By doing what Mary did, help young kids through as much as you can.
.Catholic AnswerMary MacKillop was homeschooled, along with her brothers and sisters, until she was fourteen. At the age of fourteen she went out to the workplace to help support her family. See the link below.
Mary saw a need to educate poor children and heard a call from God to do so.
She helped by founding schools where the poor could have heir children educated.
Mary wanted the help the poor because she was not rich herself and she wanted to make people believe even if you are poor or rich you are equal.
patrons of Australia •Francis Xavier •Mary Mackillop •Our Lady Help of Christians •Therese of Lisieux
Mary MacKillop helped the poor by establishing schools for underprivileged children, particularly in rural areas. She also worked to provide education and support for marginalized groups, such as the indigenous population of Australia. Additionally, Mary MacKillop founded the Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart, a religious congregation dedicated to serving those in need.
she was an amazing woman and she was a strong believer of the christian faith. Her goal was to help and that is what she did!
she didn,t help at all
Mother Mary MacKillop, founder of the Catholic Sisters of St. Joseph of the Sacred Heart and first Australian saint (effective 17 October 2010), worked with poor children, orphans and "women in distress." This might have been how they referred to single mothers in the 19th Century.
Mary mackillop helped people in all different ways usch as teachoing them school ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Mary Mackillop worked with teaching children, helping girls in danger, helping abandoned children, the incurably ill, and fought for the rights of those less fortunant than herself, all with the help of the Order of the Sisters of St Joseph (the Josaphites), of which Mary created. Mary's motto - 'Never see a need without doing something about it". Mary believed that all children and those less fortuant than others, all had fair rights and should be treated equally and with respect. Mary played a major part in Australian history, and contributed greatly to the Australian people.
A:Mary MacKillop was an Australian Roman Catholic nun who, in 1867, became the first mother superior of the the Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart, which she founded together with Father Julian Tenison Woods. MacKillop was excommunicated when a nun in her charge reported to the archbishop that that Father Keating had been sexually abusing children. This penalty was not based on MacKillop having reported the priest, or even having encouraged the nun to report him, but because the report demonstrated lax supervision when she should have prevented any discussion of paedophilia. As a result of this report, Father Keating had to be moved to a parish in Ireland. Unable to communicate with or receive help from Catholics in Australia, MacKillop was assisted by local Jews, with some discrete help from Jesuit priests. On his deathbed, Archbishop Sheil ordered the excommunication on Mary MacKillop to be lifted, saying she had done nothing wrong.