SP CARITAS gals 2/19 - Sisters of Providence
Transcription
SP CARITAS gals 2/19 - Sisters of Providence
Caritas ● A publication for the Sisters of Providence and Friends ● Spring 2003 Editor’s note: This is the story of a medical mission to Guatemala and El Salvador to provide medical primary care outreach and some measure of acute care to a population that ordinarily would be unlikely to receive such help. The care is simply not available and/or there is no money to pay for it. As in so many stories about the works of the Sisters of Providence and the Providence Associates, minor miracles happen when individuals driven by faith and compassion see a way to make a difference in the lives of others. INSIDE: Sisters and Associates reach out around the world DELEGATION BRINGS health care and hope TO GUATEMALA AND EL SALVADOR by Roberta Rorke, SP T he last time I visited our Providence Associate, Chris Halter, in Guatemala, I was struck by the need for health care in the Mayan villages. So, for the last two years I hoped to find a doctor willing to give time there. This dream was fulfilled in October when two emergency room specialists — Dr. Anthony Dunlop, of British Columbia, and Dave Engebo, RN, of Longview, Wash., — set out with me for a tour in El Salvador and Guatemala. ➺ ➺ SOA arrest/trial ● General Council visits ● Haiti celebration health care and hope... We embarked on our three-week journey with the aim of providing material and moral support to resident field workers, including our sisters and associates. We also planned to gather information about acute and chronic needs in the communities served to assist our long-term planning for medical outreach in the two countries. We were met in San Salvador by Sister Maria Antoineta Trimpay and Javier, a young man who works for the sisters. We went to the village of La Papalota for the night and began seeing patients in San Marcos Lempa early the next morning. This is an area where there was intense fighting during the civil war and the outer church wall carries the Mission team members (from left) Tony Dunlop, MD; bullet holes Chris Halter, PA; Roberta Rorke, SP; and Dave Engebo, RN. 2● Our plan for the as evidence. One of Dave’s first patients was a young woman who has a bullet wound scar. In many ways, this was the best possible beginning since it introduced us to the experience of many of the people we served. Whenever we learned the history of someone, it included stories of struggle and tragedy. For example, one woman had lost four sons. Others had lost parents or siblings. Yet, the spirit of the people is incredible. Another day, we took a boat up river to Linares. This is a village Sisters Isabel Cid and Marilyn Charette used to visit, spending the night in a family’s hammock and returning to La Papalota the next day. That family’s house was destroyed in the earthquakes, so its members have moved in with another family in what is no longer a house but where some walls remain. During the war, people of Linares fled to Honduras, where they lived in such difficult conditions that they moved on to Panama. When they returned after the war, they were given land far from any cities and where the roads were dangerous because of bandits. The people frequently travel by boat and agriculture is the only work. The river water, which some drink and others wash clothes in, is brown in color. The people are extremely poor and have many physical ailments, including dysentery, scabies and malnutrition. I think all of us were impressed by the three sisters serving in ministry in El Salvador. Sisters Fran Stacey and Maria Antoineta live alone in the “campo” (countryside). Sister Monica Campillay lives in San Salvador at the formation house with Sisters of Providence candidates Vilma Franco and future is to continue to encourage physicians to visit El Salvador and Guatemala to provide a greater continuity of care. SISTERS AND LAY PEOPLE COLLABORATE TO MEET GLOBAL NEEDS by Roberta Rorke, SP T he global economy and the spread of U.S. culture are issues being addressed in many forums. The ability to communicate and influence persons worldwide is a characteristic of our age. We both learn from others and teach others our values. The Sisters of Providence have a history of adventurous undertakings in distant areas calling for our presence, e.g., the Northwest in the 1850s, Alaska in the early 1900s, and the Philippines and El Salvador in the 1980s and 1990s. With the religious community’s outreach to distant areas, there always have been lay collaborators as an integral part of a new mission. In the 21st century, our reduced number of vowed members makes it even more important to work with laity to serve global needs which call out to us. Editor’s note: Judy Johnson, CSJP, a member of the board of Providence Hospitality House, was misidentified in the Winter 2002 issue of Caritas. One way to meet global needs is to collaborate with other groups. The following are a few examples of this outreach: •Providence Health System, headquartered in Seattle, budgets funds each year for aid to developing countries. (See chart for a sample of this year’s donations.) This year, with the help of funds added by the religious community, Providence Health System now has a full-time director of outreach, Mark Koenig. Mark’s assistant Peter Barry manages a warehouse in Tumwater, Wash., where donated medical supplies are stored and then shipped to areas where the equipment is needed. The health system teams with Catholic Relief Services, the Medical Mission Board and others to ship containers of supplies to countries including Guatemala, Lithuania, the Philippines and Tanzania. St. Vincent Hospital, in Portland, also part of Providence Health System, has a program to send medical residents to Nairobi, Kenya. Nurses from St. Vincent’s have participated with a medical group in Moscow, Russia. •In Spokane, where Providence Services is headquartered, Sacred Heart Medical Center has rented space to store and distribute medical supplies to the poor, under the direction of Sister Rosalie Locati. Usually, the donations are to a foreign country, but local charities also have received supplies. Sacred Heart staff members Chris Peterson, RN, from Heartsin-Motion, and Maureen O’Keefe, from Heal the Children, are members of medical teams which go to Guatemala each year. •Volunteers from both health systems have gone to El Salvador to help build houses after the last earthquake. Many others who could not go contributed financially to the rebuilding effort. An open sewer runs by the house of this squatter family in Cocales. Margarita Hernandez. Dave and Tony were inspired by what these women do. And despite working 12-hour days in high heat and humidity, they fell in love with El Salvador. Dave said his parish in Longview has a sister parish in El Salvador but he didn’t know where. When I spoke with Sister Eleanor Gilmore, CSJP, who lives in San Salvador, she said, “Why, that’s Fran’s parish!” When Sister Fran found out that Dave was from her sister parish, she gave him the grand tour of Sector Rutilio Grande. From El Salvador, we went to Guatemala. We had a lot of medicine and the bus driver refused to take it, saying we wouldn’t be able to get it through customs. Enter the Chileans – Sisters Monica and Maria Antoineta! They drove home, got their passports and drove to Guatemala with the medicine. They were stopped at the border but were permitted to type a letter saying Emaciated bodies are signs of the malnutrition that endangers the lives of children. the medicine was their gift to Guatemala. Then they were permitted through. We were all impressed with their ingenuity and their willingness to help. Chris Halter met us in Guatemala City and brought us to Panajachel, which is near his home in Santa Catarina. We had clinic in Santa Catarina each day and then moved on to Cocales, where we served the medical needs of the squatters along the railroad tracks. Then on to the “finca” (coffee plantation) where we planned to meet Dr. Carlos Gonzales, who had received a pro bono heart surgery from Providence Hospital in Seattle. Unfortunately, Dr. Gonzales died five days before our arrival. His wife, Senora Flor Gonzales, had us come anyway. The team saw more than 100 patients a day during the week we were there. My part was organization and some translation. While the experience was fruitful, we had too short a time in each area. And while we had medicines for many