First Jamaican female monk 

When Hannah Maryam TekleHaimanot came to Jamaica in December 2020, it was meant to be a two-month stop en route to Ethiopia where she had planned to settle and continue her work within the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church (EOTC).

But one day after arriving in her homeland, she met Aba Gebreyesus WoldeSamuel Negatu, an Ethiopian monk, head administrator for the church’s Archdiocese in the Caribbean and Latin America. He encouraged her to stay in Jamaica as director for the Abune Ysehaq Home for the Aged, located at the church’s Maxfield Avenue compound.

Fifteen years ago, she was consecrated Emahoy (female monk), the first Jamaican to receive such acknowledgement from the EOTC. The Bull Bay-born Hannah Maryam has served the movement for 40 years, discovering the faith while a student at the University of Illinois.

She considers her new as role an opportunity to expand her humanitarian outreach.

“The appointment is very significant to extend the legacy of His Eminence Abune Yesehaq, the late Archbishop of the Western Hemisphere. It means a lot to me personally, as one of his spiritual children, and I know that he had high hopes for me and my desire to follow in his footsteps to become a monk. Therefore, by the grace of God, I hope to work with others to improve the living conditions of the present elderly residents, to build and expand his vision of helping the homeless and indigent in Jamaica. This is all our duties as his spiritual children, not mine alone,” she said in an interview with the Jamaica Observer.

There are currently five residents at the home for the aged, which is able to accommodate nine people.