Directions - Sisters of the Holy Cross
Transcription
Directions - Sisters of the Holy Cross
Congregation Direction Set for 2004-2009 July/August 2004 DIRECTION STATEMENT 2004 Chapter coverage ............................ Cover Voices Editorial ......................................................... 2 Directions A.M. break with fair-trade coffee .................... 6 Branches: Holy Cross Around the World A letter from Kasoa ........................................ 6 “Take a Hike Day” offers camaraderie ............ 7 LT members present workshop in Peru ............ 8 History conference awakens past .................... 8 Congregations converge for Idaho retreat ..... 10 California Jubilee celebration ........................ 10 Leaves: Sisters in Ministry Saint Mary’s Jubilee ..................................... 11 Nota Bene Sister Mary Ann Pajakowski .................... 12 Sister Maura (Brannick) .......................... 12 Sister Michael Mary (Nolan) .................... 13 Sister Ruth Marie (Nickerson) .................. 13 Reflections Education and gender ................................... 14 Advancing the Mission Benefiting from corporate partnerships ......... 16 HOLY CROSS WOMEN CREATING AND STRENGTHENING RIGHT RELATIONSHIPS “Were not our hearts burning within us as we walked together along the way?” ~ Luke 24:32 We, Sisters of the Holy Cross, open to the transforming fire of the Spirit, ardently desire and commit ourselves to the promotion of right relationships with God and in our Congregation, Church, World and Cosmos. Living in a world shattered by fear, violence, intolerance, inequity and ecological destruction, we “believe that no more important mission exists at this time than to be bearers of the reconciling hope for which the world cries” (Declaration of Women Religious Leaders, 2004). The new Leadership Team for 2004-2009! (L to r:) Sisters Ruth Marie (Nickerson), Mary Louise Full, Joy O’Grady, Pushpa Teresa Gomes and Geraldine Hoyler Standing in solidarity with people of many cultures and nations, we witness prophetically to the mission of Jesus in our global reality. Moving together into the future we will: ✴ Promote nonviolent systemic change through prayer, word and action; ✴ Steward human, ecological and financial resources in an equitable and sustainable manner; ✴ Continue communal theological reflection; ✴ Participate responsibly in the life of the Congregation. Empowered by the strength of our Holy Cross charism at work in the world today, we invite others to walk with us in our life and mission. article on page 3 Voices 2 his was my third General Chapter with the Sisters of the Holy Cross. By some sisters’ standards, particularly Jubilarians, this isn’t many, yet it’s been enough to experience the truth of something a sister said just before the Chapter of ’99: “Every Chapter’s different.” And so it was. A new mix of people, issues and ideas, different facilitation—even the weather— opened new spaces for the Spirit to move. Yet continuity is there if you look for it. Each Chapter Direction Statement testifies to this. Each one builds upon its forebears and lays ground for the next. This one evolved from the ’99 Statement and the Calls that emerged from last year’s International Assembly. It was a natural next step that the Twenty-third General Chapter chose to focus the Congregation on right relationships. What is “right relationship?” Once I might have imagined it was one in which happiness and peace reigned at all times. Today (after a bit more life experience), I realize that to be truly in right relationship with one’s world is to embrace the conflict and disappointments that are a part of living while engaging with others with respect at all times. I saw this operating at the Twenty-third General Chapter. Each day brought new needs, new demands, new challenges, new deadlines. Chapter members and support teams had to respond immediately and interac- T L S NOTE: Deadline for next issue is September 1. tively to get what was needed done. Hardworking people got tired. But not once did I see respect for the other’s situation or concern for the task at hand overridden by temperament, ego or thoughtlessness. Getting the job done was important. Sustaining relationships was important. Without even thinking about it, people “lived the mission”—from moment to moment, from need to need. In this issue of Life Signs (as indeed in every issue) each article illustrates some aspect of right relationships: whether it’s learning dialogue skills in Peru (page 8), creating new ways for older sisters to enjoy the outdoors (page 7), or building a convent in Ghana (page 6). Staff and sisters were invited to contemplate