Summer 2013 - Sisters of St. Joseph
Transcription
Summer 2013 - Sisters of St. Joseph
Focusing Summer 2013 Vol. 2, No. 2 Mission Effectiveness Beyond Our CSJ Boundaries A publication of the Sisters of St. Joseph Brentwood, New York 1 We Believe... Featured in this issue that we create the future As we move with the Spirit in giving full expression to our giftedness as women in the Church Sharing equally in its mission— In living a life that is simple prayerful courageous and compassionate— in proclaiming with prophetic voice the Gospel to all people— in strengthening our corporateness as women in community— in demonstrating our belief in the dignity of the human person and the call to secure this dignity for all women and men— in expressing our solidarity with the poor and oppressed. IN FAITH AND HOPE WE ACCEPT THE CHALLENGES THESE BELIEFS IMPLY. Sisters of St. Joseph • Brentwood, NY — Vision Statement Chapter Directions As Sisters of St. Joseph living in the 21st Century, we believe in the power, presence and love of God working through an evolving universe and in God’s self-communication through Jesus Christ. As women of the Church, we recommit ourselves to Jesus’ mission as we move with the Spirit to bring about God’s reign and seek to promote justice, to live lives of non-violence and to respond to the needs of our time. F rom the ser v ice SPRING/SUMMER 2013 VOL. 2, NO. 2 Focusing is published twice yearly in Fall/Winter and Spring/Summer by the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph, Brentwood NY. in el 5 nicaragua hope in bold initiati v e St. Joseph’s Convent 1725 Brentwood Road Brentwood, NY 11717 ser v ice in puerto 6 7 S al v ador Focusing Mission Advancement Beyond Our CSJ Boundaries 8 CENTRAL OFFICE rico 9 the insight campaign 10 acting locally 11 “ N ew ” M aria R egina 12 C elebrating O ur S eniors 13 LEADERSHIP LIAISON Kathleen McKinney, CSJ Patricia Mahoney, CSJ E D I TO R S Mary Ryan, CSJ Patricia Manning, CSJ GRAPHIC DESIGN Patricia Manning, CSJ C O N T R I B U TO R S Jean Amore, CSJ Karen Burke, CSJ Rosalie Carven, CSJ Maura Costello, CSJ Gloria Cruz, CSJ Virginia Dowd, Archivist Phyllis Esposito, CSJ Nancy Fackner, CSJ Annie Fernandez, Co-Minister Catherine Fitzgibbon, CSJ Kerry M. Handal, CSJ Connie Kennedy, CSJ Janet Kinney, CSJ Helen Kearney, CSJ Phil Marinelli, Co-Minister Jeanne McGorry, CSJ Eileen Myles, Co-Minister LIinda Pero, CSJ Rita Piro, Co-Minister Jane Reilly, CSJ Barbara Traola, Co-Minister Thomas Travis, Co-Minister Liz Tully, CSJ Associate Rose Viceconte, CSJ Mary Walsh, CSJ Students from CSJ Schools Mary Casey, TMLA P H OTO G R A P H E R S Joan Dawber, SC Kerry Handal, CSJ Liz Tully, CSJ Associate w w w. b re n t wo o d c s j . o r g 2 M ission Being 4 president S T U D E N T S AT 14 UN 15 B ees . . . B ees 16 S omos MÁS A ssociates ’ D’ADDARIO mission 17 RESIDENCE 18 REFLECTION 19 S T. J O S E P H L I K E A C E LT I C K N OT 20 SISTERS IN THE NEWS 22 Photo: PLAYING IT FORWARD— On May 22, 2013 S. Joanne Forker and Monica Reddy Wood were awarded Doctoral Degrees from Teachers College at Columbia University. They represent the CSJ Spirit— Being Mission. Joanne (ASJ ’65) taught and administered at the Academy of St. Joseph and at present is Principal of Sacred Heart Academy. Monica (TMLA ’72) taught at the Academy of St. Joseph and at present is on the Board of Trustees at The Mary Louis Academy. As individuals, we strive to be models of our mission within our very persons. As a Congregation we seek to make all our ministries reflections of our living Charism and mission. This expectation intensifies our need to develop comprehensive, practical and consistent Mission Effectiveness Programs for ourselves, Associates and our Co-Ministers. 3 Being Mission June 15, 2013 Jean Amore, CSJ Dear Sisters, Associates and Friends, The mission of the Sisters of Saint Joseph is rooted in the gospel mission of Jesus who came to bring about the reign of God by revealing God’s love and by healing, redeeming and liberating all people. We live and work to bring all into union with God and with one another. The unique way in which the congregation is called to this mission is through inclusive love which brings about union and reconciliation. Each one of us is called to look at our world with compassion and partner with one another to alleviate suffering and make salvation a real experience for others here and now. As Sisters of Saint Joseph we have taught and ministered in hospitals, parishes, prisons and social service agencies. As sisters of the neighborhood we met the needs before us. In this time we must broaden our view and look at our expanding global neighborhood to see new needs: to alleviate the suffering of the excluded, the oppressed and the poor. As you read the pages of this issue of Focusing you will see how our sisters, associates, co-ministers, students and friends have looked close to home