Threshold for Summer 2013
Transcription
Threshold for Summer 2013
hreshold With Grate f ul Hear ts • c e l e b r at i n g 1 5 0 y e a r s • A publication of the Benedictine Sisters of Mount St. Scholastica Threshold Summer 2013 • 1 Volume 12Number 1 Summer 2013 From the Prioress With Open Doors and Open Hearts Recently, we had a seven-year-old visitor, Megan Ruf, in our monastery dining room who was missing her front teeth. A part of my conversation with her went like this: “What happened to your teeth?” “I lost them.” “Lost them? How?” “One fell out. The other was pulled by my dad who twisted and twisted, and then he yanked and then it came out, and I didn’t even cry or scream.” “Wow, are you brave! Did the tooth fairy come?” “Yes, she did.” “She? Are you sure it was a she?” “Yes, it’s a girl.” “Tell me, I’ve been wondering, how does the fairy know when to come?” “Oh, simple. When the tooth falls out, a bell rings in her office and that’s how she knows.” As I reflected on these words, I thought it is hard to match the conviction and clarity of this young woman. What a creative and spontaneous response to my question! This anniversary year has been one where the sisters have creatively and spontaneously responded to many guests and visitors. Our hearts burst with gratitude as we greeted men and women religious, Archbishop Naumann, over a thousand citizens of Atchison, members of various church choirs, students (elementary, secondary and college,) employees, retreatants, former members of our community, oblates, alumnae/alumni and family members who have come to our home. Our expressions of gratitude are met with reciprocal expressions of awe and thanks for our ongoing commitment to the monastic way of life and the monastic works of mercy in this current environment of ours. In the pages ahead you will read two statements that have come from the Conference of Prioresses: one on gun control and one on immigration. Both statements 2 • Mount St. Scholastica are derivatives of those of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) and coauthored by the prioress of Pan de Vida Monastery in Torreon, Mexico. You will also read an article about a trip three of us took to our daughter house in Mexico this past winter. As we were finishing up the retreat days with the sisters and their neighbors, we asked them what we could continue to do to support them. They said that they wanted us to keep them in prayer. They also wanted us to tell the story of the drug cartels’ horrible influence in their country, especially their locality. They also stated emphatically that we should try to stop our country’s obsession with guns and drugs. Both have an atrocious impact on their neighborhoods. Drugs and gun violence are erasing life in friendly, normal neighborhoods. As you read the statements we have written and published, do so remembering the gospel mandates, the ordinary folks in Mexico, and your own convictions about the common good. These pages are filled with your names and organizations that support us financially. Thank you so much for all the sacrifices that you make for us. We are able to move into the future with your help. As this goes to press, we are halfway through the events of the sesquicentennial year. Three events will be outside of Atchison. We plan to thank the volunteers and friends of Keeler Women’s Center in Kansas City, Kansas, in July. In September we will be in Mission, Kansas, as we express gratitude from our hearts to families and those with whom we have ministered in the greater Kansas City area. October will find us in rural Nemaha County from where we have received many vocations. God bless you for your generosity. Come visit us. We love having our doorbell ring! Anne Shepard, OSB Threshold Table of Contents Vo l u m e 1 2 • Nu m b e r 1 • S u m m e r 2 0 1 3 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . Our Patronal Feast 5 . . . . . . . . . A.C.E.S. Birthday Party 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . Our New Oblates 8 . . . . Witnessing Tragedy in Torreon 10 . . . . . Gun Control & Immigration 12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . In the News 14 . . . . . . . . Development Message 15 . . . . . . . . . . B.C. Discovery Day n o v e m b e r e l e v e n t h , t w o t h o u s a n d t w e lv e through november eleventh, t wo thousand thirteen July 2013 Our Brazilian sisters from Mineiros will join us in Atchison 150 years 6 . . . . . . . MH-MA Celebrates Sisters sesquicentennial July 7, 2013 - 11 a.m. Golden Jubilee celebration for Sisters Rosann Eckart, Fran Cross, Barbara McCracken, Ann Diettrich, Angela Ostermann July 10-15, 2013 16 . . . . . . . Celebrating Atchison Day Sisters from our daughter houses as our guests 17 . . . . . . . . . . . . . Creative Sisters July 11, 2013 - 2 p.m. Feast of Benedict Wanjira Mathai speaking on Hope 18 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Obituaries July 12, 2013 - 12 p.m. Threshold is a publication of the Benedictine Sisters of Mount St. Scholastica for families, friends and benefactors of the sisters. All reproduction rights reserved. Editor: Barbara Ann Mayer, OSB Design Editor: J.D. Benning Communications coordinators: Anne Shepard, OSB and Helen Mueting, OSB Mount St. Scholastica 801 South Eighth Street Phone: 913-360-6200 Atchison, KS 66002 Fax: 913-360-6190 Cover photos: Upper left, ACES birthday party; middle left, Feb. 10 feast with area sisters; lower left, sisters sextet on Atchison Day; upper right, The Great Return; middle right, ACES students with St. Scholastica coloring books; lower right, Maur HillMount Academy students bless sisters. Visit our website at www.mountosb.org Contact the editor by e-mail at bmayer@mountosb.org To subscribe /unsubscribe, contact the circulation manager: Mary Margaret Kean, OSB (mmkean@mountosb.org) 10th Anniversary celebration of Keeler Women’s Center in Kansas City September 15, 2013 - 2 p.m. Kansas City Day for family, friends, alums and co-workers at St. Pius X Parish in Mission, Kan. September 22, 2013 - 7:30 p.m. Fellin Lecture at Benedictine College with Judith Valente as speaker October 5, 2013 Oblate Renewal Day and celebration October 13, 2013 - 1 p.m. Seneca Day for family, friends, alums and co-workers at St. Peter and Paul Parish, Seneca, Kan. November 10, 2013 Closing of Sesquicentennial Year with community celebration November 17, 2013 Night of Dreams - In Gratitude Threshold Summer 2013 • 3 Inspiring Faith t h e f e a s t o f s t. s c h o l a s t i c a Celebebrating our Patronal Feast We marked February 10, the feast of St. Scholastica, in a special way for our sesquicentennial year. The celebration began with the Eucharistic liturgy in St. Scholastica chapel with Archbishop Joseph Naumann. We felt the excitement build as the chapel filled with one hundred-sixty women religious from the region. Sister Anne Shepard greeted all in attendance, expressing gratitude to those who have journeyed