a more global meaning of right relationships over their morning coffee (page 6)— right relationships with the people who grow and deliver it to our door; with other countries; and with the earth itself. In this season Jubilarians, too, celebrated their years of relationship with God and the Congregation, and with all to whom they minister in their lives (pages 10-11). Life Signs takes this moment to congratulate the Sisters of the Holy Cross on all 23 of their general chapters. For each has prepared the way for the next “chapter” in the life of the Congregation and in the ongoing journey of realizing right relationships. ❦ Life Signs is published six times a year for all members of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Cross. News items, draft articles and suggestions are welcome. Items must be in the Communications Office by the beginning of the month preceding publication to assure inclusion and may be edited for length and clarity. Send signed, dated materials to: Life Signs Editor, Sisters of the Holy Cross. The Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Cross 201 Bertrand Hall—Saint Mary’s Notre Dame, Indiana 46556-5000 Sister Aline Marie (Steuer), CSC, President Barbara Wade, Editor Louise Koselak, Assistant Editor PHONE: (574) 284-5728 • FAX: (574) 284-5577 http://www.cscsisters.org Directions 3 Chapter, continued from cover Twenty-third Chapter comes to peace-filled fruition he Twenty-third General Chapter of the Sisters of the Holy Cross, which began on July 11, unfolded and wound its peace-filled way to a new Direction and Leadership Team, and ended on July 22— one day early. Along the way, sisters around the world and at Saint Mary’s expressed appreciation for the daily news and pictures that came to them through e-mail, the Sisters News Update, the Web and the “E-Tree”—all made them feel a T continued, page 4 Opening liturgy. (L to r, front row:) Sisters Margaret Mary Nimo, Stella Maris Kunihira, Esther Adjoa Entsiwah, Angelica Birungi, Shopna Cecilia Gomes and other sisters from around the world enhance the sound of the “Saint Mary’s Schola” (choir) for the opening liturgy of Chapter. The international note lent to prayer and liturgical music throughout Chapter reflected the harmonious blend of nationalities and cultures that characterized the tone of the Twenty-third General Chapter. “I am just sending a note to THANK YOU ALL for keeping us informed— the e-mails are really great.” Day Two. Lighting the Chapter fire. Sisters Jean Barbara (Korkisch) (center) and Sue Kintzele of the Environment and Housekeeping Committee, light the Chapter fire as members gather in the courtyard outside the Chapter room in Regina Hall to witness the fire that will ignite the Chapter candle each day. Life Signs ■ ABOVE: Keynote speakers for Chapter Sisters Catherine O’Brien, CSC, and Ursula Bugembe, RSCJ, set the tone of global vision and challenge for Chapter members on the second and third days of Chapter. RIGHT: Chapter facilitator Sister Janet Roesener, CSJ, guided Chapter members through a peace-filled process of compassionate consideration and mutual understanding. July/August 2004 Directions 4 Chapter, continued from page 3 part of the Chapter experience. Much work is yet to be done—getting out Chapter documents and communications to Congregation members, transitioning from one leadership team to a new one, and implementing a new governance structure. But those who experienced the unfolding of Chapter, whether far or near, seem revitalized with a new spirit of hope and expectation and the energy and joy of a clear challenge for the future. Here are more scenes from General Chapter 2004... ❦ Considering the Calls. Characteristic of the Chapter process was the regular mixing of table composition and reflecting upon each other’s work. [Thanks to photos and daily updates, we feel] “we are very much present...” Day Seven. Morning prayer: Processing in the Madonna of the Cosmos, joyfully carried by Sister Diane Cundiff The social event of the season was “Café Sainte Croix” (also known as Lourdes Assembly Hall). Here sisters enjoy the musical skits presented by each Area. Liturgical dancing by Sisters of the Holy Cross was very much a part of contemplative experience during the liturgies and prayer rituals of Chapter. Pictured, Sister Dana Michelle Sullivan Life Signs ■ July/August 2004 Directions 5 LEFT: Day Nine, election day. Sisters Pushpa Teresa Gomes, left, and Hashi Margaret Pereira anoint Sisters Amalia Marie (Rios) and Agnes Anne (Roberts) in the Bengali custom before the morning Mass asking for the intercession of the Spirit especially on this day. CENTER, RIGHT: Day Nine, morning prayer before elections. (“The Spirit is a-movin’, a-movin’ all over this land.”) Pictured, Sisters Mary Magdalena Gomes and Maria Regina (Gomes) BOTTOM LEFT: Day Ten. The new Direction Statement is accepted and greeted with joy (and much relief on the part of the writers!). BOTTOM RIGHT: Day Twelve, Closing Liturgy. Sister Aline Marie (Steuer) leads the acclamation of the new Leadership Team in the Church of Our Lady of Loretto. “Whoever is doing this terrific job on the Web page, I want to say ‘You are wonderful!’ A great piece of work—thanks.” “Thank you for all the work in keeping us up to date on everything—it was the next best thing to being there!” Life Signs ■ July/August 2004 Directions 6 Breaking the daily “grind” with fair-trade coffee Sisters and staff take a morning coffee break to learn about and enjoy a cup of Fair Trade coffee. ith cups and mugs in hand, sisters joined Holy Cross Services Corporation employees in a fair-trade coffee break July 9 in the Lillie O’Grady Gathering Space at Saint Mary’s to sample the fair-trade coffees and teas that would be served during General Chapter. Coffee is the second largest U.S. import after oil, and the people in the United States consume one-fifth of all the world’s coffee, making the United States the largest consumer in the world. But few Americans realize that agricultural workers in the coffee industry often toil in what can be described as “sweatshops in the fields.” Many small coffee farmers receive prices for their coffee that are less than the costs of production, forcing them into a cycle of poverty and debt. Fair Trade is a viable solution to this crisis, assuring consumers that the coffee they drink was purchased under fair conditions. To become Fair Trade certified, an importer must meet stringent international criteria by paying a minimum price per pound of $1.26, providing much needed credit to farmers, and providing technical assistance such as help transitioning to organic farming. W Coffee prices have plummeted and are currently around $.60 to $.70 per pound. “With world market prices as low as they are right now, we see that a lot of farmers cannot maintain their families and their land anymore,” says Jerónimo Bollen, director of Manos Campesinas, a Fair Trade coffee cooperative in Guatemala. Meanwhile coffee companies have not lowered consumer prices but are pocketing the difference. There are over 100 companies across the United States, including Starbucks, that have licensing agreements with TransFair to offer Fair Trade Certified coffee. For more information, go to these Web sites: www.globalexchange.org and www.oxfamamerica.org. ❦ Good to the last drop. Sisters Ann Oestreich, IHM, and Mary Turgi take pleasure in a mug of coffee while educating sisters and HCSC staff about what Fair Trade means to farmers and consumers. Branches: Holy Cross Around the World A letter from Kasoa by Helene Sharp, CSC T are held three days a week, with an average attendance of 65 to 70 persons. Several groups and individuals in the United States have shipped more than 1,000 books for the center. The program has been enhanced with Fridays designated as a “library and singing day.” The space is too small, and there are always more people than chairs. Unfortunately, there seems to be no immediate solution to the problem. In February two novices, Sisters Evelyn Ntiamoah from Ghana and Theresia W. Mbugua from Kenya, arrived he sisters in Kasoa have not been idle during these past six months: In January the Holy Cross Family Centre in Kasoa, Ghana, opened its doors. The sisters have rented a building and are holding classes for both adults and children. The original aim was to tutor those preparing for national exams and to teach adult literacy. When they first started their program, over 100 people from nursery to adult ages registered. Classes Life Signs ■ July/August 2004 continued, next page Branches: Holy Cross Around the World 7 “Take a Hike Day” offers adventure, camaraderie and fresh air T he rain came on Thursday morning, May 13, but luckily the first Take a Hike Day was not a washout. At the 1:30 p.m. start time, sisters at Saint Mary’s and Holy Cross Service Corporation (HCSC) employees began fortifying themselves with ice cream cones as they peered out the windows of the Lillie O’Grady Gathering Space searching for a break in the precipitation. Finally the sky cleared, and the sisters, accompanied by their HCSC partners, began to stream out of O’Grady to wander down the path along the Stations of the Cross next to the cemetery. Whether being pushed in a wheelchair, taken by an arm, or walking side by side, the sisters had plenty to discuss with their employee partners as they dodged