things, what the people need most is long-term care. Some people we saw never had been to a doctor. In Guatemala, even if a Mayan Indian gets to a hospital, the racial prejudice there is so strong that some doctors will not treat them. Our plan for the future is to continue to encourage physicians to visit El Salvador and Guatemala to provide a greater continuity of care. Dave is active in public speaking about his experiences and Tony would like to go back some day. For myself, I have contacted an eye clinic in Guatemala as a place to send patients with cataracts. Some people we encountered are blind but could see if they had cataract surgery. The sister running the clinic said she would accept those we send when another team comes from the United States. ● ●3 Catholic Partnership for International Missions •The religious community itself has sent aid to St. Xenia’s Hospital in St. Petersburg, Russia, and helped build a church in Magadon, Russia. The community partnered with religious in Lithuania and helped build a home for the aged and a soup kitchen. The community also is paying for a program in Lithuania to update sisters theologically since their years under communist Russia prevented their knowledge of Vatican II and its teachings. Sisters from both Lithuania and Uganda have been welcomed at Mount St. Vincent in Seattle for training in geriatric nursing. While our outreach in Africa is limited, we have funded projects in Kenya, Uganda and Cameroon. •Providence Associates also play a part in this global outreach. Some groups of associates contribute financially to the missions. Others take a more hands-on role, like Chris and Laura Halter who live and work in Guatemala. Chris has established two health clinics and organized the women in Antigua who do weaving to earn a living, thereby compelling the city to provide water and garbage disposal for them. Chris also has been involved in a re-forestation project and has built and furnished a small technical school. In El Salvador, Anibal and Transito Castro are very active in social justice causes. For example, Transito works with at-risk youth. She is known internationally for this ministry and has been invited to Germany and other countries to share her expertise. T hese endeavors show what all of us as a team can do. Each one plays their small part, but the result is a major contribution to building a better, possibly more just global society. In theological terms, we are God’s caring providence to a world in need. ● Summary of 2002 Mission Contributions (medical supplies) January February March April May June July September TOTAL Cameroon Vietnam Tanzania El Salvador Cuba Micronesia Mexico Vietnam Mexico Colombia Democratic Republic of the Congo Russia Afghanistan Panama West Indies Liberia Guatemala Honduras American Samoa Nicaragua Haiti Mexico Guatemala Cameroon $ 23,008 $ 1,861 $ 79,668 $ 1,710 $ 1,160 $ 109,951 $ 926 $ 2,973 $ 1,242 $ 1,490 $ 89,890 $ 1,432 $ 949 $ 250 $ 1,799 $ 2,564 $ 102,637 $ 750 $ 484 $ 3,834 $ 2,475 $ 250 $ 338 $ 84,915 $516,556 SCHOOL OF THE AMERICAS PROTEST Sister risks her freedom to RAISE AWARENESS Maureen Newman, SP, (second from right) joins in protest with other members of Peace Community and friends (from left) Sue Boyle; Karin Dufault, SP; Chauncey Boyle, SP; Miriam Spencer, CSJP; Kathleen Jess; Mary Grondin, SP; Jeri Johnson, PA; Corky Muzzy, CSJP; Teresa White, SP; and Kay Van Stralen. The photograph was taken by Charlene Hudon, SP. 4● S ister Maureen Newman decided to lay her freedom on the line on November 17 at Fort Benning, Ga., in hopes that the act of a 57-year-old Sister of Providence from Seattle risking arrest and a possible six-month jail sentence would open some eyes. After two nights in jail awaiting arraignment and the spectre of returning to Georgia for trial in February, she still is convinced that her decision was the right one. She was compelled to risk her own security to focus attention on the attacks, rapes and murders of innocent Editor’s note: Maureen Newman, SP, was sentenced on February 10 to serve three months in a federal prison at a location that was still to be determined at press time. In a note to other Sisters of Providence after her trial, she wrote: “I could not have made it through this last two months, and especially this week, without your prayers. Because of them, I have been at peace.” people in Latin America by soldiers trained in the School of the Americas. “I believe every person in the United States cares about human rights,” Sister Maureen said in an interview after her return to Seattle. “If they knew how many human rights violations were done with their tax dollars, they would be appalled.” Sister Maureen wants Americans to understand that U.S. tax dollars fund the training of military personnel who commit violent terrorist acts in the name of freedom. Though today the Department of Defense’s school for soldiers bears a new name, the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, its agenda and practice are the same, she asserts. Her decision to cross the line onto the military base was not made lightly, Sister Maureen explained. For the past three years, she has been one of thousands who traveled to Georgia in the annual protest of the school to remember the 1989 massacre of six Jesuit priests and their housekeeper and her daughter at the University of Central America in San Salvador. This year, even while preparing to participate she did not know for sure if she would cross that line, so she did not tell her family. Her sister and two aunts back in Walla Walla, Wash., already were nervous about her participation because of the way the right of dissent is being challenged in America today. “Today in the U.S., it is very difficult to have dissent,” Sister Maureen explained. Another factor was talking with religious sisters and brothers from other countries about their views of the United States and its military stance. “People in the United States don’t understand how some view these actions.” Sister Maureen said she had always asked herself what if – what if she crossed the line and risked arrest and the possibility of a six-month prison sentence for the misdemeanor offense of trespassing. But in prior years, her responsibility to return to the children, as vice principal of St. Therese School in Seattle, kept her from taking that step. She felt an obligation to them that she no longer has since she is transitioning to a new education ministry. “Probably what pushed me over the edge was an experience two weeks ago,” Sister Maureen related. At a forum at Seattle University that was sponsored by Catholic Relief Services, two Colombians were speaking on human rights violations supported by U.S. government funds. “The same human rights violations in Nicaragua and El Salvador are escalating in Colombia, where one archbishop, eight priests, one woman religious and thousands of indigenous people and African Colombians have been killed,” she said. The speakers described rapes, kidnappings and executions. “The eyes of the women who were raped, who had seen their husbands and children killed, were in my mind,” Sister Maureen said, her voice welling with emotion. The images and descriptions stayed with her, and on the Thursday before leaving for Georgia, Sister Maureen told her provincial, Sister Barbara Schamber of Mother Joseph Province, that she might cross the line. By Saturday night, on the eve of the protest, she had Sister Maureen Newman made up her mind. But first, she wanted to make sure that the protest was nonviolent and that there was no destruction of property. Then, satisfied with the integrity of the statement the protest group was making, she stepped through the hole in the fence and onto the base property. She and the other 90 protesters, including nine women religious, were arrested by young soldiers. Their arms were bound behind their backs with plastic handcuffs and they were told to strip down to their lowest full layer of clothing. Sister Maureen complied and watched as the soldiers threw away her SP Peace Community T-shirt (probably because it said “Close the School of the Americas” on the back), and also her origami peace crane made from a demonstration song sheet. The protesters were fingerprinted and photographed, and subjected to a ‘pat-down’ search. Then, wearing leg chains, they were led to the county jail, where Sister Maureen would spend the next two nights awaiting her turn to be