with us in various ministries and study programs. Sister Glenna Smith, OSB, president of the Federation of St. Scholastica, two Benedictine sisters from St. Mary’s Monastery in Pennsylvania (from which we began our journey to Atchison), three from Ridgely, Maryland and three Benedictine sisters from Colorado also joined us. “It is inspiring to ponder the faith, courage, and the boldness of those first seven sisters who set in motion what would become a rich history of witness and service to the children and families of Atchison and beyond,” Archbishop Naumann said in his homily. Reflecting on the Gospel of the day, the archbishop spoke of Mary’s hospitality in listening to the Lord, which is at the heart of religious life. “One of the great gifts that you give to the Church as Benedictine sisters is your fidelity to prayer,” he said. “The commitment of religious to stake their entire lives on Jesus and the truth of his Gospel motivates all those who encounter them to commit our lives more and more to Jesus…” Sister Anne Shepard presented a plaque of St. Scholastica to the archbishop as a token of the community’s appreciation. All gathered in our dining room for a festive meal and renewal of friendships. “It was truly a joyous celebration of the many ways God has worked through your community,” said Sister Eileen Haynes, Sister of Charity of Leavenworth. “Your warm hospitality, the joy of who you are as Benedictine sisters, and your love for the Eucharist and music were quite evident and took me to a deeper sense of the gifts you possess in your charism and mission.” Photos (top to bottom): Sisters Gemina Manukuja and Judith Kapinga, student sisters from Tanzania, did a ritual dance carrying the Gospel book at the Eucharistic celebration. Sister Barbara Smith (second from left) and Marie Louise Krenner (right) join Sisters Jacinta Conklin and John Paul Bauer from St. Marys, Penn., in the dining room. Sisters Elaine Fischer and Bridget Dickason serve ice cream for the guests. Sisters Maria Heppler and Connie Krstolic chat with Archbishop Joseph Naumann at the buffet following the Eucharist. 4 • Mount St. Scholastica | by Joanne Yankauskis, OSB Holy Ground celebrating with ACES students | by Helen Mueting, OSB On January 29, about 50 sisters went to Atchison Catholic Elementary School (ACES) to celebrate one of the milestones in the Mount’s Benedictine history with the students. On November 11, 1863, seven sisters arrived in Atchison and were welcomed by two Atchison residents to their new home, which was located on the corner of what is now 2nd and Division Streets. The sisters joined with the students in blessing a memorial stone which was placed on the corner of the property. Before the blessing, Sister Anne told the students, “This is holy ground. We’ve come back to where it all started.” After the blessing, the students presented carnations to each of the sisters who were present. Some of the sisters shared lunch with the students prior to the blessing; after the blessing, many visited the classrooms where they answered questions about their vocation and Benedictines. “It was a wonderful experience for us and for the students,” Sister Sharon Murray said. She was very touched by how welcoming the students were and regretted that they do not have more exposure to us. Many other sisters commented on the genuine welcome they felt from the students. The day closed with an assembly in which both the students and sisters participated. Sisters Diana Seago and Susan Barber began with a song celebrating our 150 years while Sister Micaela Randolph expressed the words in a liturgical dance. Sister Gabrielle Kocour, a graduate of St. Benedict’s Catholic Grade School, shared some of her grade school experiences with the children. She told the students she never forgot what her third grade teacher told her class. The teacher said that the lessons of the Bible could be summed up with these words of Jesus, “Do not be afraid, I am always with you.” Sister Gabrielle said, “Our hope is that every time you walk through the school doors, you remember that Jesus is always with you.” The sisters were then treated with a play enacting the arrival of the sisters to Atchison. The play was written by Kay Noll, a teacher at ACES, and dramatized the sisters’ history dating back to St. Scholastica and St. Benedict in Italy in 480. It received a standing ovation, and the children were invited to give a repeat performance for the sisters in Dooley Center. At the close of the assembly, Sister Anne presented the school with a plaque of St. Scholastica and called upon the sisters to give a blessing to the students. Photos (top to bottom): Sister Martha Schweiger chats with Colton Kocour, a seventh grader, at lunch. Eighth grade students performed a play about the history of the Benedictine Sisters and their arrival in Atchison. Pictured (left to right) are Ali McKibben, Randi Brox, Miranda Wagner, Lexi Griffin, and Kylee Stec. Sister Anne Shepard, along with all the sisters in attendance, bless the newly placed stone. A stone marking the site of the sisters’ first school in Atchison at the corner of Second and Division Streets was blessed during the 150th birthday party. Threshold Summer 2013 • 5 Hon ori ng a L e g ac y Maur Hill-Mount Academy Students Celebrate Mount Sisters and her sister wanted to do something for the sisters so they raised some money and bought a Wii game as a gift. They visited Dooley Center regularly and enjoyed interacting with the sisters. “They told stories about their teaching days and were interested in our experiences and activities,” she said. On March 21, St. Benedict’s Day, Maur Hill-Mount Academy hosted a celebration for the 150th anniversary of the Benedictine Sisters in Atchison. About 50 sisters attended a program in the school gymnasium. Maur Hill-Mount Academy students holding lanterns led the sisters into the gym in a solemn procession. After a greeting by Father Meinrad Miller, chaplain, six students offered historical petitions, asking God’s blessing on the sisters. Sister Anne Shepard thanked the students, recalling her time as principal of the Mount Academy and the wonderful spirit of the teachers and students. She also told the story of the last meeting of Benedict and Scholastica when Benedict was prevented from returning home by a violent storm after Scholastica prayed for him to spend the night. “God heard her prayer because she loved more,” Sister Anne said. The celebration included a rose and candle ceremony introduced by Pauline Schuele, dormitory prefect. She explained that it was a Mount Academy tradition for the juniors to give the seniors roses to symbolize friendship and the seniors to give the juniors candles representing wisdom. In that spirit, the juniors and the sisters exchanged roses and candles. “It was very humbling for me to be a part of this traditional ceremony,” said Erica Seago, a postulant. “I was passing on the wisdom of the Benedictine sisters, and yet I am such a new member I wasn’t sure I knew enough about that wisdom. But I appreciated being a part of such a beautiful ceremony.” President Phil Baniewicz (pictured at top) gave a brief address, commending the sisters for their rich tradition of prayer and education. Afterwards the students raised their hands in blessing over the sisters. Emily Stec, a senior, shared her experience with the sisters in Dooley Center when she was a freshman. She Before leaving, the sisters handed out Benedictine medals and homemade dove cookies to the students. Sister Susan Barber accepts a rose from Sarah Mullins at the Rose and Candle ceremony. Alicia Pruett, Alexander “Von” Huber, Olivia Mangue, Kaitlyn Miller, and Alexander King offer prayers at the celebration honoring the Benedictine Sisters. 