and around the globe to bring healing and hope where there is great need. They found new ways to be Christ’s presence, to be endless compassion overflowing to empower others to be that presence where there is need. We look with compassion on the immigrant, the impoverished, women and children who need a home, the frail and elderly and we look at our earth whose resources are depleted for economic gain while ignoring sustainability. In a world where individualism, competition and status define the human person we invite you to reflect on how you can be involved in our mission. We ask you to help us imagine a life where hunger, political oppression, violence and over-consumption are no more. We need you to partner with us in seeking solutions to alleviate suffering wherever it is encountered. Finally we rejoice with you who journey with us in hope and confidence in the power, presence and love of God working in an evolving universe. Sister Helen Kearney, CSJ 4 THE FROM DENT I S E R P Our mission challenges us to let God’s compassion, forgiveness, justice and inclusive and unconditional love move in and through us P erhaps the mission of the Sisters of St. Joseph can be described better as something we strive to be rather than do. When we say “we live and work to bring all into union with God and one another,” we mean we let God’s passion for a world of inclusive love, unity, reconciliation, justice and peace shape us. Further, our mission, we believe, is particularly relevant for our times and for all God-seeking people. When economic, social and gender inequality; violence; polarization; and suspicion are so much a part of our lives, our mission calls us to deep contemplative union with God and to openness to love of all people without distinction. In a world in desperate need of people to hold it together, we strive to allow God’s holiness to be in us a dynamic, transformative uniting love. Our mission challenges us to let God’s compassion, forgiveness, justice and inclusive and unconditional love move in and through us. This is reflected in a way of life that calls each of us to be empowering, reconciling, hospitable and just. As a Congregation, we use our corporate power to change injustices in economic, political and social systems, locally and globally and to advocate for those who are without the voice and resources to help themselves. As Sisters of St. Joseph we embrace the God of evolution. The deeper we come to understanding the creation story, reflecting interrelatedness, interdependence, diversity and unity, the more expansively and inclusively we learn to live our mission. Everyone, everything and every situation reveal something about God and the way things are in God’s world. The world is our home and the very place where God is revealed and the reign of God unfolds. God’s reign unfolds when each of us lives at the level of consciousness where the Spirit can lead us to erase injustices, mend our abused Earth, render differences non-divisive, and be women of unity, reconciliation and God’s inclusive love. References: The Unbearable Wholeness of Being by Ilia Delio; Compassionate Awareness by Adolfo Quezada. 5 W itnessing H ope in E l S alvador Jane Reilly, CSJ A Faculty and Students at St. Joseph’s College Give Service in Nicaragua delegation of 47 women religious from LCWR were invited by a non-governmental organization (NGO) called SHARE to commemorate the 32nd anniversary of the assassination of the four North American church women in Dec. 2012. Ita Ford, MM, Maura Clarke, MM, Dorothy Kazel, OSU and Jean Donovan had accompanied the Salvadoran people during the civil war and were among the 32,000 who were murdered. —Representatives from LCWR celebrating the lives of the Salvadoran Martyrs A sense of the poverty at Subtiava, Nicaragua Thomas Travis, Ph.D., St. Joseph’s College, Co-Minister I n a small, economically impoverished barrio of Subtiava, Nicaragua, you will find a one-room building with a sign that says “Preescolar San Jose” --a preschool that is serving over forty 3-5 year old children. It opened a few years ago thanks to the generous support of faculty, staff, students, and friends of St. Joseph’s College. Since 2007, students and faculty members have been going to this barrio as a service component to special interdisciplinary courses, the first of which was taught by Drs. Tom Petriano and Antoinette Hertel. Students bring clothing and school supplies for the community and while there help with projects like building simple homes and installing playground equipment. St. Joseph’s College students and Professor Maria Montoya with the teacher and preschoolers at Preescolar San Jose Scholarship students at the Colegio The College has also started a scholarship program that connects individual sponsors with over 50 children who now attend a well-respected elementary/secondary parochial school near the barrio. It costs $295 to send a child to the school for a year, and that includes tuition, books, uniforms, and a bicycle for getting back and forth to the school. The College has partnered with Hope for the Children Foundation in the establishment of these scholarships, and is also supporting the Foundation’s recent implementation of a microloan program to help local residents start businesses and improve their dwellings. In August 2013 a group of Nursing faculty and students will be going on their third visit to determine how best they can help the community. On December 2 we began our trip to where the women had been murdered. It was requested that the group keep silence. We were invited to imagine what it was like for them to know the end was near. As we drew near the site we expected to come upon a deserted field in a desolate place perhaps with a simple marker. We were appropriately somber. To our surprise there was a large crowd participating in a fiesta. —Meditative walk to the site of the assassinations —Commemorating the lives of Ita, Maura, Dorothy and Jean Individuals who have generously supported the educational programs include Sisters Mary Ann Cashin, Agnes Meagher, Eileen Kelly, Elizabeth Hill, Loretta McGrann, Karen Donohue, Maureen Skinner, Kerry Handal, Joan Ryan, and Catherine Fitzgibbon. 66 For more information about this Nicaragua project, you can contact Tom Travis at St. Joseph’s College by emailing him at [email protected]. We visited the chapel where Bishop Oscar Romero had been killed. As the group entered the simple chapel, we were enveloped in a profound silence. All listened attentively as a Carmelite Sister recounted the last moments of Romero’s life. Each one was invited to pass behind the altar and stand where the Bishop had stood at the moment of his death. As we formed a line to draw near, people started singing, “This is holy ground. We’re standing on holy ground for the Lord is here and where he is is holy.” This song became the theme of our pilgrimage. —Viewing the wall of memory In the midst of the enthusiastic gathering of men, women, and children was a simple four sided monument filled with flowers. It was a celebration of the lives of Maura, Ita, Jean and Dorothy. We entered into the spirit of the day. All were welcomed, embraced, and led to chairs as guests of honor. There were pictures of the women, as well as banners from the different communities where they had ministered. It became clear from testimony of the men and women who had walked with them that the spirit of these four as well as all the martyrs lives on in the people and in their hope for a better future. The older ones who lived through the war, the massacres, and who mourned their disappeared loved ones, are the memory keepers. The younger ones are the harvest of hope. They are single-mindedly dedicated to secure justice and peace for all. There is a national initiative to reduce domestic violence, to provide alternatives to gangs, to guarantee the opportunity for education to all. Through dance, drama and stories the old story and the new story were joined. On the last day of the journey we visited the wall of memory where the names of 32,000 victims of the war are listed. Three elderly women recounted the day their son or daughter disappeared and then showed us where their names were inscribed. Then we were brought to the Catholic University to visit the tombs of the priests and the housekeepers who had been assassinated. We learned that they had been murdered because they wouldn’t stop preaching the gospel message for preferential option for the poor. As we sat in prayer in the chapel where they are buried, the university choir, preparing for their Christmas concert, sang the Alleluia chorus from Handel’s Messiah. What a perfect end to an alleluia experience! 7 Twenty years of service and learning with the poor in Villa España, Puerto Rico C S J B o l d I ni t i at i v e : B an G kok , T hailand Karen Burke, CSJ T hailand is listed by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) as both a top destination for victims of human trafficking and a major source of trafficked persons. The internal traffic of Thai females consists mostly of 12-16 year olds from hill tribes of the North/Northeast. Most of the internally trafficked girls are sent to closed brothels, which operate under prison-like conditions in Bangkok. Thailand’s sex tourism industry is primarily driven by acute poverty. As a result of the current economic downturn, hundreds of factories and projects have closed across Thailand, leaving thousands of workers— both Thai and non-Thai—unemployed. Gloria Cruz, CSJ S. Karen Burke with the Good Shepherd Sisters in Bangkok,Thailand The Fatima Centre of the Good Shepherd Sisters of Thailand is a non-profit organization dedicated to developing the quality of life of all those in need regardless of their religious affiliation. The Fatima