arraigned. The first night was the worst for most because of the cold and only having one thin blanket. Thirty to forty protesters were housed in a holding tank that was 10 cinder blocks by 71/2 and had a bench that would only seat 10. “My 12 years working with women inmates at the King County Jail had prepared me somewhat for the experience,” Sister Maureen said. “Without that, I would have been more frightened, but I had a better idea of what to expect with incarceration.” That was not true of some of the more fragile young people, who were unsure of what to expect, had no money to post a cash bail and worried about getting to see a lawyer. In court on Tuesday, the lawyer talked to 20 protesters at the same time for about 20 minutes before the arraignment. Calling bail “necessary in these times,” the judge set the amount at $5,000, requiring the payment of $500 cash for each protester to be released until trial January 27. This was the first time protesters had not been released on their own recognizance, without having to pay bail. Clearly, the stakes are being raised by the authorities, making it harder for the protesters to grab the world’s attention. For 13 years, protesters have gathered in Georgia, but the media tends to view the annual protests as business as usual, and worthy of little if any news coverage. That is despite the fact that these have been some of the largest demonstrations in the United States since the civil rights movement until the recent anti-war protests. Today, it has to be something sensational to get in the news, Sister Maureen claimed. Perhaps that something sensational at the School of the Americas protest can be the arrest of a Sister of Providence from Seattle. ● Seattle – Ann Buchanan (sister of Margaret Botch, SP), Kirkland ●5 New Providence Associates The new year began with a bumper crop of Providence Associates, lay individuals who share the mission and charism of the Sisters of Providence. Today, there are more than 1,000 Providence Associates worldwide – about equal to the number of Sisters of Providence. Burbank – Debbie Learned, Judy Umeck and Irene Mullen Spokane – (Front row) Betty Weber, Mary Butler, Marilee Hedemark, Kate Smith and Susan Keyes; (back row), Crystal Johnson, Karen Wormell, Buck Rogers, Bob Wormell, Blanche Hill and Marty Bishop Great Falls – Dixie Hromcik, Barbara Mechels and Jeanette Day Not pictured: Portland – Ramona Raffael, Darlene Moore and Suzanne Davis General Council Visits 6● Regional Conference Held in Spokane I n January, the provincial superiors and councils of Holy Angels and Mother Joseph provinces joined the Superior General and the General Council for a Western Regional Conference in Spokane. In addition to visiting the Spokane provincial administration office and Mount St. Joseph/Emilie Court, some General Council members stopped in Seattle to tour that provincial office, the archives and St. Joseph Residence. The informal visits were a wonderful opportunity to make face-to-face contact with people heretofore known only by mail, telephone and e-mail. ● A group photo from the conference includes (standing from left) Sr. Germaine Chalifoux, Holy Angels; Albert Beaudry, translator from Montreal; Sr. Carla Montante, provincial, Holy Angels; Sr. Donna Burkhart, Mother Joseph; Sr. Barbara Schamber, team leader/provincial, Mother Joseph Province; Sr. Claudette Chenier, Secretary General/Councillor; Sr. Kathryn Rutan, Superior General; Sr. Jacqueline Fernandes, Mother Joseph; Sr. Margaret McGovern, Holy Angels; Sr. Mary Lei Gordon, Holy Angels; and Rollande Malo, General Treasurer/Councillor. Also pictured are (seated from left) Sr. Lynn Chappell, Mother Joseph; Sr. Yolande Gagnon, General Councillor; Sr. Judith Desmarais, General Councillor; Sr. Maria-Inelia Munoz, General Councillor; Sr. Roberta Rorke, Mother Joseph; Sr. Margaret Botch, Mother Joseph; and Sr. Patricia Vartanian, Holy Angels. Seattle entertainer Beau Dobbs (right) entertains Sr. Maria-Inelia Munoz, Sr. Donna Burkhart and Sr. Paula Cosko. Washington Superior General Kathryn Rutan, SP, (second from left) clarifies information about Emilie Court to Sr. Judith Desmarais, Kathleen Schlicht, director of Emilie Court, and Sr. Maria-Inelia Munoz. ●7 Mary Cosner (right), a longtime administrative assistant in the Spokane office, greets Sr. Claudette Chenier; Sr. Yolande Gagnon; Sr. Maria-Inelia Munoz; and Sr. Judith Desmarais. Loretta Greene (second from left), archivist for Mother Joseph Province, shows photographs to Sr. Yolande Gagnon, Sr. Judith Desmarais, and Sr. Maria-Inelia Munoz. Joan Silling (right), System Office operations director at Providence Health System, makes a presentation to Sr. Maria-Inelia Munoz, Sr. Claudette Chenier, Sr. Yolande Gagnon and Sr. Judith Desmarais. Sisters of Providence thank our donors and benefactors W e deeply appreciate your kind and generous donations to the Sisters of Providence and the ministries in El Salvador and the Philippines. We acknowledge the contributions that were received through the Office of Development from January 1, 2002, through December 31, 2002. If you note any error in these records, we apologize and ask you to please contact us at (509) 474-2311. 8● $1,000+ MAJOR BENEFACTORS: $100-$499 SPECIAL DONORS: Mr. & Mrs. Jim Becker Bouten Construction Mr. & Mrs. Frank Bouten Mr. William Bouten, PA Dr. & Mrs. William Dittman, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Ficco Mr. & Mrs. James Flaherty Dr. E. K. George Mr. Alfred Herrera Mr. & Mrs. Robert Kudrna Mrs. Betty Leadon, PA Mrs. Rose Mary Lonczak Ms. Henrietta Manipis, PA Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Martin Mr. & Mrs. Richard O’Neill Ms. Lily D. Pasaporte Pathology Assoc. Med. Lab. Sacred Heart Medical Center Ms. Alice Sandstrom St. Cecilia Catholic Church St. Luke the Evangelist Church Mr. & Mrs. Donald Barford Ms. Marjorie Batey Mr. & Mrs. Richard Bennett Mrs. Mary Butler, PA Ms. Marie Cansino-Lim Ms. Irene Castro Rev. William Cawley Ms. Marie M. Chapman Mrs. Edward Chvatal Mr. & Mrs. Robert Collins Colvico, Inc. Mr. John Corey Ms. Virginia Cory, PA Drs. Arthur & Joan Craig Dr. & Mrs. Michael Cunningham Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Day Dr. & Mrs Armand DeFelice Mr. & Mrs. Herman Desautels Mr. Norbert Donahue Rev. John Doogan Ms. Patricia Dunne Emilie House Mr. & Mrs. William Evans Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Farris Dr. David Fellin Ms. Virginia M. Flatter Mrs. Leo Flesch Dr. Jodi W. Funk Mr. & Mrs. Stacy Gales Mr. & Mrs. Tom George Mr. & Mrs. Don Giovanazzi Mr. & Mrs. G. W. Glueckert Ms. Kathleen Guloy Ms. Lois Hagen, PA Ms. Aurore Hamel Ms. Betty Harrington, PA Mrs. Cheryl Zeigler Helmbrecht Ms. Mary Lou Hennessey, PA Mr. Charles Hofer Dr. & Mrs. Won Hong Maj. Gen. & Mrs. H. E. Humfeld Mr. & Mrs. John Isely Mrs. Stella Janosov, PA Ms. Loraine Jensen Dr. & Mrs. Kennard Kapstafer Mr. & Mrs. Harry Keith Mrs. Catherine Kelly Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Korslund Mr. & Mrs. Randy Larson Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Layne Latah Creek Wine Cellars Mrs. Cecelia E. Lentz Mr. & Mrs. Ken Lind Mr. & Mrs. James Linehan Mr. William Longpre Mr. & Mrs. Harry Magnuson Fr. Stanley Malnar, PA Mr. Scott Manning, PA $500 - $999 MAJOR DONORS: Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Anderson Dr. & Mrs. Johnny Cox Mr. Gerardo Duran Dr. Maria Flores Ms. Avelita Formeloza, PA Mrs. Eunice Glass, PA Gordon Construction Mr. & Mrs. Walter Groce Ms. Lois Hagen, PA Ms. Audrey McGary Moloney, O’Neill, Corkery & Jones Ms. Gerri O’Brien Mr. & Mrs. James Peplinski Providence Services Ms. Roberta Sample, PA Ms. JoEllen Shannon Mr. & Mrs. Robert Sletten Sletten Construction Company St. Mary Medical Center St. Rose Catholic Church Mr. Eric Stacey Ms. Rose A. Voth Washington Trust Bank – Private Banking Group Rev. J. Severyn Westbrook Mr. & Mrs. Robert Wildenhaus Mr. Paul Zimmer Mr. R. E. Zuelke Mr. & Mrs. Martin Marler Mr. & Mrs. Emmett Marx Ms. Mary B. Maxwell Ms. Maryanne Veith McCartin Dr. Rosemarie McCartin Mrs. Marion E. McCarty Ms. Eleanor McElwee, PA Dr. Dee McGonigle Ms. Maria McKiernan Mrs. Rose Meersman Dr. & Mrs. Jacob Meighan Mr. & Mrs. Chris Melone Mr. & Mrs. Joe Mertens Ms. Elizabeth Monti Mr. Gerald B. Moran Mr. & Mrs. Gene Moriarty Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Munson Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Murphy Mr. & Mrs. Smithmoore Myers Mr. David Nocchi Ms. Eileen