puddles, felt the spray of droplets from the trees, and marveled at the beauty of the thousands of lilies of the valley blossoming at the end of the path around the shrine of Our Lady of Peace. ❦ The sisters were grateful for the assistance of all the employees who took time from their busy schedules to accompany them during Take a Hike Day. TOP RIGHT: Sister Peter Clare (Berna) enjoys an ice cream cone as she and Sister Margaret Mary Lavonis wait for the rain to stop. ABOVE: Sister Agnes Solari begins a leisurely stroll with her HCSC partner, Kari Alwine of Human Resources. LEFT: Staff members assist Sister Josephine Callahan as she makes her way to the walking path. A letter from Kasoa, continued from previous page “The sisters in Kasoa have not been idle...” from Uganda for the three-month mission experience. They spent time in both Takoradi and Kasoa assisting the sisters in their ministries, and joined the Catholic Action for Street Children team in Accra for a monthlong ministry experience. They returned to Uganda on April 30. The convent building at Nyame N’Adom is progressing. Workers expect to complete the work this December. Several dozen fruit and other fast-growing trees were planted to the east of the house. These will serve, not only Life Signs as a fruit and shade source, but also as a windbreak, and will help curb soil erosion. On Easter Monday, the sisters hosted the first Holy Cross family gathering in Kasoa. Father Bob Gilmour, CSC, celebrated the Eucharist outside under a canopied cover, which provided ample shade for this and other activities for the day. The occasion, attended by 36 members, produced a rather impressive gathering of the Holy Cross family in Ghana. ❦ ■ July/August 2004 Branches: Holy Cross Around the World 8 LT members present workshop to sisters in Peru by Joan Marie Steadman, CSC I n early May, Sister Marilyn Zugish and I journeyed to our Holy Cross community in Peru to facilitate a workshop on dialogue skills and conflict resolution. Our sisters and postulants included the workshop within the context of their four-day nucleo meeting. It was a grace and gift to be with our sisters and share in their lives. We gathered at Foyer de Charite, a retreat center outside Lima at the foot of a mountain. The setting was beautiful. With the assistance of Sister Sally Harper, CSJ, our able translator, we spent an energizing two days with our members as they learned more about and practiced dialogue and conflict resolution skills. Our concern about how the experience would unfold through translation disappeared very quickly. The spoken word and the myriad ways we communicate with facial expressions and gestures helped us all and provided some lighthearted moments in the process. “Joan and Marilyn taught us some new techniques for resolving conflicts in group discussions,” commented Sister Mary Josephine Delany. “These were so helpful,” she added, “that we’ve already used them in our nucleo, as well as in our pastoral work and meetings.” Postulant Carmen Marcelo Muñoz said that she was grateful for the opportunity to meet the two members of the Leadership Team and “for them to get to know us as well, as far as it was possible for us to communicate and express ourselves.” Carmen said she learned a lot about her own interpersonal relationships and the need to deepen her listening skills. “Whoever learns something is no longer ignorant,” she stated, “and I should be conscious of what I express and feel.” ❦ TOP: Dialogue training for sisters in Peru, May 8-9. L to r: Sisters Giovanna Carmona Chávez, Patricia Mary Crane, Marilyn Zugish, translator Sally Harper, CSJ, and Joan Marie Steadman. BOTTOM: Holy Cross sisters in Peru gather for a group photo outside the retreat center where the dialogue workshop was held. Front row (l to r): Postulant Isabel Cristina Camacho Torres, Sister Noylí Ríos Manzo, Postulants Esperanza Sullca Clemente and Carmen Marcelo Muñoz, and Sisters Patricia Dieringer and Mary Josephine Delany. Back row (l to r): Sisters Lilma Calsín Collazos, Giovanna Carmona Chávez, Marilyn Zugish, Eleanor Snyder, Joan Marie Steadman, Mary Magdalena Gomes and Patricia Mary Crane. CSC history conference awakens past, renews friendships by James Connelly, CSC n Thursday evening, June 10, Brother Joseph Fox, CSC, president of the Holy Cross History Association, welcomed 49 participants to “A Pilgrimage to the Past,” the Twenty-third Annual Conference on the History of the Congregations of Holy Cross, held at the Sarto Retreat House in Evansville, Indiana. Local author, John McMullen, offered background information on Catholics in Evansville and Vanderburgh County, Indiana, and Brother Joseph led the group in a