Centre provides opportunities for women and young girls to break out of the unending cycle of poverty and sexual exploitation. The first house of the Good Shepherd Sisters was established in 1965 in Din Daeng, Bangkok. From the open paddy fields and slum dwellings, it is now a crowded busy metropolis. The slums have increased in number and the needs of the people facing unemployment, sickness, and lack of educational opportunities have escalated. Responding to this need the Good Shepherd Sisters in Din Daeng have very successfully implemented a number of programs. The Good Shepherd Sisters programs are directed towards those who are most deprived and rejected in society, especially women and girls who are victims of sexual exploitation. The FATIMA SELF-HELP CENTRE provides opportunities for 130-150 girls and women from nearby slums and government housing to learn basic skills that will enable them to earn a decent living. Needlework and craft making are taught and the standard of work is high. A DAY CARE CENTRE services 87 children of the women who work at the Fatima Centre and other small children from poor families in the neighborhood, who are at risk, providing education and nutritional needs. BAAN SUKRUTHAI is a mother and baby home providing services for 30 young women who were rejected by family. The TEENAGE RESIDENTIAL TRAINING CENTRE provides a residential school for 45-50 young girls aged between 10 years and 18 years, who are at risk in the community. The girls come from very poor families. Many have a history of sexual abuse or rape. Here they can complete their education while receiving help and counseling in an atmosphere of love and respect. Practical skills are also taught including; dressmaking, hairdressing, flower making, handicrafts, and computer. Some of the girls in residential care have serious medical conditions, including HIV Positive, STD’s, and depression. They receive professional counseling and medical attention which the sisters financially support. We CSJs voted at the 2011 Chapter to secure funding of $32,000 from the Bold Initiative for structural repairs at the Fatima Centre and Baan Sukhruthai. The foundation of a 54 meter long and 2.8 meter high side wall protecting the Fatima Centre from neighboring sewerage canal (Klong) waters and potential intruders had been getting washed out for five years. The wall was in danger of collapsing and taking with it the back walls of two adjoining buildings. The wall is in close vicinity to the Mother Baby home and the Day Care center. The Mother Baby Home provides refuge, education, and care for unwed mothers-to-be and mothers with infants, while the Day Care center prepares children for entry into Thai Government School and Thai society. In 2008, as the wall was about to fall down, the Good Shepherd Sisters invested Thai Baht 200,000 (approximately US $6,500) to a local company for temporary repair. The cement flooring that was poured at that time was not solidified with any strong foundation, and the cracks moved from the wall to the floor cement slabs to the back walls of the aforementioned buildings. At a cost of 1 Million Baht (approximately US $32,000), a reputable construction company was able to drive pylons into the Klong to support the structurally salvageable parts of the wall and to rebuild the areas that needed complete reconstruction. This successful reconstruction was financed in total by the CSJ Bold Initiative. Klong (canal) outside the wall of the Fatima Centre T he Sor Isolina Ferré Center is a non-profit organization that dedicates efforts to transform and revitalize the Villa España Public Housing Community through education, advocacy and leadership training. We provide tools to help the whole family (parents, grandparents, youth and children) to achieve their fulfillment as human beings by discovering their talents. When I began in 1993, Sister Isolina and I looked for persons in the Housing Project to train as leaders for the Community. With our vision based on the integral development of human beings and our mission to promote this development with justice, dignity, respect and love, we recognized that we are children of God and brothers of others responsible for their spiritual and material growth. Our task was to find people’s needs and begin to give the attention they deserved in order to transform, revitalize and educate this community so they would have a better life. As time has passed and with the help of generous persons, we have been able to extend our services to our neighboring friends, to our public schools, public housing and other poor sections in the neighborhood. Reflecting on my 20 years of work in Villa España, I would say that these years have been my most wonderful time of service as a member of the Sisters of Saint Joseph in Puerto Rico. I always wanted to work with those less privileged who needed others to help them. This