Norris, PA Mr. & Mrs. Craig Nowak Mrs. Florence O’Donnell Mr. & Mrs Jorge Olguin Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Panesko Mrs. Elizabeth Pariseault Peterson Investment Mgmt. Ms. Patricia Radle Mrs. Marie Raschko Mr. Frank Rotondo Mr. & Mrs. Lowell Ruen Dr. & Mrs. Robert Ruggeri Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Sayko Ms. Colleen Seed, PA Ms. Cherie Shisler Sisters of Perpetual Adoration Mr. & Mrs. Roger Smith Mr. & Mrs. John Spartz St. Joseph’s Hospital - Chewelah Mr. Alfred Stein Mr. & Mrs. Olaf Stimac, Sr. Mr. Robert Sullivan Mr. & Mrs. Frank Szymanski Mr. & Mrs. George Telfer Mr. Thomas B. Tilford Mr. & Mrs. Richard Umbdenstock Mr. & Mrs. Vernon Waldenberg Washington Trust Bank – Corporate Giving Program Ms. Pat Weinheimer, PA Frederic Wessinger, Jr. Trust Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence White Ms. Mary Ann Wilharm, PA Ms. Dorothy Williams Mrs. Donna Wilson Yakima Diocesan Council of Catholic Women Sisters of Providence thank our donors and benefactors ● $1 - $99 DONORS: Ms. Lola Abraham Mr. & Mrs. Jessee Abrajano Ms. Myra Adlington Mrs. Carol Allen Ms. Mae Ann Asimus Mrs. Barbara Baca Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Baffney Ms. Genevieve Bailey Ms. Mary Barrett Ms. P. Leighann Barrie Mr. & Mrs. Henry Before Ms. Marietta Bishop Ms. Mary Anne Boyle Ms. Vera Brauer Ms. Shirley Brown Mr. & Mrs. Robert Brunelle Ms. Laurine Campbell Ms. Karen Carl Mr. & Mrs. Dale Carlsen Mr. & Mrs. Norm Carpenter Mrs. Phyllis Carpenter Dr. & Mrs. Charles Cavanaugh Ms. Helen Champoux Mr. & Mrs. Roger Champoux Ms. Evelyn Cochran Mr. & Mrs. Donald Conley Mr. William Conley Mr. & Mrs. George Cooper C.O.P.S. Northeast Mrs. Mary Cosner Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Cummings Ms. Patricia Cureg Mrs. Lucille Curran Ms. Beverly Deckelmann Mrs. Theresa DeFranco Mr. Ian DelaRosa Ms. Val DelaRosa Ms. Jeanne Desmarais Ms. Donna Dieckman Ms. Phyllis Dunton Ms. Antoinette G. Everett Mr. & Mrs. Ray Everett Ms. Grace Fellows Mr. & Mrs. Monte Ferguson Mr. & Mrs. Norman Flerchinger Mr. & Mrs. Charles Foley Mr. Dan Fortensky Mr. Dave Gales Mrs. Susan Garnsey Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Garr Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Gasperino Ms. Georgette Gence Ms. Dulice Gerow Ms. Louise Gibson Dr. & Mrs. Michael Gillespie Mr. & Mrs. Bill Ginder Ms. Loretta Ginder Mr. & Mrs. David Goicoechea January 1, 2002 through December 31, 2002 Ms. Louise Graffenberger Ms. Marie Green Ms. Alexis Greshom, PA Mr. & Mrs. Richard Gretch Ms. Delma Grubich Ms. Kay Chapman Hall Mr. & Mrs. Donald Hart Mr. & Mrs. John Hayes Mrs. Jane Veres Herr Mr. & Mrs. Paul Jaremko Ms. Evelyn Jenda, PA Mr. Michael Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Ken Kannegaard Ms. Barbara Kenney Ms. Carol Kilduff Ms. Agnes E. King-Babe Mr. Robert Korslund Ms. Mary Doherty Kowalsky, PA Mrs. Dolores LaCoursiere Ms. Mary Larpenteur Ms. Theresa Laurent Mr. & Mrs. Dale Lavigne Ms. Eunice Lindekugel Ms. Lily M. Lockwood Ms. Judith Lynn-perez Mr. Jack Marceau Ms. Nita Marceau Mr. & Mrs. John Maricelli Mr. & Mrs. John McCarthy Mr. Charles McCormick Ms. Jacqui McCue Ms. Jan Merklin Mrs. Peggy Miller Mrs. Catherine Mitchell Ms. Mary Moore Mount St. Joseph Mrs. Virginia L. Murphy, PA Ms. Catherine Nemmert Mr. & Mrs. Michael Nestor Ms. Bonita Nistler Ms. Anita-Narcisa Norcross Ms. Eileen M. Norris, PA Rev. Msgr. Francis M. Osborne Dr. & Mrs. Robert Parker Mrs. Patricia Parrish Mr. & Mrs. Robert Parshall Mr. & Mrs. David Petty Ms. Dorothy Pillow Mr. & Mrs. Donald W. Prentice Ms. Ramona Raffaell, PA Mrs. Wendy Ramsey Mrs. M. Bernice Reilly Ms. Mary Jane Resch Ms. Connie Roberg Ms. Olive Rodgers Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Rogers, PA Mr. & Mrs. Frank Rose Mr. & Mrs. Larry Roseman Ms. Susan A. Ross Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Rossi Ms. M. Helen Rydell Dr. Robert P. Sagerson Ms. Marilee A. Schiff Mrs. Margaret Schmitt Ms. Dani R. Schroader Mr. & Mrs. Richard Schroeder Ms. Bonita Scott Mr. & Mrs. William Shreeve Mrs. Jean Simard Mr. & Mrs. Michael Skinner Ms. Dorothy Spangelo Mrs. Pam Spino, PA Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Sprute St. Thomas Child & Family Center Mr. Delbert Steele Mr. & Mrs. Hubert Stein Mr. Robert J. Strupp Mr. & Mrs. F. L. Swenson Ms. Julia Taylor Mr. Anthony Teske Ms. Vi A. Toering Mr. & Mrs. John Traynor Mr. & Mrs. J. R. Trotter Ms. Joyce D. Vornbrock Mrs. Betty Walters Mr. Victor Weible Mrs. Marcella Wenala Mr. & Mrs. Patrick West Mr. & Mrs. James Wittrell Mrs. Phyllis Weber Wright Ms. Esther Prieto-Ybarra, PA Ms. Lucille Zanetti SISTERS’ GIFTS DONATED TO FUND: Sister Mary Clare Boland Sister Claire Bouffard Sister Dorothy Byrne Sister Mary K. Cummings Sister Judith Desmarais Sister Louisa Hageman Sister Chloe Keitges Sister Clare Lentz Sister Rose Lulay Sister Loretta Marie Marceau Sister Alexis Melancon Sister Mary Kaye Nealen Sister Susan Orlowski Sister Therese Plourde Sister Carmen Proulx Sister Alice St. Hilaire Sisters of Providence – 227 E. 9th, Spokane Sisters of Providence - Walla Walla MEMORIALS 2002 We are grateful for thoughtful donations received through the Development Office in memory of deceased friends or loved ones. In memory of Sr. Mary Berghoff Mrs. Dolores Lacoursiere In memory of Sr. Bernadette Botch & Mrs. Botch Ms. Betty Harrington In memory of Sr. Mildred Marie Brenner Mr. David Gales In memory of the Brenner Sisters Mr. & Mrs. Norman Flerchinger In memory of Mary Charette Mr. & Mrs. Charles Foley Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Panesko In memory of Edward Chvatal Mrs. Edward Chvatal In memory of Sr. Honora Collins Mr. & Mrs. Roger Smith In memory of Jim Collins Ms. Karen Carl In memory of Harriet Demarais Ms. Genevieve Bailey Ms. Helen Champoux Mr. & Mrs. Roger Champoux Ms. Jeanne Desmarais Sr. Judith Desmarais Ms. Marie Green Mr. Michael Johnson Ms. Theresa Laurent Mrs. Patricia Parrish Mrs. Margaret Schmitt Mrs. Jean Simard In memory of his daughter Michele Mr. Norbert Donahue In memory of Sr. Vincenza Dufresne Ms. Patricia Dunne In memory of Emily Ehlinger Mr. & Mrs. Smithmoore Myers In memory of Sr. Eileen Mary Flood Mr. & Mrs. Henry Before Mr. & Mrs. Donald Conley Ms. Virginia Flatter Ms. Olive Rodgers In memory of Sr. Francine, Bea Orchard & Bonnie Silhany Mrs. Lucille Curran In memory of Sr. Louis Gaetan & Sr. Rosalie Dionne Georgette Gence In memory of Sr. Bernadine Ginder Mr. & Mrs. Bill Ginder Ms. Loretta Ginder Mrs. Catherine Mitchell In memory of Vi, John, Jeannene Jones & Elsie Marx Mr. & Mrs. Emmett Marx In memory of Ann Korkowski Ms. Mary Barrett In memory of June Kroupa Ms. Lucille Zanetti In memory of Mrs. Agnes LeBlanc Ms. Marie M. Chapman In memory of Sr. Anne Marcelle LeMay Ms. Agnes King-Babe C.O.P.S. Northeast Ms. Mary Ann Wilharm In memory of Sr. Ignatia Marie Lindekugel Rev. John Doogan Ms. Mary Larpenteur Ms. Eunice Lindekugel Dr. Rosemarie McCartin Ms. Maryanne Veith McCartin Frederic Wessinger, Jr. Trust In memory of Walter Lonczak & deceased Sisters who knew Rose Mary Mrs. Rose Lonczak In memory of Sr. Francis Ignatius MacDowell Mr. William Conley Ms. Louise Gibson In memory of Maryville Sisters Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Cummings Mr. & Mrs. Chris Melone Mr. & Mrs. John Spartz In memory of Jack McCarty Mrs. Marion E. McCarty In memory of Dr. James McClellan Dr. Michael & Susan Gillespie In memory of Jack Meersman Mrs. Rose Meersman In memory of Jean & Kenneth Merryweather Mr. & Mrs. George Cooper In memory of Sr. Julian Moran Mrs. Mary Cosner Mrs. Theresa DeFranco Mr. Gerald B. Moran Mr. David Nocchi In memory of her mother Ms. Mary Moore In memory of Dr. Frank Morton Dr. & Mrs. Robert Parker In memory of Sr. Rita Mudd Mr. & Mrs. James Linehan Mr. & Mrs. Dan Mitchel Mr. & Mrs. William Shreeve Mr. & Mrs. Paul Wilson In memory of Sr. Flavia Nadon Mr. & Mrs. Robert Collins In memory of Ralph & Gary Nistler Mrs. Bonita Nistler In memory of Sr. Alberic Marie Paquette Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Layne In memory of Martin Pariseault & Mother Joseph Mrs. Elizabeth Pariseault In memory of Agnes Parker Ms. Cherie Shisler In memory of Helen Peplinski Mr. & Mrs. James Peplinski In memory of Laurel Phetteplace & David Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Paul Jaremko In memory of Sr. Rose Dolores Reisenauer Mr. & Mrs. Robert Parshall In memory of Helen Rutan & Joe Rutan Mr. & Mrs. Michael