Litany of Remembrance, praising the seven Holy Cross O missionaries who were the first to come to America. This year’s conference followed an entirely new format, with bus trips to various sites in southern Indiana figuring in the early history of the community in the United States. On Friday, June 11, conference-goers were bused to Vincennes, Indiana, where they gathered in the Old Cathedral and sang the “Te Deum”—just as the first contingent of Holy Cross missionaries had done when they arrived in Vincennes in October 1841. After mass, Richard Patrick Day, whose family has been members of the Old continued, next page Life Signs ■ July/August 2004 Branches: Holy Cross Around the World 9 Cathedral parish since 1760, had found Anselm’s grave, spoke to the group about and John Galvin of the the cathedral and the early Historic Madison Foundabishops of Vincennes. There tion spoke about the history was a tour of the museum of St. Michael’s Church in and the former bishop’s Madison where Anselm lived house, now the rectory, and kept school in the where Bishop Celestine de basement of the church. la Hailandiere welcomed Madison Mayor Al HuntingAmong the many Holy Cross renewing friendships at the history the seven men from France. ton addressed the group at conference were (l to r) Brother John Kuhn and Sisters Joan Marie Father John Schipp, the the cemetery and Brother Steigmeyer and Albertine (Kramer). pastor, led the tour. Gerald Muller, CSC, gave an From Vincennes the participants traveled on to Terre organ recital in the church, now a historic landmark. Haute and St. Mary of the Woods College where the Sisters On the bus rides, the travelers saw several videos: Rev. of Providence, founded by Jacques Dujarié, opened their Marvin O’Connell on “The Magnificent Six,” the six Holy first house in North America under Blessed Mother Cross brothers who came from France in 1841; Mother Theodore Guerin. Two Sisters of Providence, Sisters Eileen Theodore Guerin and St. Mary of the Woods College; and Kelley and Mary Roger Madden, read papers on the early the history of Madison, once the largest town in Indiana. foundations of their community in Indiana and on the As always, the conference was a time for renewing French school of spirituality, which had influenced both friendships among members of the four Holy Cross comDujarié and Moreau. There followed an elegant banquet munities, all of whom were represented, as well as with lay and the business meeting of the Holy Cross History friends who joined this year’s “pilgrimage.” Association. At the conclusion of the conference, Father Chris On Saturday, June 12, everyone boarded an early Kuhn, CSC, took over as president of the Holy Cross bus for Madison, Indiana, on the Ohio River where History Association for 2004-2005 and announced that Brother Anselm (Pierre) next year’s conference will be Caillot, one of the original held in Chicago and will band and only 16 when he celebrate among other things came to Indiana, taught in the 50th anniversary of the parish school. Brother Notre Dame High School in Anselm drowned while Niles, Illinois. Sister swimming in the river in Suzanne Payette, CSC, of 1845. The high point of the Goffstown, New Hampshire, weekend was a visit to his and Brother Richard Kelly, grave in the Springdale CSC, of New Orleans were Cemetery in Madison and elected to two-year terms on the dedication of a marker the council. Father James provided by the Holy Cross Connelly, CSC, was elected History Association. vice president and Father The exact location of the Richard Gribble, CSC, and gravesite was discovered only Sister Dorothy Ann two years ago by Mr. and Reppen were re-elected Mrs. Robert Newland of secretary and treasurer, (L to r:) Father James Connelly and Brother Joseph Fox are joined by Indianapolis. Newland respectively. ❦ Robert Newland of Indianapolis, who discovered the gravestone of spoke, describing how he Brother Anselm. Life Signs ■ July/August 2004 Branches: Holy Cross Around the World 10 Five congregations converge for Idaho retreat by Elsbeth Mulvaney, CSC S isters from three other states and four congregations joined the Sisters of the Holy Cross in Idaho for their annual retreat, June 14-19. Idaho native Sister Mary Louise Deroin invited Sister Mary Ellen Vaughan to extend the ministry of WindSong, South Bend, Indiana, by traveling to lead the reflections on God and the cosmos at the Benedictine Monastery of the Ascension in Jerome, Idaho. Optional afternoon trips to nearby mountain, desert and spring-fed waterfall locations supplemented the presentations and prayer services that Sister Mary Ellen had prepared for the group. While the sisters reveled in the