tribe arrived, and they stayed with
the Sisters and the boarding school was filled. Now the Sisters
were on the spot, they deepened their reflection on the social
situation of life in the forests: the clash between the indigenous
people and the rubber plantation workers. The Sisters opted
for the indigenous people and decided that in their school
there was a place for anyone who wanted to come, but they
gave preference to the indigenous people. |