Skinner In memory of Roy Rydell Ms. Grace Fellows In memory of Hildegarde Schamber Ms. Elizabeth J. Monti In memory of deceased Sisters of Providence Ms. Lola D. Abraham Ms. Evelyn Cochran In memory of Albert Steele Mr. Delbert Steele In memory of Kathleen Stein Mr. Alfred Stein In memory of Mary K. Stone Ms. Joyce D. Vornbrock In memory of Stan Toering Ms. Vi Toering In memory of Marie Weible Mr. Victor Weible In memory of Ann Wiltse Ms. Jacqui McCue ●9 University of Great Falls W 10 ● 70th Anniversary hen most people think of the Sisters of Providence, they think of health care. And, in fact, the religious congregation did found what has become one of the largest health systems in the nation. But it also founded a private, Catholic liberal arts university in Great Falls, Mont., that is celebrating its 70th year in higher education. “The benefit of the College is obvious,” an entry in The Little Journal of Providence said in 1933. “It is from the beginning God’s work. The Community did not seek it. The Lord by ways and means most unexpected made possible its establishment.” The institution began its life in 1932 as a college for women – a collaboration between the Sisters of Providence, the Ursuline Sisters, the Catholic Bishop of Great Falls and the civic community. Originally called Great Falls Junior College for Women, it was located in the Ursuline Academy on Central Avenue in Great Falls. A year later, Great Falls Normal School was established and combined with the junior college to provide teacher training. Fourteen women enrolled in its first year, and three years later registration for both the junior college and the normal school was 105 women. In 1937, the first male student enrolled and a year later there were 19 men in attendance. The two schools were really separate, each operating under a different Catholic religious community, but in 1942 Great Falls Junior College for Women was discontinued. Meanwhile, Great Falls Normal College had become Great Falls College of Education. By the early 1950s it became simply the College of Great Falls, under the direction of the Sisters of Providence. Classes were This photo shows three of the nine large, 7-foot-high held in the stained glass windows in the chapel’s choir loft that depict Christ and the 12 apostles. old Columbus Hospital, bringing the Junior College, the Normal College and Columbus School of Nursing together as the College of Great Falls. In 1944, land was purchased south of the city which became the site of the 11-building campus in 1960. That same year, Sister Rita Mudd became the campus president. The site included living quarters for priests and a convent for the sisters. In 1995, the College of Great Falls became the University of Great Falls. Today, the University of Great Falls has an enrollment of 821 full- and part-time students and offers associate, This mosaic by Sr. Mary Trinitas graces a spot to the right of the altar at Trinitas Chapel on the campus of the University of Great Falls. bachelor’s and master’s degrees. It also has a new president, Dr. Eugene McAllister, a former Jacksonville University vice president who held business and economics posts in the administrations of both former Presidents George Bush Sr. and Ronald Reagan. McAllister replaces former UGF President Fred Gilliard, who retired in May 2001, and interim president Michael Easton. McAllister, a native of the Bronx, N.Y., holds economics degrees including a bachelor’s from Loyola University in Los Angeles, a master’s from the University of California at Davis, and a doctorate from Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. The University of Great Falls offers courses onsite and through distance learning. In fact, the university has been involved in outreach education since its beginning. The Telecom distance learning program, utilizing video and webbased communications, reaches across the United States and Canada. Transfer agreements have been established with numerous tribal and community colleges around Montana and its neighboring states and provinces. The University of Great Falls has not strayed from its original focus: “providing students an education for living and making a living with character, competence and commitment.” And the sisters remain involved. Mary Kaye Nealen, SP, currently serves as provost and vice president for academic affairs. Margaret Beaulieu, SP, a graduate of the college, holds the status of professor emeritus. The UGF campus continues to be a community landmark. Its spiritual centerpiece is the Trinitas Chapel, an exquisite sanctuary that features the inspired religious artworks of Sister Mary Trinitas Morin, SP, campus art professor for 32 years. Although she died in 1965, she lives on in the stained glass windows, carvings, mosaics and murals that adorn the chapel and its Galerie Trinitas. Preservation of the art of Sister Trinitas and the promotion of appreciation for religious art are the missions of the community arts center and museum, which opened in 1994. A stroll down the corridor leading to the Galerie must be made slowly. The detail of the stained glass and metal panels depicting Mary, Mother of Sorrows, on one side, is moving. On the other side, the wood and metal mural portraying the history of the Sisters of Providence in the Northwest is inspiring. The works of Sister Mary Trinitas can be seen elsewhere on campus, including in the student center and the library. A host of annual campus events offer great opportunities to visit the University of Great Falls. Those events include Founder’s Day (Sept. 8); Mass of the Holy Spirit (September); Homecoming (this year, in January); Martin Luther King, Jr., Celebration (January); Holy Week & Easter Observance; the pow-wow in Celebration of Sobriety & Diversity (March); and the Baccalaureate & Commencement (December and May). For more information, check out the university’s website at www.ugf.edu, or call the university’s public information office at (406) 791-5290. ● Attendees at the dedication ceremony for the Sucrerie Henri clinic gather in the yard of the dispensary in this view looking towards the old church and school. Father Daniel Lucien, pastor of St. Anne’s, is joined for the ribbon-cutting ceremony by Sr. Marie-Claire Soucy; Sr. Claire Houde, provincial of Emilie Province; and Sr. Barbara Schamber, team leader/provincial of Mother Joseph Province. Sisters of Providence ● 11 celebrate 25 years in Haiti Bless renovated clinic where Sr. Marie-Claire Soucy ministers to the poor L ast October, a weeklong celebration in Port au Prince commemorated the 25th anniversary of the ministry of the Sisters of Providence in Haiti. Emilie Province sponsors the Haitian ministry, where Sister Marie-Claire Soucy of Mother Joseph Province has been serving for most of the last 24 years. Sister Claire Houde, provincial superior of Emilie Province, invited sisters from Mother Joseph Province to join in the anniversary celebration. Sister Barbara Schamber, team leader/provincial, and Sister JoAnn Showalter, candidate director, were very pleased to represent Mother Joseph Province at the celebration. Sr. Marie-Claire Soucy (left) and Sr. Claire Houde cut the ribbon to open the newly dedicated dispensary. The week was an eventful one. Father Daniel Lucien blessed the clinic addition at Sucrerie Henri, which now includes an apartment for a doctor on the top level. People from local villages turned out for the blessing ceremony and the rest of the week’s events, which included the entrance of Icelda Feliz to the pre-novitiate, and the acceptance of eight new Providence Associates. Haiti is a country that is flavored by Amerindian, Spanish, African, French and Anglo-Saxon influences. The official language is Creole, but some of its people speak French, English and/or Spanish, which is the language of the neighboring Dominican Republic. There is a marked contrast between the haves and have-nots in Haiti, with 10 percent of the population said to control all of the country’s wealth. While the Haitian people lack in material goods, they are rich in spiritual things, the sisters serving in ministry there have observed over the years. ➺ ➺ While the Haitian people Haitian schoolchildren and their teacher sing in praise. lack in material goods, they are rich in spiritual things, the sisters serving in ministry there have observed over the years. Sisters of Providence celebrate 25 years in Haiti... F 12 ● ive Sisters of Providence from