Career
Cajander married the doctor Anders Cajander in 1848 and had two children. After this loss, Cajander moved to train as a deaconess at the Evangelical Deaconess Institute in Saint St. Petersburg. The wealthy Finnish philanthropist Aurora Karamsin was familiar with the institute and when she decided to open a deaconess institution in Helsinki she invited Cajander to be its first principal.
The institute opened in December 1867, during the great Famine of 1866-1868.
In the winter months it also ran a soup kitchen. The care offered there was considered superior to the care offered elsewhere in the city.
In 1869 Cajander founded a children"s home in Helsinki. Cajander and Karamsin are considered the first Christian philanthropists in Finland, and are credited with introducing the new idea of women having a vocation to work for the church.
The first deaconess educated in Finland became Cecilia Blomqvist.
The secular nursing profession for women in Finland did not start until the nursing courses of Anna Broms in the 1880s.