About the Order The Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of Saint John of Jerusalem of Rhodes and Malta is one of the oldest institutions of Western and Christian civilization. The 13,500 Knights and Dames remain true to its principles – nurturing, witnessing and protecting the faith and serving the poor and the sick.
The American Association Founded in 1927 as the first association of the Order of Malta in the Americas, the association is headquartered in New York City with over 2,000 Knights, Dames and volunteers in over 30 Areas working with the poor, sick, and incarcerated and giving witness to the Catholic faith.
Spirituality Knights and Dames join the Order of Malta to pursue their spiritual growth over a path laid out by Blessed Gerard more than nine hundred years ago, seeking to nurture and witness the Faith and assist the sick and the poor.
Spirituality in Action Members are involved in hands-on work at over 100 hundred organizations, including food banks, hospitals, pregnancy support centers, homeless shelters and mentoring programs for at risk children.
Donations & Payments You can make a donation, pay your Annual Contribution as a member, purchase a Mass Card, register for AmazonSmile, and more. Be sure to review the Association’s Privacy Policy and Account Agreement.
“Life is a Gift, a Symphony to be Celebrated and Shared”
The St. Bernadette Ministry’s focus is to serve those who are near or at the end of life, the frail elderly living in nursing homes or at home, individuals who are experiencing loss of dignity, or those whose life is nearing sunset. It is a Christian response to the culture of death, physician assisted suicide and euthanasia, loss of dignity and denial of personhood. As a ministry specifically for the sick, we serve those who are terminally ill, in particular our malades, malades-in-spirit, and our members.
Everyone has a beautiful story to tell and to share in the preciousness of passing on wisdom. My Life Story: A Legacy Project is a way to remember and be remembered, it’s one’s important moments, a history as an autobiographical poem in prose in the storyteller’s own words. This, as a legacy document, is for them to share with and leave for their family and friends.
This Biographical Legacy Project of the American Association of the Order of Malta is based on two programs. One is the clinical model developed by Dr. Harvey Chochinov’s Dignity Therapy which is now used to give patients in hospices and in hospitals who are on palliative care the opportunity to talk about their lives and preserve their history.
The second model is from the Eastern Palliative Care, which is a partnership between Outer East Palliative Care Service, Order of Malta and St. Vincent’s Hospital in Melbourne Australia offering home-based integrative palliative care. Their volunteer services include, yet are not limited to, companionship, respite, transportation, and the Biography Project.
Research with terminally ill patients showed that one’s sense of dignity literally made the difference between one’s desire to live or die. In areas where physician-assisted suicide was legal, the loss of dignity was more than any other reason to die, while pain was only 5%.
American Association, U.S.A
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