three provinces are in ministry in Haiti today. The sisters from Emilie Province are Diane Sarrasin, superior; Ghislaine Landry, postulant director; and Jeanne Longpre. Sister Herna Astorga, at the Come and See House, is from Bernarda Morin province in Chile. Mother Joseph Province’s Sister Marie-Claire Soucy acts as “nurse/doctor” in the clinic at Sucrerie Henri. “I belong to two provinces – Mother Joseph and Emilie,” Sister MarieClaire says. She seems born to be a missionary in foreign countries, serving others while adapting to their cultures and languages. It is a call you either have or you do not, she acknowledges. Her years in ministry have taken her to Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, Cameroon and now Haiti, where she has been for most of the last 24 years. “I wanted to work with the sick; I was a fish out of water in the education department,” she says. “The Sisters of Providence should go to places where nobody wants to go,” Sister Marie-Claire says. On a typical day, she is up at 5 to pray in the little chapel, listen to the news on radio, have breakfast and go to the clinic at 7:30 for its opening at 8 a.m. On a heavy day, she is back after 3 or 4 p.m. for lunch, a nap and a beverage, then it’s back to the clinic for consultations, planning, pharmacy chores, and accounting. Once a month she makes home visits, and she is on call in emergencies. Sister MarieClaire can perform minor surgery, but for bigger things patients must be driven a half-hour away to the hospital. When night falls, it’s time for a light meal, to answer the needs of people who come to the house, and then get to bed early to rest for the next day. Life alone can bring isolation, so Sister Marie-Claire welcomes the opportunity three times a week to use the ham radio to communicate with the sisters in Port au Prince. She spends her free time reading, listening to music and, on the weekends, “putting on a video and imagining I’m at the movies.” The life is by no means easy. Solar energy and a small generator power the house and clinic, but she can be without running water for months when the small spring that supplies the water system has to be renewed. Then, water has to be brought in from 10 minutes away by car, and purified against typhoid and malaria. On any trip away from Les Cayes, even to Port au Prince, the first order of business is to get a shower, she explains. S till, she loves this ministry and these people. “Haiti is really special,” she asserts. But it is, she allows, extremely challenging with its intense poverty, unemployment, illiteracy, malnourishment and disease. “If you don’t have faith, you wonder …” ● Please Remember in Prayer Lee Deslauriers, brother of Sister Lillian Deslauriers, SP, died November 15 in Lauderdale, Fla. Bob McGuire, brother of Sister Mary Catherine McGuire, SP, died January 13 in Everett. Mary Jane Reilly, sister of Sister Anna Marie Koval, SP, died November 16 in Redondo Beach, Calif. Guillermo Pagulayan, brotherin-law of Sister Blanca Sagles, SP, died December 2, in Toronto, Canada. Audrey (Betty) Allen, sister of Sister Mary Audrey McCoy, SP, died January 15 in Seattle. Cyprien Begin, brother of Sister Simmone Begin, SP, died December 11 in Montreal. Alice Wiseman, sister of Sisters Annette and Jeannette Parent, SP, died December 15 in Baker, Mont. Lea Landrey, sister of Sister Georgette Jean, SP, died January 2 in Montreal. Gail Sorensen, sister-in-law of Jim and Dorene Plampin, PA, died January 2 in Longview. Lorette Masse, sister of Sister Lillian Deslauriers, SP, died January 23 in South Hero, Vt. Germaine Glassy-Rawlings, sister of Marilyn Wittenmyer, PA, died January 23 in Puyallup. Willard A. Smith, brother of Sister Shirley Smith, SP, died January 27 in Oahu, Hawaii. Eileen Hodgson, mother of Carol Neupert, PA, died January 30 in Federal Way. Zelma Lulay, sister-in-law of Sister Rose Lulay, SP, died February 10 in Vancouver, Wash. Andre Maynard, brother of Helene Maynard, SP, died February 17 in Quebec. g g g Rest in Peace Mary Stephen O’Brien, SP Sister Mary Stephen O’Brien died December 19 at St. Joseph Residence in Seattle. At the age of 91, she had been a Sister of Providence for 66 years. From childhood, Sister Mary Stephen knew that she wanted to become a nurse. “My childhood games were those of playing nurse,” she recalled. “My dolls – and often the neighborhood children – were my patients. Whenever I visited hospitals, I thought the sight of people serving others was lovely.” One of six children of William O’Brien and Ida Miller, she was born Florence Margaret O’Brien on March 18, 1911, in Rugby, N.D. She had two sisters who died in infancy and three brothers. She had no surviving siblings at the time of her death. Florence remembered the pleasures of her childhood, particularly visits to her grandparents’ farm. “We took long walks in the beautiful woods and along country roads. I remember picking strawberries, choke cherries, blackberries, wild currants and hazelnuts; then we would prepare these into jellies, jam and preserves. There were hours spent swimming in a nearby river and taking fishing trips in boats.” Alongside the pleasures of country life, there was the hard work that came with each season on the farm. The habits of caring and cheerful hard work she learned as a child remained with her throughout her years of nursing and pastoral care. When Florence graduated from high school in 1930, she eagerly anticipated the opportunity to realize her dream of becoming a nurse. She made the decision to go west because she had an aunt in Portland who lived near St. Vincent Hospital, which had a school of nursing. The nursing school regimen included long hours at the hospital, assisting nurses in the days of 12-hour shifts and oneon-one patient care. “We almost had to sneak out the back door if we wanted some rest,” she recalled, laughing at the memory of the time she and others did just that. “After my graduation I did special duty nursing. In those years there were no coronary care units, intensive care units or recovery rooms. During my training years and during this time of nursing, I was deeply impressed with the sisters and with their thoughtfulness to the medical personnel and to the aged and poor patients.” Florence entered the Sisters of Providence in Seattle in 1936. She professed first vows in 1938 and final vows in 1941. She took as her religious name Mary Stephen because of her first nursing experience after graduation. On the feast of St. Stephen, King of Hungary, she was called to begin a difficult case of special duty nursing. “I told St. Stephen, ‘If you help me with this case, I’ll do something for you someday,” she said. Years later she remembered, and kept, her promise. Her first assignment was to St. Vincent Hospital. In 1943 she spent a year at St. Peter Hospital in Olympia before beginning eleven years of nursing in Anchorage and Fairbanks. “The years in Alaska are among the most memorable,” she recalled. Confronted with a shortage of doctors and nurses due to the war, Sister Mary Stephen and other hospital personnel learned to adapt to difficult situations with the frontier spirit of makedo and can-do. After she left Alaska, she worked at St. Joseph Hospital in Vancouver, at St. Vincent Hospital again, and Sacred Heart Hospital in Medford, usually in a supervisory role in the surgical and maternity departments. Throughout her years of nursing she frequently was assigned to night shifts. “I never did become accustomed to sleeping in the day. It was a cross to bear. Yet the hours on night shift gave me time to grow spiritually. At night there were not so many distractions and interruptions to prayer life. Also, if a patient were suffering, night shift gave me the opportunity to get close to him or her. Often, when I thought I had done the least is when I had done the most. God worked through me.” In the mid 1960s, Sister Mary Stephen began a second career in pastoral care after completing Clinical Pastoral Education at Providence Hospital in Portland. She served in the pastoral care departments of Providence hospitals in Seattle and Everett and at Mount St. Vincent in Seattle. Sister Mary Stephen retired to St. Joseph Residence in 1986. Her hobbies included knitting, crocheting, playing cards, reading and listening to classical music. “In my retirement years I can still live out my commitment to God by using the more available time for praying with and for others. During my