6 • Mount St. Scholastica Joining us in Prayer E ig h t w e lcome d a s Obla te s | by Ju d i t h S u t e r a , O S B Eight women and men from the Atchison area and beyond were welcomed as oblates of Mount St. Scholastica on April 27. These people have been attracted both to the spirituality of the Benedictine way and to this Benedictine community. Two of them are from the Oklahoma City area and are part of an oblate group that continues to meet there after the departure of the Red Plains sisters. Sister Melissa Letts is their leader; however, since she is living in Atchison and cannot attend every meeting, a group there does the local coordination and leadership. New oblates Marka Acton and Connie Harrison have traveled to Atchison several times in the past two years to acquaint themselves with their “new” community. Marka is an accountant who is very active in her parish. Attending retreats at Red Plains led her to a desire for a deeper spirituality. She sought oblation because “a community of people who know this to be a life directed towards salvation are just the folks I want to be around.” Connie, too, found the sisters through retreats. Her faith is expressed in the areas of peace and justice, both in the civic realm and within her Methodist church. The peace of the Benedictine way is especially attractive to her: “There is a purpose to simple tasks, a greater self-awareness, and a more serene and centered approach to daily living.” Judy Valente also came from a distance to find her spiritual home. An author and a reporter for public radio and television, she first met the sisters while doing a story. Although she lives in Bloomington, Ill., she has been spending time with the sisters over the past two years through frequent trips. The tangible result is a book about the sisters that will be published later this year. Monasticism speaks to her because, as she says, “The Our newest oblates - Back row: Marka Acton, Darrin Allen, Benedictine values of listening, silence, contemplation and care Tom Blake; Middle row: Rebecca Taylor, Marla Looper, Pat of creation mirror perfectly what the poet tries to do in art.” Mulvihill; Front row: Connie Harrison, Judy Valente. Two other new oblates are part of the group that meets in Atchison under the direction of Sister Thomasita Homan. Rebecca Taylor, originally from New York, now lives in Circleville, Kansas, and is a parish catechist. “During my first retreat at the Mount two years ago, I was struck by the welcoming sense of peace, tranquility, and connectedness. Learning about the Rule has really shown me the way I want to live,” is the way she describes her path to oblation. Patrick Mulvihill has known the sisters for decades since attending educational programs at his church in Perry, Kansas. He works for the state of Kansas as an insurance fraud investigator and is grateful for the spiritual nourishment. He says, “I look forward each day for the opportunity to pray the psalms and scriptures and to reflect upon them.” The other three oblates are from the Kansas City area. Darrin Allen, a lifelong Catholic, is a network engineer who decided to explore his faith and was led to the oblate group through the community’s website. “I really began to search out God,” he recalls, “and it was here where I found what I was searching for in the Benedictine way of life.” Marla Looper is a family interventionist and addictions counselor who met the sisters through her association with Keeler Women’s Center. She connects her oblation with her personal and professional life saying, “The Rule of Benedict, as with the 12-steps, is not just a list of rules; they are guides characterized by balance, simplicity and humility.” Both Marla and Darrin attend the oblate group in Kansas City, Kansas, led by Sister Molly Brockwell. Tom Blake attends a group that meets in Kansas City with Sister Therese Elias. Tom has been professionally associated with sisters from Atchison for many years as a teacher and educational administrator. Through these relationships and programs at Sophia Center, he felt called to become an oblate. The new oblates join over 100 other men and women of very diverse lives who share a commitment to foster Benedictine values in their lives and to be united with the sisters of Mount St. Scholastica. Threshold Summer 2013 • 7 An Unspoken Tragedy T h r e e “ V e r on i c a s ” W i t n e ss V i o l e n c e in by Anne Shepard, OSB Last December Sisters Anne Shepard, Barbara McCracken, and Loretta McGuire traveled to Torreon, Mexico, to give a retreat to the sisters at Monasterio Pan de Vida. The following is a reflection Sister Anne wrote on her return. We arrived in Torreon on Friday night at a time when there were still some celebrations going on to commemorate Mexico’s revolution. Around 9 p.m. on the way home from the airport, we stopped to see some youth who were meeting at our sisters’ center. They were having a party. Every Friday night the sisters host the youth to keep them away from the drug traffic in their neighborhoods. On Saturday we met with the seven sisters. I gave a brief introduction and shared with them how I believe that what they are experiencing is the paschal mystery. On our pilgrimage to Germany for the sesquicentennial celebration, we stopped at a church, Wieskirche, where we saw an image of Christ I had never seen, an image of the scourged Christ. That image stayed in my mind. I think that the people of Torreon are being scourged on the road to Calvary. We three from the Mount that went there were the Veronicas, called to give comfort, to wipe tears, to listen, to console. After a brief introduction, we asked the sisters to tell us what they were experiencing. The flood gates opened. One recalled a friend telling her that a group of young boys and their friends were outside her home one night enjoying each other’s company. The cartel came and T o r r e on , M e x i c o forced her son to shoot his friends. Then the drug dealers gathered them all, dismembered those who were shot, took them to a landfill and dumped them. The mother was alive and had to walk through the dismembered parts; she