desire came from watching my Mom give to the poor who had less than everyone of us and she always shared with them whatever she could according to her means. S. Louise shows where gates were installed to keep children out of danger areas Working with the poor has taught me much and every year the needs are different but very challenging. Their struggles have been major for such a long time that it is hard for them to trust anyone as we try to help. The work with the people in Villa España has not been easy, the same way that their lives have not been easy. Sometimes people expect more of us and easily get disappointed when we don’t give them what they demand. But once you gain their trust it’s a different story because they feel we love them and accept them the way they are. One leader we work with told me “life is no joke for many but having someone walk with and care for us has been a true blessing.” We are very grateful to the Department of the Family who provides federal funds to run the program in Villa España. We are able to work with the needs of the whole family, providing them with a nurse, librarian, psychologist, work placement counselor, computer instructor and education teacher. The participants are active in programs for different groups such The Sisters of St. Joseph of Brentwood continue to strengthen the bond with the Good Shepherd Sisters of Bangkok through the sale of craft items at community events in Brentwood, retreats, vacations in Hampton Bays and at our CSJ sponsored ministries. All of these handicrafts were produced by women and young girls as a means for them to earn a just wage for their dignified work. as pregnant girls, arts and crafts, gold age club, sports and cooking classes. Recently we opened C.A.P.A. a program for student drop outs to get high school diplomas. We recognize and thank the different institutions that help us along the way, such as my Congregation of the Sisters of Saint Joseph, members of my family, Academia and Convento María Reina, parishes around us, Sacred Heart University in Santurce and individual generous persons. We do the best we can with what we have and get, but the reality is that we need more help to continue our work, especially in these days that the economy is so bad and funds are less and difficult to find. Everywhere you turn there is a cut of funds! I have become richer and the people I have served have become family to me. I’ve seen the growth and development of the children into wonderful persons who are learning to contribute to a new society. The generous persons I have encountered along the way have been very good to us all. Persons continue to help and support me as I work in this mission, and are apostles who feel part of us here and are happy to be of some help in whatever way they can. As time passes I realize each day, that God’s presence is here and trust that God will continue to provide tools to serve those in need. The road is hard and difficulties are always present, but God gives us the strength to continue giving of ourselves to our neighbors. Women making craft items at Fatima Centre 8 9 INSIDE THE INSIGHT CAMPAIGN Connie Kennedy, CSJ Rosalie Carven, CSJ F S rom its very beginning, Brentwood CSJs have been key members of NY- CRC- STOP (a Coalition of 34 Religious Congregations to STOP Human Trafficking). The mission of the Coalition is to raise awareness of this modern day slavery, to advocate for legislation to eradicate human trafficking, and to assist women and children who have been taken for the purposes of sexual exploitation and forced labor. In this capacity we have given substantial support to the SAFE HOUSE, which was founded and is operated by Lifeway Network, under the leadership of Joan Dawber, SC. oon after the violent deaths of twenty school children in Newtown, Connecticut, the Sisters of St. Joseph began a collaboration with Pax Christi Long Island that aimed at awareness and reduction of the toll of gun violence in the United States – more than 30,000 deaths each year. Calling their efforts “The InSight Campaign to End Gun Violence” twenty-one sponsors from religious, peace and justice, academic and civic groups took their first public action on April 15, 2013 as hosts for a conference at Hofstra University, Uniondale NY. Speakers for the event included Congresswoman Carolyn McCarthy who was joined by a panel including a New York State legislator, a community organizer, a local police chief, and the Long Island co-chair of New Yorkers Against Gun Violence. Congresswoman Carolyn McCarthy (r.) joined the panel discussion on Gun Violence at Hofstra University on April 15, 2013. In preparing for the conference, the Insight Campaign was struck by statistics on gun violence against children. In one year, the total of 18,270 children between the age of one and nineteen were killed by guns. (www.childrensdefense. org ). Sandy Hook, the most