religious life I have tried to be a true daughter of Mother Gamelin and of the Church,” she said. Her favorite Scripture was Romans 8:28: “We know that in everything God works for good with those who love Him, who are called according to His purpose.” Sister Mary Stephen felt blessed by God to have been called to the Sisters of Providence. She was always involved in the life and ministry of the community. ● Sedonia Doyon, SP Sister Sedonia Doyon, 93, died December 11 at Mount St. Joseph in Spokane. She had been a Sister of Providence for 72 years. With a spirit of strength and pioneering determination, Sister Sedonia was an excellent nurse, nursing instructor and administrator. The sixth of 13 children, Sedonia was born July 28, 1909, in St. Camille, Quebec, to Louis Cerenus and Rose-Aimee Turcotte. As a small child, she moved with her family to Scobey, Mont. Her father saw within Sedonia great academic potential and sent her to St. Thomas School in Great Falls, where she was taught by the Sisters of Providence. She then attended high school in Missoula at Sacred Heart Academy, graduating in 1928. Sedonia liked and excelled in school, but her educational pursuits meant a childhood spent away from her parents and twelve brothers and sisters. “I became independent at a very young age,” she later said. Sister Sedonia became a postulant in the Sisters of Providence in 1929 and entered the novitiate at Mount St. Vincent in Seattle in 1930. She made first vows in 1931 and received Sister Providence as her name in religion. She professed final vows in 1934. Sister Sedonia wanted to become a teacher and attended Seattle University to major in education. But after her second year of religious profession, she was asked to go into the nursing field. She was sent to St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver, B.C., where she completed the RN requirements at the School of Nursing in 1936. She earned a BSN from Seattle University in 1940 and a MSN in nursing education from Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C., in 1955. Although Sister Sedonia ministered in the health care field her entire religious life, she was able to fulfill her original dream of teaching. Her first assignment was instructor and director at St. Paul School of Nursing, Vancouver, B.C., from 1940 until 1942. “I didn’t know beans about teaching nurses when I first started,” she said, “but I grew to enjoy it very, very much.” A deep commitment to excellence, with high expectations of herself, her students and her employees, took root early in her life. “I am from a large family,” she said. “We all worked hard. That’s just the way it was.” After the United States entered World War II, Sister Sedonia was transferred to Columbus Hospital School of Nursing in Great Falls, where she served from 1942 to 1953. She later returned there for a year in 1959. Her other nursing ministries included: St. Patrick Hospital, Missoula, 1955-56, 1965-66; Providence Hospital, Oakland, 1957-59; Holy Family Hospital, St. Ignatius, Mont., 1960-64; Sacred Heart Medical Center, Spokane, 1964-65; and St. Clare Hospital, Ft. Benton, Mont., 1965. Sister Sedonia next served as director of the Student Health Clinic at Gonzaga University from 1966 through 1977. She lived with her mother in a house very close to Gonzaga. ➺ ➺ ● 13 Rest in Peace Sister Sedonia’s next ministry was being in charge of the Infirmary at Mount St. Joseph in Spokane from 1978 to 1981. At the end of her career, she said her nursing ministry was a treasured part of her religious life. She retired at Mount St. Joseph in 1981. She was a quiet presence there during her retirement years. She enjoyed many hobbies and crafts, music, playing cards, sewing, reading and making toys to give away. Sister Sedonia was also very close to her family and was important to her sisters, nieces and nephews. Surviving immediate family members include a sister, Jeannette Suchy of Cherry Valley, Calif., and a brother, Maurice Doyon of Reedsport, Ore. ● 14 ● Reda Perrault, SP Sister Reda Perrault died February 1 at St. Joseph Residence, Seattle, at the age of 86. She had been a Sister of Providence for 68 years. The seventh of fifteen children, Ethelreda (Reda) was born into a large French Canadian farmer family on April 21, 1916, in Moxee City, Wash., child of Alberic Perrault and Salome Regimbal. Two of the first six children died in infancy. Reda said, “We were fortunate to be raised on a farm where we had plenty to keep us busy as well as nourish us during the difficult Depression years.” Reda began first grade at Holy Rosary School in Moxee, spending the next 12 years gleaning a Catholic education from the Sisters of Providence. Side by side with the education received in school was the more influential Christian training given by thrifty and loving parents in a well-organized Catholic home. Sunday mornings found the family car packed for the short trip to early Mass. This day was really set aside as “Sabbath” – a day of rest from work on the farm. During Lent the entire family usually gathered in the evening to pray with the rosary. During Lent, May and October the family attended daily Mass. Since both parents enjoyed outings in the mountains, Sundays after Mass often found the Perrault family picnicking, camping and hiking in the American River and Bumping Lake areas in the Cascade Mountains. Because the family was so large, some younger and older children were left home on each trip, knowing it would be their turn the next time. Thus, little lessons in self-denial were instilled early into the members of so large a family. All her life, Reda continued to enjoy the outdoors. With a twinkle in her eye, she declared, “I know that I am one-sixteenth Indian – way back several generations – and I secretly harbor the thought that this heritage is part of my great love for nature.” Each summer from eighth grade through high school, Reda replaced the sisters as sacristan at church while the sisters were away attending summer school. She attributed this closeness to Christ as a big influence in her religious vocation. Reda graduated from Holy Rosary High School in June of 1934. Reda entered the Sisters of Providence postulancy in Seattle in July 1934 and the novitiate in 1935. She professed first vows in 1936 and perpetual vows in 1939. An older sister, Florence, had entered the Providence community three years earlier, becoming Sister Bernice Marie. A younger sister, Yvonne, entered a year later, becoming Sister Bernard Maria. These sisters had an aunt, Sister Joanna, and several cousins in the Providence community. Sister Reda received a teaching certificate from the College of Great Falls in 1939. She received a bachelor’s degree in education, 1943; a master’s degree in education, 1957; and a bachelor’s degree in accounting, 1968, from Seattle University. Sister Reda served as a teacher and/or principal at Holy Family School, Seattle (1938-40, 65-66); St. Joseph School, Yakima (1940-44); Sacred Heart School, Tacoma (1944-47); Providence Academy, Vancouver (1947-51, 52-53); St. Catherine School, Seattle (1951-52); St. Patrick School, Walla Walla (1953-54); St. Joseph School, Vancouver (1954-59); and Immaculate Conception School, Fairbanks (1959-65). She served as accountant at Providence Heights, Issaquah (1969-74) and Kennedy High School, Seattle (1974-78). She served as insurance auditor at Providence St. Vincent Medical Center, Portland (1979-87). Highlights for Sister Reda during her many years of teaching included summer schools for religious education in Anchorage, Kotzebue and Tanana, Alaska. Living with the Eskimo and Indian peoples in the remote villages was especially enriching to her. “I learned to greatly appreciate other races and cultures,” she reflected. This concern for people of many races intensified during the three summers she worked at the Interracial Center in Seattle’s central city. “We ran a day care center there for ten weeks each summer to help out parents who were working. We usually had about sixty or seventy children,” she said. “Those were hard but rewarding summers, and they gave me great empathy for minority people and their problems.” In 1978 Sister Reda had the privilege to spend a sabbatical year at the CREDO (Continuing Religious Education Development Opportunities) program at Gonzaga University, in Spokane. It was truly a year of renewal for her, a time that she saw as a real highlight of her life. “This was a year during