opportunity for silence and reflection, the most hospitable monks were a little concerned that the sisters would never have a chance to talk! “I was especially happy that, as Holy Cross, we were able to share our resources—in the person of Sister Mary Ellen—with the Mercy, Franciscan, Notre Dame and Incarnate Word sisters who joined us,” said Sister Mary Louise. ❦ Holy Cross retreat participants gather in front of the Ascension mosaic outside the Benedictine Monastery chapel in Jerome, Idaho. L to r: Sisters Mary Mulligan, Marie Bernadette (Rogers), Patricia Mulvaney, Kathryn Mulligan, Miriam Joanne (Frankenfield), Mary Louise Deroin and Mary Ellen Vaughan The local community of Saint Catherine by the Sea in Ventura, California, celebrated the Diamond and Golden Jubilees of the sisters in residence who had lived their vowed lives for 70, 60 and 50 years as Sisters of the Holy Cross. Jubilarians from other convents in southern California also were honored at this time. The Jubilee Mass and dinner were held May 2. L to r: Sisters Ignatius (Schumacher) – 70 years, Gloria Valdovinos – 50 years, Kathryn Mulligan – 60 years, Harriet Marie (St. Marie) – 60 years, Phyllis Golab – 50 years, Carmen (Davy) – 60 years, Beatrice Marie (Schutz) – 50 years, Patricia Hogan – 60 years, and Mary Rose (Cunningham) – 60 years. ❦ Life Signs ■ July/August 2004 Leaves: Sisters in Ministry 11 Sisters celebrate Jubilee at Saint Mary’s S unday, July 25, 2004, was special in many ways—for weather, for spirit and for celebration. Jubilee 2004 began in the Lillie O’Grady Center where the Jubilarians received corsages from the members of the Leadership Team. This year Sisters Aline Marie (Steuer) and Anna Mae Golden were recipients, since they too are celebrating Jubilee anniversaries. The Jubilarians then moved to the Church of Our Lady of Loretto, where they were celebrated with the ringing of handbells and the applause of families and guests gathered to join in the celebration. With a crescendo of drums and trumpet, guitars, flute and organ, the Liturgy began. All the assembly entered into the spirit, filling the church to the cupola with resounding song. On behalf of those present, the celebrant, Father Paul Kollman, CSC, expressed heartfelt gratitude for the years of service the Jubilarians had given as he said, “Thank you, thank you, thank you, for your selfless gift.” It was a message echoed over and over again throughout the celebrations of the day. ❦ INSET ABOVE: Sister Joan Marie Steadman pins a corsage on Jubilarian Sister Aline Marie (Steuer). LEFT: Sister Pauline Gomes, the Silver Jubilarian, proclaims the second Scripture reading. TOP RIGHT: Sister Joan Marie reads the Jubilee proclamation from Leviticus. CENTER RIGHT: Jubilarians stand for the Congregation’s acclamation. Front row (l to r): Sisters Patricia Hogan, Ambrose (McCracken) and Bettina (Batchelder); Back row: Sisters Basil Anthony (O’Flynn), Marguerite (Troxler) and Anna Clare (O’Connor). BOTTOM RIGHT: The Jubilarians process out of the church to enthusiastic applause. (L to r:) Sisters Gloria Valdovinos, Anna Mae Golden, Bettina (Batchelder) Patricia Gantz and Georgia (Costin). Life Signs ■ July/August 2004 Leaves: Sisters in Ministry 12 S ister Mary Ann Pajakowski was honored May 7 with a “2004 Many Women, Many Voices” award presented by Peace House, a shelter for victims of domestic violence located in Park City, Utah. Currently, Sister Mary Ann works at Holy Cross Ministries as coordinator for after-school and summer programs primarily for Hispanic youth in Wendover, Park City and Heber City, Utah. Sister Mary Ann’s first experience with Peace House was through its violence prevention program when she worked with a group of middleSister Mary Ann Pajakowski school girls who were experiencing conflicts in school. This collaborative effort by Peace House and Holy Cross Ministries taught the girls positive ways to address and resolve conflict and stop the cycle of violence. The group, then known as “Las Chicas,” under Sister Mary Ann’s direction, put on plays and skits, wrote songs and choreographed their own dances, performing for various local events and in the Park City Olympic venue. Sister Mary Ann also volunteers in the St. Mary’s Parish religious education program and for No More Homeless Pets of Utah. She serves on the Sisters of the Holy Cross Hispanic Ministries Committee and chairs the Women’s Human Rights Working Group of the Congregation Justice Committee. ❦ S ister Maura (Brannick) was presented with an honorary doctorate of humane letters degree during the May 8 com- mencement ceremony at Holy Cross College, Notre Dame, Indiana. Highlighting her ongoing service to the poor