cried out to see if anyone else was alive. Her son, the one who was forced to kill his friends, is now in a mental institution and may never recover. Another told a story of when she was walking home from teaching. She saw a car stop and then a man who had been shot was thrown from the car onto the pavement. Yet another told of how she witnessed the shooting of three people in the store directly across the street from them − a woman and two customers. Evidently, the woman was a dealer and the customers were suspected of buying drugs. Another spoke about a family having a wake for their daughter. The cartel came by and shot the family members in front of the children in the house. One day on her way to visiting a parish on the bus, a sister was in the crossfire of the representatives of two cartels. With others, she fell to the floor. When she got up, she saw several bodies on the street and didn’t even know if she was shot. Now she has nightmares and cannot sleep as she tries to recall what happened. Others talk about how bodies are hung from overpasses for commuters to see. On Friday night we met an 11-year-old boy who was fairly new to the youth group. One week recently, he pulled one of the sisters aside and showed her a bag of high grade cocaine that he was handed that day on his way out of school. He wanted to give it to her for disposal. She told him that he was given the coke, and he had to decide what to do with it. After knowing the consequences of tasting it or keeping it, he decided to flush it down the toilet. Sister was vehement about having them make good decisions on their own and not having them made for them. The sisters often go to lead the wake services for those killed because of a lack of priests who will go into the neighborhoods. One of the hardest realities for the prioress is that while she is undergoing chemotherapy treatment she cannot visit the homes to pray and give comfort to neighbors, families, and grieving mothers. Sister Anne Shepard and Sister Lizeth Padilla, newest member of Pan de Vida monastery in Torreon. 8 • Mount St. Scholastica The next day we viewed the PBS movie “Pray the Devil Back to Hell,” a story of the women in Liberia who worked to end a seven-year war in that country. This segment is one of a five-part series on “Women and War.” We stopped the movie at strategic spots to talk about feelings and about similarities and differences between the Liberians and the women in Mexico. At the end of the movie, the sisters seemed hopeful. They were inspired because of the way the Liberians moved to action. Monday was a day I will never forget. In our four-hour session, I talked about the road to Calvary and the Church of the Scourging Christ and gave some examples of women who were peace initiators in the past century (including Wangari Maathai). Sister Barbara McCracken gave them a checklist of symptoms of PTSD, one that was written by the U.S. military for soldiers that come back from war. Sister Loretta McGuire talked to them about trauma and what that does to people, how it isolates them from God and one another. Both spoke to the sisters about coping mechanisms and how to take care of themselves. We invited them to trust the God within, trust their personal strengths, stay in community and keep sharing their stories with one another. Monday afternoon was free for us. We took a ride into town to see the sights. What we saw on three occasions were police trucks with masked men in the front and back of the trucks, armed with AK47’s. One police car had a single officer, masked, gun pointed straight ahead, going down a side street. Their proposed aim: to protect the people – seems to terrify more than safeguard. One doesn’t know where the drug cartels end and the police begin. There seems to be complicity of some members from all the groups in the horror of the violence and terror. No one is safe. On Monday evening, the sisters were at the center leading vespers. One of the sisters gave a synthesis of the morning and asked anyone there to share what touched them. Stories surfaced of the women leaving the meeting and reflecting on hope, on the radical call to forgiveness, on trusting the power of love within them, of needing Sister Barbara McCracken with Sister Mariana Olivo (second from right) and two women from the parish. Sister Cecilia Dominguez embraces Sister Loretta McGuire. now to reach out to their neighbors and of having some ways to help their children. The people of Torreon are so grateful for the presence of the Benedictine sisters in their neighborhood. They trust the sisters and feel safe with them, both physically and emotionally. They also were grateful that we from the “grandmother” house in Atchison came to be with them and to give them hope. The last morning we reflected on the reading from St. Paul, “When I think of you, I continually thank my God for you.” Our eyes were not dry and our hearts were full. We are left with questions: What is our role as North American Benedictines? How can we help the monastery in Torreon? How can we get word out about the atrocities in the city? Of the constant presence of armed forces on the streets? Of the deserted neighborhoods? Of the frequently self-imposed curfews? How do we help others realize that the violence worsens even as the official discourse tends to downplay it? How do we work for immigration reform so Mexicans can come to the states to visit their families who reside here? I promised the women in Torreon, both the sisters and the ones who came to the center, that I would contact the media about the need to publish stories about the violence in Mexico. Many sections of the country are dominated by drug lords who are armed by the U.S. and who get their money from the United States. Studies have projected that a large percentage of the profit of the multi-billion dollar drug industry stays in the States. The sisters also said the penchant for guns in the U.S. spurs the gun-related violence and drug trafficking in Mexico. While in Torreon, we met beautiful people of faith who want their lives changed. They want their neighborhoods back. They want to know where the disappeared are. They want the outside world to know this is happening. Threshold Summer 2013 • 9 Prevention of Gun Violence A Statemen t of th e Co n fe re n ce o f B e n e d ictin e Prio re s s e s Ma rch 2 1 , 2 0 1 3 As Benedictine monastic women we stand united in a 1500-year tradition, rooted in Gospel values of peace and non-violence. Our Benedictine way of life requires us not only to be people of peace but also “to foster peace in the society around us.” That peace is based on right relationships and mutual respect. Any violation of the rights and integrity of people, of the land, and of the environment is an act of violence. A definite culture of violence is pervasive in our society in movies, television programming, video games, music and advertisements. The proliferation of guns, both