which I studied the Bible and theology, increased my prayer life, and just relaxed. It culminated in a 26-day tour to the Holy Land, Athens and Rome. Those days are a cherished memory for me.” In 1987, Sister Reda retired to St. Joseph Residence in Seattle, where she served for nine years as executive housekeeper. She continued to oversee the housekeeping staff until a stroke forced her to stop active ministry. Sister Reda greatly loved her religious community and enjoyed living and praying with her religious sisters. Immediate survivors include a brother, Frank Perrault of Kennewick; and a sister, Veronica Dettling of Yakima. ● B r ie fs Sister graduates from University of Great Falls K aren S. Hawkins, SP, graduated from the University of Great Falls on December 14, receiving a bachelor of science degree in human services with a minor in addiction counseling. Sister Karen, a Sister of Providence in temporary vows, is a member of St. Luke Parish in Great Falls. She is involved with the Beyond the Circle mentoring group that works with at-risk children and is employed at the Gateway Treatment Center. At Gateway, she works with women and children at the recovery home and as a case manager doing advocacy work for patients who are getting their lives back on track. Sister Karen formerly worked for 20 years as a financial analyst in New York, then as a client advocate and financial manager at Sojourner Place in Seattle, and as a certified nurses’ aide at Providence Elder Place in Portland. ● Novice wins essay contest S ister Brenda Velasco won third-place in The Pacific Northwest Inlander’s fiction writing contest in December. Her story, “Garlic Milk Cures the Soul,” can be found on the weekly newspaper’s website at www.inlander.com. Search the story archives for ‘Velasco”. Sister Brenda, who is entering her second year in the novitiate, also recently wrote a story about her candidate year that was published in Vision magazine, a national religious vocation discernment guide. ● Providence Chapel to close At a commemorative Mass in their honor in November, the Sisters of Providence bid farewell to the 92-year-old chapel at the former Providence Hospital in Seattle. The sisters, pictured here gathered around the altar, were joined by the leadership of Providence Health System, Swedish Hospital, and David Sabey Corp., which purchased the building to develop a biotech and medical research facility. The chapel will close in April and a new chapel will be part of the redevelopment project. The chapel’s six large stained-glass windows were put into storage for some future use. ● rt” for Your Hea re u s a re T ’s d Go “Come Find omen Sisters invite w eat tr to a summer re , who an, age 18 to 40 life f you are a wom us io lig re call to a g in or pl ex may be idence Sisters of Prov treat as a sister, the ke mer wee nd re m su a to u yo invite free e theme of the in Spokane. Th , “Come Find God’s t is a time weekend retrea eart.” This is H ur Yo r fo re ces, to Treasu prayer experien in e at ip ic rt riences to pa ories and expe st s’ er st si e th ity and hear ligious commun re e th ng ri te ing of en en who are seek om w r he ot t ee to m ion. similar informat begin at 7 p.m. w The retreat ill seph, at Mount St. Jo Friday, June 6, at d en d Avenue, an rther 12 West Ninth fu r Fo , June 8. ay nd Su . m p. 1:30 an ease contact Jo information, pl , or ct re cation di Gallagher, SP, vo l ai m , or by eat 206-932-6272 hoo.com; or ya @ at jgallaghersp Vocation Office , e-mail Judy George, SP 474-2323 or by 950 at , er ag man ● providence.org at vocations@ I Providence Event 2003 to be held in Spokane T he Women of Providence in Collaboration will hold one of three Providence Events for 2003 at Providence Auditorium, in Spokane, June 27-29. The theme of the events is “Come & Dance a New Song at Cana: Providence and Discipleship through Mary.” The other two Providence Events will be held August 1-3 in Allison Park, Penn., and Oct. 1012 in Kingston, Ontario. “The purpose of these events is to continue to explore our evolving theology of providence through the lens of Mary and discipleship,” organizers said. “We will explore new insights into some of the images of our Mother of Divine Providence.” Three theologians will serve as presenters: Michelle Bisbey, CDP, director of mission effectiveness for her community in Pittsburgh; Anita DeLuna, MCDP, an associate pastor at Our Lady of the Lake University in San Antonio; and Mary Kaye Nealen, SP, acting provost and vice president for academic affairs at the University of Great Falls. The facilitators are Jane Ann Slater, CDP, and Ann Petrus, CDP, both from San Antonio. The Spokane event begins Friday, June 27, at 7 p.m. and concludes Sunday, June 29, at 12:30 p.m. The cost of the conference is $225, which includes tuition plus room and board, or $185, which covers tuition plus meals. Registration deadline is March 26. Associates are encouraged to join the sisters attending the event, which is being coordinated in Spokane by Sue Orlowski, SP. For information, contact her at 509-474-2300. ● ● 15 Caritas ● Sisters of Providence Provincial Administration, Mother Joseph Province 9 East Ninth Avenue Spokane, WA 99202-1295 Non Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Spokane, WA Permit #4 CARITAS is published by The Office of Communications, Sisters of Providence, Mother Joseph Province. Jennifer E. Roseman, Director of Communications A publication for the Sisters of Providence and Friends ● SPRING 2003 Providence Child Center honors Sisters with 2003 Heart of Gold Award P 16 ● ortland’s Providence Child Center Foundation presented the Sisters of Providence with the 2003 Heart of Gold Award at a dinner at the Oregon Convention Center Ballroom in February. The award is presented annually to citizens who have improved the lives of children with special needs through advocacy and action. Archbishop John G. Vlazny of Portland was the dinner’s honorary chair. “For more than 159 years, these intrepid women of the Sisters of Providence have cared for society’s most vulnerable with pioneering spirits and enduring commitment,” the foundation’s board of directors noted in its award presentation. The sisters have had a special mission of care for children in need, including establishment of Our Lady of Providence Nursery in Portland in 1945. Beginning as an orphanage for children, the facility has transitioned over the years under the name of Providence Child Center. Proceeds from the Heart of Gold Dinner benefit the medically fragile children at Providence Child Center, the only 24hour pediatric skilled nursing facility in the Northwest dedicated to children with severe disabilities and complex medical needs. The center’s 58 beds are designated for children who need long-term chronic care, shortterm respite, physical maintenance and end-of-life services. Assistance is provided without financial burden to the families. The Providence Child Center pays for the daily care of the children with support from community donors and fund-raising events such as the Heart of Gold dinner. The Sisters of ProviSister Barbara Schamber, team leader/provincial (center), accepts the Heart of dence continue in ministry Gold Award from Pat Budo, Providence Child Center administrator. Sisters sharing today throughout Mother in the moment are (from left) Scholastica Lee, Margaret Pastro, Carolyn Koreski Joseph Province, which and Rose Marie Dillman. includes Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Montana, Washingstrong commitment to helping ton, California, and El Salvador. society’s most vulnerable children Their ministries help children and their tireless efforts on behalf and families contend with child of those less fortunate show they abuse and neglect, emotional are truly women with “hearts of disturbance, addiction, homelessgold,” the foundation noted. ● ness and education. The sisters’ Full House in Yakima S everal young women recently spent the weekend at the Come and See House in Yakima. Pictured are (back row, from left) Sr. Irene Charron, Sr. Dianne Crawford, Sr. Pauline Lemaire, Sarah Cieplinski, Sr. Clare Lentz and Sr. Alice St. Hilaire; (second row) Phong Chu, Tina Vo and Mai Phuong Do; and (front row) Sr. Fe Sumalde, Sr. Georgette Bayless, Janet Ramirez, Kimthu Nguyen, Chi Phan, Micky Nguyen and Amy Le. Sisters JoAnn Showalter and Lang Tran helped the sisters in Yakima arrange this vocation event. ● www.sistersofprovidence.net