The Venerable Edel Mary Quinn was an Irish lay missionary.
Background
She was a great-granddaughter of William Quinn, a native of Tyrone who settled in Tuam to build Saint Mary"s Cathedral. During her childhood, her father"s career brought the family to various towns in Ireland, including Tralee, Company Kerry, where a plaque was unveiled in May 2009 at Bank Of Ireland House in Denny Street commemorating her residence there between 1921 and 1924.
Career
Born in Kanturk, County Cork, Edel was the eldest child of bank official Charles Quinn and Louisa Burke Browne of County Clare. Edel Quinn felt a call to religious life at a young age. After spending eighteen months in a sanatorium, her condition unchanged, she decided to become active in the Legion of Mary, which she joined in Dublin at age 20.
She gave herself completely to its work in the form of helping the poor in the slums of Dublin.
In 1936, at age 29 and dying of tuberculosis, Quinn became a Legion of Mary Envoy, a very active missionary to East and Central Africa, departing in December 1936 for Mombasa. Edel settled in Nairobi having been told by Bishop Heffernan that this was the most convenient base for her work.
By the outbreack of World World War II, she was working as far off as Dar es Salaam and Mauritius. In 1941, she was admitted to a sanatorium near Johannesburg.
Fighting her illness, in seven and a half years she established hundreds of Legion branches and councils in today"s Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Malawi, and Mauritius.
French McCarthy, later Bishop of Zanzibar, wrote of her:
"Mission Quinn is an extraordinary individual. Courageous, zealous and optimistic.
She wanders around in a dilapidated Ford, having for sole companion an African driver.
When she returns home she will be qualified to speak about the Missions and Missionaries, having really more experience than any single Missionary I know."
All this time her health was never good, and in 1943 she took a turn for the worse, dying in Nairobi, Kenya of tuberculosis in May 1944. She is buried there in the Missionaries" Cemetery. The cause for her beatification was introduced in 1956.
She was declared venerable by Pope John Paul II on December 15, 1994, since when the campaign for her beatification has continued.