recent, did not stand alone. The Lifeway Network Safe House offers long term harbor to women survivors of Human Traffacking. Because of their inhumane experiences there is a need for education, social services, and community life. In the safe atmosphere of this home, the women are supported and nurtured by a host community of volunteers. There is also another group of volunteers who offer their professional and life experiences to support these women. Together they provide a special brand of caring in a safe environment to the women they serve. For more information, to make a donation, or to volunteer for this special work, please go to the website: www.lifewaynetwork.org —Community volunteers at Safe House Phyllis Esposito, CSJ M For that reason, S. Rosalie Carven, the Congregation’s representative to the Campaign, invited students in CSJsponsored schools on Greater Long Island and Puerto Rico to make this experience their own through the visual representation of their feelings or through poetry. An image is worth a thousand words. Close to one hundred students submitted art work and poetry that spoke loudly of their desire for a future free of gun violence. ary’s Meals is a grassroots organization initiated by a Scotsman, Magnus, to provide one meal a day in a school setting for children who would not otherwise have that one meal. At this point, 755,777 children in countries in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Eastern Europe and South America are benefitting from this program – 301 of them because of the generosity of the Sisters in St. Joseph Convent and the neighboring communities. Through collaboration with the Art Department at St. Joseph’s College, Patchogue, each piece was professionally photographed so that a slide presentation with the musical background of “Over the Rainbow” could be shown to the audience at the conference. The imagery of students’ fearful awareness and hopeful dreams helped move hearts to join the campaign to end gun violence in our communities. Every Advent and Lent, the Sisters choose a charity for which they pool their resources. Zoe Rae Rote, a 19 year old freshman at the University of Notre Dame (and S. Phyllis Esposito’s niece) made a video to explain the project to the Sisters. After listening to her enthusiasm and dedication, the Sisters made Mary’s Meals their choice. With the US Senate’s recent rejection of common sense gun regulation, the Campaign is still at work. The conference slide presentation is being shown in more venues. The PowerPoint presentation and original art work will be displayed at the Long Island Childrens’ Museum (Garden City, NY) during July and August 2013. The campaign will host viewings and discussion of the film “Trigger – The Ripple Effect of Gun Violence.” In a strong, but loving way, the Sisters of St. Joseph are continuing to appeal for reasonable legislation on gun violence. 10 Acting Locally... Student artwork from The Mary Louis Academy, Sacred Heart Academy and Bishop Kearney HS visualizes the effects of gun violence. In addition to Zoe herself, they were impressed with the way this program fits with our Chapter directives. In addition to feeding the children, it requires the children go to school. School scores have gone up incredibly in schools where Mary’s Meals is in place. Prior to this, many parents did not send their daughters to school but now, because they are receiving this meal, parents are sending their girls. The program also helps the local economy by employing local farmers to grow the crops and depends on local women to prepare and serve. It only costs $11 a year to feed a child in Malawi and $17 to feed a child in one of the other 15 countries where the program now serves local children! For more information, please check www.marysmealsusa.org Nancy Fackner, CSJ A bout thirty years ago a dear neighbor in Neponsit taught S. Grace Keavney how to crochet granny squares and she hasn’t stopped since. Grace, who will celebrate her 70th Jubilee in September 2013 has ministered in elementary and high schools, parishes and Maria Regina Residence. In between she crochets afghans and baby blankets for family, friends, Maria Regina Gift Shop and The Bridge of Life. The pastel rainbow colors of the baby afghans are exquisite. The Bridge of Life is a non-profit organization dedicated to offering women the resources they need to choose life rather than an abortion during a crises pregnancy. Sisters Rosemary Kern and Peggy O’Donnell volunteer at The Bridge and experience the joy expressed by families when they receive compassionate care and support for their newborns such as strollers, car seats, clothing and a beautiful baby blanket handmade with love from a Sister of St. Joseph rooted in the mission of Jesus “that all may be one.” 11 C ELE B RAT I N G Excellence in Nursing and Rehabilitation Congregational Healthcare Coordinator S. Susan Sabol visits