legal and illegal, has contributed to a significant increase in violence in the United States and in the drug wars in Mexico. In 2010, guns took the lives of 31,076 Americans in homicides, suicides and unintentional shootings. This is the equivalent of more than 85 deaths each day and more than three deaths each hour. In Mexico, 15,273 died in drug war gun violence alone that same year. Over 68% of the traced guns used in crimes in Mexico between 2007 and 2010 came from the United States. The United States has the highest rate of gun-related injuries among developed countries, as well as the highest rate of gun ownership. Besides the deaths and tragedies for families, friends and associates, gun violence also affects society in other ways, including higher medical costs, reductions in quality of life because of fear of gun violence and stresses on the criminal justice system. To help create healthier environments in families, schools and communities and to reduce the impact of gun-related violence, the American Psychological Association recommends multiple approaches, among which are education, training, access to mental health treatment, program funding and research. The Conference of Benedictine Prioresses endorses their recommendations. In his holy Rule, our founder St. Benedict states, “Your way of acting must be different from the world’s way.” We, the Conference of Benedictine Prioresses, are compelled to address the rampant culture of gun violence and disregard for human life. Therefore, in concert with statements issued by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious we call on lawmakers to: • Close loopholes and require every person who buys a gun to pass a criminal background check. • Ban the sale of assault style weapons and high capacity ammunition magazines. • Make gun trafficking a federal crime. • Strengthen federal laws to stem the flow of American weapons that contribute to the drug trafficking violence in Mexico. • Fund robust care for those with mental illness, ensuring that health insurance plans, Medicare and Medicaid offer mental health benefits at parity. • Provide for early identification and intervention for children and young adults in need of mental health treatment. • Increase the number of well-trained mental health professionals available for school and community gun violence prevention, intervention, threat assessment, and crisis management. • End the freeze on gun violence research. • Address the growing use of violence as a means of entertainment in films, television programs, video games, music and advertisements. 10 • Mount St. Scholastica I m m i g r at i o n R e f o r m A Statemen t on Con fere n ce o f A me rica n B e n e d ictin e Prio re s s e s Ma rch 2 1 , 2 0 1 3 We, the Conference of Benedictine Prioresses, join our voices with the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), with the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), with Network, and with the bipartisan legislative effort to create a comprehensive immigration reform. C on t e x t As immigrants themselves, our Benedictine foremothers understood the needs of immigrants coming to this country. They served well and nurtured faith in this new land. In our time of numerous migrations, we acknowledge the rich contribution made by immigrant people and decry the unjust treatment they are too often compelled to endure. Rooted in the wellsprings of Christian Scriptures, we recall the migrations of our forebearers Sarah and Abraham, who left their homeland (Genesis 12:1-3), as well as Moses, who led the people out of Egypt (Exodus 3:7-10), and we hear the clear gospel call to welcome the stranger into our midst (Mt. 25:35). As Benedictine monastic women, we listen with the ear of our hearts (Prologue of the Rule of Benedict) as we call for compassion and justice for all immigrant people. We are animated by our Rule which bids us to welcome as Christ all guests who present themselves (Rule of Benedict 53:1). Hospitality is a core value of Benedictine spirituality as well as a sacred duty and trust. Because we know that it is God whom we receive in the “other,” we dare to speak out, even in this age of violence and fear of the stranger. We are compelled to raise our voices in an effort to transform the culture of fear and exclusion into one of peace and inclusion where the “stranger” becomes friend. One of many walls that separate the United States and Mexico, located in the Sonora Desert. C o m p r e h e ns i v e I m m i g r at i on R e f o r m The central features of any immigration reform need to be: • a clear and secure path to legal documentation and citizenship for the estimated 11 million immigrants who are currently in the United States, • a family-based reunification system that keeps families together, • a revision of the current visa system especially for migrant workers, • protection for all workers’ rights, • a speedy enactment of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act with an option for community service in lieu of military service, • reform of the detention and deportation system with due process, • a fair and expedient process for asylum seekers. As people of faith and citizens of the United States of America, we urge our country to establish compassionate and just policies to offer newcomers opportunities to participate fully in our society, to satisfy their basic human needs, to share their many gifts with us, and to live according to their human dignity. Threshold Summer 2013 • 11 In the News Technology and Formation What is social media and how does it impact those who are entering monastic life? This was the focus of a presentation by Sister Suzanne Fitzmaurice for formation and vocation directors at the American Benedictine Formation Conference in Fort Smith, Arkansas, in March. Sister Suzanne began with a show and tell of various devices used today and gave a brief description of each, detailing how they are used and the cost of each. She then gave an overview of the eight most commonly used forms of social media: Facebook, Twitter, blogs, wiki, instagram, podcast, skype/facetime, and pinterest, which she connected to an informal survey she gave to women in their 20’s and 30’s on technology use. The formation directors were given the opportunity to discuss various questions communities need to consider when looking at technology and the use of social media in their individual monasteries. Sister Suzanne also shared possible social media policies and guidelines. Sister Carol Ann Petersen Honored For the third time in recent months, Sister Carol Ann Petersen and the Keeler Women’s Center have been recognized for their efforts on behalf of the women of the Kansas City area. At the “Safe Homes, Safe Streets” benefit in Topeka on February 12, the Kansas Coalition Against Sexual & Domestic Violence selected Sister Carol Ann to receive their Community-Based Ally of the Year Award. She was nominated for