and underserved, Holy Cross College President Richard Gilman, CSC, recognized Sister Maura as “a living example of what one person can do to make a difference.” A familiar face in the South Bend, Indiana, area for more than 20 years, Sister Maura is the outreach coordinator at St. Joseph Regional Medical Center Sister Maura (Brannick) and Chapin Street Health Center, a clinic she founded in 1986. ❦ Life Signs ■ July/August 2004 Leaves: Sisters in Ministry 13 S ister Michael Mary (Nolan) received an honorary doctorate of laws degree at the May 15 graduation ceremony of Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame, Indiana, for 36 years of defending the rights of the homeless, orphans, street people and human rights victims in Brazil. Sister Michael Mary earned a degree in economics and social science/ business administration in 1964 from Saint Mary’s College. To facilitate her work for the poor, she also attended Pontifical Catholic University in Brazil and received her law degree in 1984. Dedicated to protecting the Sister Michael Mary (Nolan) human rights of marginalized citizens in Brazil, Sister Michael Mary continues to defend the poor in their struggle for justice. ❦ S ister Ruth Marie (Nickerson) was named a Hall of Fame honoree during the ninth annual Central California Excellence in Business Awards luncheon June 23. Sponsored by The Fresno Bee newspaper and chambers of commerce and economic development corporations throughout the central San Joaquin Valley, the award honored Sister Ruth Marie for her dedication to Saint Agnes Medical Center, recognizing the medical center’s high ethical standards, success and growth, employee and customer service, and concern for the environment. Sister Ruth Marie (Nickerson) Sister Ruth Marie has been president and chief executive officer of Saint Agnes Medical Center since 1984. She assumes office as First Councilor on the new Leadership Team for the Congregation, August 29. ❦ Life Signs ■ July/August 2004 Reflections 14 Education and gender by Dana Michelle Sullivan, CSC, Patricia Dieringer, CSC, and Mary Ann Pajakowski, CSC T he concept of gender refers to socially Summarizing her 20 years of experience, a teacher in a constructed roles that describe how women Chicago Catholic girls’ high school, which serves a variety and men should act and relate in society. of ethnic populations, emphasizes what helps and what Education is a process of formation whose aim is to hinders the education of young women. Hindrances help people develop their capacities, fulfill their human include low self-esteem, a low competitive nature, parental potential and contribute to a productive and just limitations of the girl’s role, societal definitions of the girl’s society. Access to education is a fundamental human role and lastly, boys. Personal ability and achievement right, but gender discrimination denies many women come up against some or all of these, and girls must be their right to education and to the full development taught how to overcome these obstacles. of their God-given potential. How can education help She suggests some specific ways to help girls deal with young women develop their gifts and talents to share these challenges. Involvement of girls in cocurricular with a world that is so much in need of what they activities—not necessarily sports—provides opportunities have to offer? for leadership training and a larger circle of experience. Schools play a significant role in the formation of Girls are more motivated when they feel connected with a identities and relationships. They are in a unique teacher or staff member of a school. Specific classroom position to establish an atmosphere for students to learn techniques include exposure to both a cooperative style of and function. To begin to transform gender relations, learning and traditional discipline. Like first-generation schools need to create new ways of perceiving power immigrants, girls must learn how to function competently and its use, moving away from “win-lose” situations to in several different worlds. “win-win” situations that will benefit all. Educational systems can either reinforce a system of For example, in a classroom, it’s important for inequality among and between men and women or begin teachers to facilitate cooperative learning among the to transform it. Educators need to replace concepts like children rather than competitive learning styles. In Fe y Alegria #25 School in Lima, Peru, many in-class assignments allow students to practice new skills and concepts in cooperative learning groups. This helps students develop social skills that value cooperation and sharing of gifts among girls and boys without