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Casa Ricci Social Services

Casa Ricci Social Services
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Established 1951; 66 years ago (1951)
Purpose Care for the neediest and for their children
Location
Founder
Fr. Luis Ruiz Suárez, SJ
Affiliations Jesuit, Catholic
Website Casa Ricci

Casa Ricci Social Services began in 1951 when Spanish Jesuit Luis Ruiz Suárez opened the Jesuit residence in Macau, China, to war refugees. With their resettlement Ruiz addressed the situation of those suffering from leprosy, and later those with AIDS.

The roots of Jesuit social work in Macau go back to 1569 when Melchior Carneiro, S.J., the first bishop of Macau, founded there the first Western-style hospitals in Asia.

In 1951 the Spanish Jesuit Fr. Luis Ruiz Suárez came to Macau and found it flooded with refugees from World War II. He opened the Jesuit residence to these refugees and initiated the Casa Ricci Social Services center. The center provided the refugees with food, shelter, job help, and document processing. For their children the centre set up the “Colegio Mateus Ricci School” and “Escola de Santa Teresa do Menino Jesus School.”

In the 1960s, the refugees had moved on and Ruiz shifted the services of the centre to the elderly, founding “Betania Home” for men and “Santa Maria Home” for women. Ruiz also extended services to the north of the peninsula and Taipa Island to alleviate family poverty and child labor.

In 1971 he enlisted the support of Caritas Macau, with help from Caritas International, to take Ricci House under its umbrella. while he continued extending outreach efforts.

Ruiz's work with he poor went on unabated. In the mid-1980s he extended Casa Ricci Social Services to lepers at Dajin Island of Taishan city in Guangdong province. He began by obtaining medical care, food, water, and help with housing, then he found a group of religious sisters who would live among them and serve their needs.

He further established leper colonies deep in the mountains of Sichuan and Yunnan provinces in the north, bringing dependable drinking water and new housing, and, again, the help of a group of sisters. Ruiz emphasized reintegrating into the society the children of the lepers, securing their education along with other children. He established orphanages where they would not be associated with the stigma of leprosy. Ruiz went on to establish charitable institutions for the elderly, the disabled, the mentally handicapped, and to educate social workers throughout much of China.


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