Keeler’s work as a community partner with the Metropolitan Organization to Counter Sexual Assault (MOCSA) and for her own personal commitment. “Sister Petersen has been an integral part of the strong partnership between MOCSA and Keeler Women’s Center since 2004 to coordinate services for victims of sexual violence. Specifically, MOCSA has provided a weekly survivor’s group, a trauma workshop, and crisis counseling,” Julie Donelon, CEO and president of MOCSA, said. “Currently, MOCSA provides groups and education at Keeler Women’s Center for Spanish-speaking women who are survivors of sexual assault.” Sister Carol Ann Petersen, OSB Among the many victim-centered and empowerment-based services provided at Keeler Women’s Center are education and support for addictions and domestic violence, counseling for survivors of abuse and other needs, workshops on parenting and job seeking, and assistance for women who need help finding community resources. An average of 300 women and 20 to 25 men are served per month. The Keeler Women’s Center, located in the Catholic Charities building at 2220 Central Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas, is an outreach ministry of the Benedictine Sisters of Mount St. Scholastica. 12 • Mount St. Scholastica New Book on Psalms Sister Irene Nowell has written a new book on the psalms entitled Pleading, Cursing, Praising, published by Liturgical Press. It is a guide to praying with the psalms and includes questions and exercises for personal reflection and suggestions for composing one’s own psalm-prayers. Sister Irene maintains that the psalms teach us to tell our story, to cry out our pain, and to give praise to God. Sister Irene is a past president of the Catholic Biblical Association and served on the Committee on Illuminations and Texts for The Saint John’s Bible. Her other books include Numbers (of the New Collegeville Bible Commentary), Sing a New Song, The Psalms in the Sunday Lectionary, and Women in the Old Testament. March for Life On a chilly January afternoon, Sister Molly Brockwell boarded a bus with forty-two students and three other adults from Bishop Ward High School in Kansas City, Kan. They arrived in Washington, DC, twenty-three hours later, bleary-eyed, ready to join a half million other people in the annual March for Life. Over the next two days they joined other pilgrims from our archdiocese, including Archbishop Joseph Naumann, and hundreds of thousands of people from across the country, in giving witness to the belief in the sanctity of every human life. The rally on the mall and the march to the Supreme Court building were snowy, cold and jam-packed with people. “I discovered that the March for Life is much more than a demonstration; it is a celebration of life,” Sister Molly said. “To join with so many others in prayer, in song, and in action is a moving experience. Watching my students take it all in as well made it unforgettable.” Attending the March for Life rally in Washington, DC, on Jan. 23: Bishop Ward High School students Stephanie Valle, Gracie Sherrod, Sister Molly Brockwell (teacher), Marta Baldwin, and chaperones Renee Winkel, Gerard Alba and Celia Fox. Correction Sister Mary Mel L’Ecuyer’s (right) name was omitted in the winter issue of Threshold in the time line naming the first four sisters to be missioned in Brazil in 1964. She served in Mineiros, Brazil, from 1964-2003 in various capacities, including English and art teacher in the high school, principal of the grade school, novice mistress, and manager of the farm. She delivered milk to 120 poor families for several years, helped plant over 200 trees around the villas, and helped provide 200-liter water containers for poor families. She is currently translating Sister Judith Sutera’s book True Daughters into Portuguese for the community in Mineiros. New Smoking Policy To protect and enhance our indoor air quality and to contribute to the health and wellbeing of all employees, sisters, Dooley residents, and guests, Mount St. Scholastica campus is entirely smoke-free effective April 1, 2013. Smoking is prohibited on the grounds and in all of the enclosed areas within Mount St. Scholastica. This includes everywhere in the monastery, Dooley Center, St. Cecilia’s, and Sophia Center. We ask our guests, family, and friends to please honor this policy. Threshold Summer 2013 • 13 With grateful hearts You are a big part of the reason we are celebrating with grateful hearts our sesquicentennial. Over the 150 years our community has been living, praying and serving in Atchison and the surrounding areas, you, our relatives, friends and benefactors, have been there helping us every step of the way. From the first night, November 11, 1863, when the Atchison people met the seven Benedictine sisters at the ferry on the Missouri River, until the present, we have relied on your support and in turn have Mary Margaret and John Murray, long-time offered you our prayers. supporters of the Benedictine Sisters, greet Sister Because of your generosity we have exceeded our fundraising Mary-Agnes Patterson at the Night of Dreams. goal again this year! Your donations have helped us care for our older sisters and to computerize the medical records in our Dooley Center. Caring for our buildings and grounds is always an ongoing challenge.You make it possible for us to serve the many people who come to Sophia Center for enrichment, quiet reflection and retreat. Our Keeler Women’s Center is now celebrating 10 years in operation, and with your help we continue to develop programs and services for the many women who come there. You bless us with your financial help, and without it we would not be able to continue these works. We serve many people who cannot pay for the services they need. You also help us with hours of volunteer time here at the Mount and in our ministries. You give of your talent to serve on our boards and advisory groups and help us plan for our future. We are so grateful to you. You are always in our daily prayers. Each Wednesday we offer our community Eucharist for our relatives, friends and benefactors. You can request prayers by contacting me at patterson@mountosb.org or 913-360-6215 or on our web site: www.mountosb.org. Our prayer is our best way we can thank you for your kindness to us. God bless each of you! Mary Agnes Patterson, OSB Director of Development Donation Sources 2012 $1,630,704 * *National Religious Retirement Office 14 • Mount St. Scholastica Uses of Donations 2012 $1,630,704 Because She Loved More Th e Story of the Foll owe rs of St. S chol astica in Atchison , K a n sas by T homa sita Homan , OSB di scove r y day The keynote address given by the Sisters of Mount St. Scholastica at Benedictine College Discovery Day, April 17, culminated in a “flash mob.” Their singing brought a full auditorium of students, faculty, guests, and friends to stand and sing in full joy: Gaudeamus Hodie (We rejoice today and today and today…). The