distinction, since all are equally involved and responsible for the outcome of their learning. In this setting, everyone’s gifts and talents are cultivated and received by a supportive audience of Coeducational physical activities are encouraged in after-school programs sponsored by Holy Cross males and females. Ministries in and around Salt Lake City, Utah. Life Signs ■ July/August 2004 Reflections 15 “...they can demonstrate to students that men can cook and be nurses, and that women can be politicians and fix the plumbing!” Aniceto Armendariz, a Holy Cross Ministries staff member, supervises an art project for girls and boys. gender discrimination with new mental models. For example, they can demonstrate to students that men can cook and be nurses, and that women can be politicians and fix the plumbing! To reverse discrimination, textbooks and other resources need to be analyzed to ensure that they are not reinforcing stereotypes about how women and men act. In Peru, pedagogical methods are based on models from Spain. Peruvian educators need to evaluate these textbooks and adapt them appropriately to their culture. Otherwise, middle-class European values rather than Peruvian values may be unconsciously replicated in the classroom. Physical education activities present another arena for challenging gender stereotypes. Games are often divided by sex and can reinforce stereotypes about what men and women are physically capable of achieving. At Colégio Santa Maria in São Paulo, Brazil, physical education classes in all grades integrate girls and boys. At Holy Cross Ministries’ after school programs in Utah, soccer is played by age groups, and not boy/girl. Both girls and boys are expected to develop their skills in all games and sports. Many more possibilities exist to reverse the patterns of sexism in education. Some of these include introducing women’s points of view in discussions; examining feminine Life Signs and masculine qualities and not ranking them hierarchically; helping students critically analyze stereotypes in society and the media; and offering women’s studies courses. Finally, educators must be willing to constantly assess their own attitudes about women’s right to education and their role in society. Their attitudes will affect the material they present, how they present it, and how it is received and interpreted by their female students. For women to exercise their human rights, they must be treated as fully human. Their formation as persons, including the education they receive, must reinforce their full potential to contribute to society. Education must prepare present and future generations of women and men to build a society that allows for the full development of everyone’s potential. If education fails to do this, not just individuals, but the whole of society will suffer. ❦ Sisters Dana Michelle Sullivan, Patricia Dieringer and Mary Ann Pajakowski are members of the Women’s Human Rights Working Group of the Congregation Justice Committee. ■ July/August 2004 Advancing the Mission 16 “Keep your eyes and ears open—opportunities are everywhere.” Benefiting from corporate partnerships by Leslie Choitz, assistant development director any large corporations have community relations departments that seek ways to support the communities of their employees and customers. One such corporation is Meijer, a grocery and general merchandise retailer with locations in five Midwest states: Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan and Ohio. Each year Meijer gives back at least 5 percent of their net profits to the community, benefiting schools and religious groups. The Development Office has registered with the Meijer Community RewardsSM program. This means that anyone who shops regularly at a Meijer’s store can designate that a percentage of their monthly purchases goes to the Sisters of the Holy Cross. All the shopper has to do is apply for a Meijer Guest CardSM (or Meijer Credit Card) M Life Signs ■ and then scan her/his card at checkout. Rewards are based on a sliding percentage of monthly purchases in excess of $100. (Most items qualify for rewards; however, there are some exceptions such as gasoline, postage and online purchases.) Current cardholders can use their cards to register for the rewards, too. Applications and more information about the program are available from the Development Office for sisters who may be interested, or shoppers can sign up online at www.meijer.com/rewards. The Congregation’s organization code number is 986941. Corporations in other parts of the country may have similar programs. Keep your eyes and ears open—opportunities are everywhere. Every penny counts! ❦ July/August 2004