singing echoed the spirit of the presentation in celebration of 150 years since seven sisters arrived to found a monastery in Atchison. The panel of presenters included Sister Anne Shepard, the story of St. Scholastica and history of the Mount community; Sister Linda Herndon, a look at the first Mount St. Scholastica college handbook; Sister Thomasita Homan, how the Mount is present at Benedictine College today, and Sister Irene Nowell, emcee. Assisting in planning the multi-media presentation were Sisters Judith Sutera, Susan Barber, Janelle Maes, Helen Mueting and Marie Louise Krenner. Following the program, all present received a CD of Mount music: “How Can I Keep from Singing,” a St. Scholastica card, and traditional homemade dove cookies. Many in attendance expressed words of appreciation. The following poem captures the gratitude of Edward Mulholland, a professor at Benedictine College, who said the program “really gave me a deeper appreciation for the work you and your community do and have done for so many years.” And Lanterns Burned You came to serve amidst the threats, Despite those first night dangers And lanterns burned to welcome you In vigil hands of strangers. You came to build, to sow, to teach To slake our thirst for knowing Your tree, like in the Psalms you pray, Greened by the river flowing. Through wars and prejudice and want Your strength not once did weaken And souls in darkness, toil and doubt Have found in you their beacon. Your peaceful, gentle, woman’s touch Your “yes” to God, like Mary, Has sparked one hundred fifty years Of flames across the prairie. May faithfulness to God and rule Be yours, as we, in wonder Thank Sisters of Scholastica Whose prayers call down the thunder. For the Benedictine Sisters of Mount St. Scholastica Monastery. In honor of their Sesquicentennial Celebration. Dr. Edward Mulholland, April 2013. Threshold Summer 2013 • 15 A great day in Atchison Over 1,000 visitors attend Atchison Day | by Suzanne Fitzmaurice, OSB “This place is amazing! I always wondered what it looked like.” “I can’t believe how beautiful these chapels are!” These are just a few of the comments heard over and over as more than 1,000 people came through our doors to share a meal, listen to some sacred music, and tour the monastery. The celebration began for many with a picnic meal of hamburgers, hotdogs, baked beans, and cookies served by the Knights of Columbus at the Atchison Heritage Conference Center. As people entered the room, the excitement grew as they ran into sisters they hadn’t seen in years. Many of them had been their former teachers with whom they shared memories and stories from years gone by. Visitors also took advantage of tours given by Benedictine College students. This was the first opportunity for many to see the beautiful chapels and stained glass windows. The students shared stories of our history and as one tour guide stated, “These sisters have the most beautiful prayers I have ever experienced.” Throughout the afternoon people gathered in St. Scholastica chapel to listen to musical selections by choirs from the Mount, Ebenezer Baptist Church, Peacemakers, First Presbyterian Church, United Methodist Church, and Singsation, a youth choir. Students from Maur Hill-Mount Academy, Benedictine oblates, and friends of the Mount assisted the sisters in making everyone feel welcome. Sister Alberta Hermann picked up a former Mount employee, Gracie Cluke, and two of her great-great grandsons in the wheelchair van. Gracie told someone, “I’m not going to wash my face tonight because it’s so full of kisses.” It was a grand celebration and many commented on the hospitality they experienced. Myron and Valerie Fanton and their four children expressed their appreciation in a note afterwards: “Many thanks for opening your hearts and home to us this afternoon in honor of your 150th birthday! It was such a joy to share the day with many of you …We all delighted in our conversations and tour of your monastery…May the Lord give you many more vocations and blessed years in Atchison.” Photos (top to bottom) Anna Buhman-Wiggs, daughter of Adam and Anita Buhman-Wiggs, peers out from a choir stall during a tour of the chapels on Atchison Day, April 14. The Atchison Peacemakers choir. An ambassador from Benedictine College directs the Schuele family down the main hall. Pictured are (front left to right): Greta, Annika, Bridget, Katja; (back) Jeff holding Liesel, Megan and Marika (hidden). 16 • Mount St. Scholastica Creating Something S i s t e r s C r e at e B e a u t y O u t from nothing of S c r a p s | b y B a r b a r a M a y e r, O S B We often say sisters don’t retire, they are just recycled. A group of sisters, all former teachers, have been recycled into seamstresses, transforming donated materials into objects of beauty. With an average age of 87, Sisters Mary Benedict Jacobs, Mary Ethel Burley, Bettina Tobin, Elena Hernandez, Laetitia Chavez, Mary Margaret Bunck, and Loretta Wiesner gather each weekday morning in the basement sewing room to work on their projects. They use whatever people give them and try to make things that can be sold in the monastery gift shop or given to Night of Dreams or Keeler Women’s Center. Sister Laetitia, who has been quilting for the past 15 years, says she has worked on 180 projects. “I’ve made a quilt for the Night of Dreams every year since it started,” she said. She has also sewn squares together for table runners and sofa pillows. “Sometimes people give us unfinished quilts or other projects, and we try to finish or use them in some way,” said Sister Mary Benedict. “Currently Sister Elena is making baby and children’s quilts from unfinished quilt squares. We are also making place mats for Dooley Center from some donated scraps. I cut them out and Sister Elena sews them on the machine.” One of their biggest projects was making 250 table trivets for our sesquicentennial celebration. Designed by Sister Bettina, they are made of donated fabric and the sturdy table padding from the former Riccardi Center. They stitched the dates 1863-2013 and Mount St. Scholastica on them with a special attachment. The trivets are being used as gift shop items, special awards, and table decorations. Sister Bettina has also created book covers, cell phone bags, purses, book marks, and iPad covers. She recently recycled some embroidered circles into attractive wall hangings. “Everything we make has a history,” she said. “What to make and how to make it out of what we have is always a creative challenge.” Sister Mary Ethel, who has been working in the sewing room for about 12 years, navigates with a walker. She was originally asked to be “fashion consultant for Dool- (L to R) Sisters Mary Margaret ey Center.” She alters or Bunck, Elena Hernandez, and sews new clothing for Mary Benedict Jacobs the sisters in Dooley and also makes tote bags for walkers and wheel chairs as well as folded coasters for the gift shop and Night of Dreams. Sister Loretta uses donated yarn to make stocking caps and scarves for Keeler Women’s Center. Sister Mary Margaret helped with the trivets and keeps the materials in order. When someone donated some trellis ribbon, Sister Mary Benedict made necklaces that have been very popular in the gift shop. She also made attractive scarves out of novelty yarns. “We enjoy being a group of creative sisters making things to help others,” Sister Mary Benedict said. Sister Loretta Wiesner Sister Laetitia Chavez Threshold Summer 2013 • 17 Into Eternal Rest Sister Marjorie (Rosella) McGrath, OSB January 19, 1926 - January 7, 2013 Sister Marjorie made her mark on the world. She was an Atchison native who attended local Benedictine schools, but South America would come to hold the most special place in her heart. The first thing most people identified with her was her strong and distinctive voice. Making profession in 1945, she studied music, drama, and music literature/history to earn a master’s degree from the University of Notre Dame. After 24 years in elementary and secondary music education, she responded to a call to be a missionary. She lived among the poor of Capachica, Peru, from 1969 to 1975. After further training in pastoral ministry, she again took up her simple life with the people of Itaberaba, Brazil, where she lived from 1980 to 1995. Coming back to North American culture was a challenge to her, but she maintained in her later years the values that had served her so well. She continued to live simply, to sing joyfully, to offer hospitality. Her last mission was to live, along with Sister Bettina Tobin, as a “Benedictine presence” in the town of Alma, Kansas, and she was always a smiling presence within the monastery to the end of her days. Sister de Monfort Knightley, OSB August 18, 1926- March 16, 2013 When Sister de Montfort began her life in Wichita, and then entered the monastery in 1948, her later career could hardly be imagined. Possessing a quick and logical mind, she was a perfect fit for her chosen field of mathematics, receiving a master’s degree from Kansas State University. For some 50 years she taught in high schools and colleges, and was especially remembered for the 16 years she spent at Lillis High School. It was natural for her to be drawn to the field of computer science in its earliest stages, earning a second master’s degree in that subject from Notre Dame in 1966, long before most people knew what a computer was. She introduced generations of students to this emerging world and led them to numerous awards at state and national math competitions. She once served the community as treasurer and was active in senate and in other commuity functions. Her gentle kindness was evident in her long relationship with “Irish,” the setter mascot of Lillis, and animals drew special affection from her. In fact, her hospice care plan included the unusual feature of prescribed visits from the monastery’s current dog. Hers was a quiet presence, but she was witty and perceptive; the kind of silent depth that dogs sensed was even more evident to people. 18 • Mount St. Scholastica Sister Loretta Schirmer, OSB December 5, 1921 - May 26, 2013 Sister Loretta Schirmer knew a lot about Benedictine values and community living before she came to Atchison as a college freshman. She was raised with eight siblings in Newark, New Jersey, and attended Benedictine schools there. From the stories told by her and her sister, the late former prioress Sister Mary Austin Schirmer, it is evident that theirs was a lively family life, filled with joy, love and sharing. She continued to delight in her family for the rest of her life. These experiences formed her into a generous and caring community member. Her master’s degree was in nutrition and food service management, which she used in the community kitchen and as manager of Mount St. Scholastica College’s Riccardi student center. She had a long career as an elementary teacher, high school home economics teacher, librarian, principal, and dormitory prefect. In the monastery, she served on various committees including the initial formation team. Whatever she did, she did with great thoughtfulness and concern. She also did some advanced study in scripture, guidance and audio-visuals to enhance her work. This was typical of her desire to expand her knowledge, to deepen her faith and to serve others. She showed her affection for her family and community in her attentiveness and her acts of kindness. One example from the past year is typical. Realizing she could no longer make her signature fudge for gifts, she carefully measured all the ingredients and put them into gift packages for her friends to complete. She never became too old or too infirm to stop thinking about others or to stop seeking and loving God. Coming Soon! Two books about the Benedictine Sisters of Mount St. Scholastica Atchison Blue by Judith Valente With the heart of a poet and the eye of a journalist, Judith Valente tells how her many visits and interviews with the Benedictine sisters forced her to confront aspects of her own life that needed healing—a journey that invites readers to healing of their own. Atchison Blue will resonate with readers of Thomas Merton, Henri Nouwen, and Kathleen Norris. Judith Valente is an award-winning journalist, poet, speaker and retreat leader. She is an on air correspondent for Religion & Ethics News Weekly on PBS-TV and contributing correspondent for Chicago Public Radio. Monastic Spring by Paula Howard, OSB This book covers the history of Mount St. Scholastica from 1963 to the present. It highlights the changes brought about by the Second Vatican Council, the leadership of six prioresses, and the sesquicentennial year of celebration. The history of the past 50 years tells a story of renewal, a springtime of hope in monastic life. The book will be of interest to relatives, friends, alumni, and benefactors of the Atchison Benedictines. Sister Paula Howard is an iconographer, former educator, writer, and administrator, and member of the Mount community. Threshold Summer 2013 • 19 The Great Return Sister Diane Liston (left) visits with Aimee Farrell. M arg e Tan sle y gre ets Sis ter M ar y Cec ile I hle at the rec ept ion . On May 25, 43 for mer s isters retur ne d to t he Mount for a we ekend to re conne c t and celebr ate ou r 1 5 0 t h annivers ar y. Many v isite d t he g r aves of sisters t he y ha d k now n as wel l as long-t ime f r iends in D o ol e y C enter. nite d. The nov itia te cla ss of 196 2 reu S av e the D at e • November 17, 2013 t h e s e v e n t e e n t h a nn u a l Night of Dreams See our website: mountosb.org Mount St. Scholastica 801 S. 8th Street Atchison, KS 66002 Please help us update our mailing list: q New address. q Please remove my name. q More than one received. (Please send labels 20 indicate • Mount St. isScholastica and which correct.) on partially recycled paper PLEASE RECYCLE YOUR MAGAZINE AND BAG