with S. Pat Seaman. S. Dorothy Schnell (second from r.) benefits from the Physical Therapy program. Excellence in Action! Therapists challenge residents with precise skill and cheerful encouragement. S E N I OR S Eileen M. Myles, Development Office, Maria Regina, Co-Minister F or 45 years Maria Regina has been a place of outstanding hospitality, compassionate care, and generous ministry for the Sisters of St. Joseph. Sisters have served in almost every capacity from resident to administrator. Mother Immaculata Clark envisioned a beautiful residence for Sisters in their retirement years and for those who would be in need of skilled nursing care. Little did she think that someday the doors would open wide to Sisters of other communities, priests, and lay men and women as well as the Brentwood Sisters of St. Joseph. Today Maria Regina is recognized as a 5-Star skilled nursing facility. This is due in large part to the foundation laid by Sisters Genevieve Therese Kenny and Miriam Eugene Kenny who opened Maria Regina and to the outstanding leadership of S. Helen Clancey who transitioned Maria Regina from a convent to a New York State approved skilled nursing facility. Now, under the leadership of Ellen Bartoldus, Maria Regina is entering a new era of excellent compassionate care. Maria Regina now has a new logo. In addition to the outstanding long term care and adult day health care, Maria Regina provides excellent short term rehabilitation services. The goal of this program is to provide the physical, occupational and/or speech therapy that will allow a person to return to the community after a serious accident, planned orthopedic surgery or a serious spell of illness. Our skilled nursing services have expanded to include intravenous therapy and specialized treatment for serious wounds. With a commitment to meeting the needs of both the congregation and the larger community, Maria Regina is exploring additional, more advanced medical/ nursing services. The Pastoral Care team of seven Sisters of St. Joseph continues to bring Christ’s healing comfort and power to all. Recreational therapists provide activities that are engaging, fun, and stimulating. S. Liz Looney and the dietary staff provide meals that are nourishing and delicious while addressing the needs of each resident. CSJ Associates volunteer at Maria Regina, as well as many other volunteers, in a variety of capacities such as Eucharistic Ministers, working in the Gift Shop, delivering newspapers, one-on-one visiting, transporting residents to the beauty salon, chapel, and dining room…and much, much more! WISDOM WOMEN In honor of St. Joseph the Worker, the 23 Sisters of St. Joseph Convent, Brentwood who are 90 years or older were celebrated as WISDOM WOMEN. S. Maura Costello presided at the Ritual of Anointing. S. Mary Angela Coughlin S. Ann Dyer S. Agnes Alphonse Finamore S. Mary Cecilia Giannitti S. Margaret de Sales Grob S. Catherine Anita Kelly S. Rose Damien Killeen S. Rita Josephine Lisante S. James Annette McAuley S. Mary Theresa McGarrity S. Mary McKenna S. Marie Pierre Meyer “ S. Anne Regis Miller S. Barbara Monaghan S. Edward Joseph Murphy S. Mary Ellen Noone S. Ann Maureen Oakman S. Mary O’Brien S. Margaret Patricia Ryan S. Maria Stapleton S. Maureen de Lourdes Stock S. James Patrice Veale S. Rosemary Wood May your heart always be joyful and may your song always be sung. May you stay forever young. “ Regina OUR Concluding Hymn from Wisdom Prayer —Bob Dylan S E N I O R S I S T E R S F U N D AY I N B R E N T W O O D The Regional Superiors arranged a SENIOR SISTERS FUN DAY on May 8th in the Academy of St. Joseph library. A highlight was the entertainment provided by the Pre-K children of Shepherd’s Gate organized by Director Anna Torres. Throughout its various transitions Maria Regina remains a place of hope, healing and hospitality as a reflection of the charism of the Sisters of St. Joseph. When in Brentwood be sure to visit Maria Regina to see excellence in action! 12 12 Volunteer S. Carmelina Lally escorts S. Frances Hagan. 13 We also attended an event at the UN in celebration of International Women’s Day. The Secretary-General, Ban Ki Moon, gave the opening address, and Michelle Bachelet, the Under SecretaryGeneral and Executive Director of UN Women, led a discussion about significant issues facing women around the world. Just having the chance to hear such impressive speakers at such an exciting venue was a great experience.” TMLA students participate in UN Commission on the Status of Women Mary Casey, TMLA ‘14 T wenty-five TMLA students from service homerooms and five faculty members were invited to attend the Commission on the Status of Women 57 held at the UN March 4 -15, 2013. They joined the approximately 60,000 women from around the world that came together for seminars, discussions, and workshops devoted to the topic of ending violence against women. The Mary Louis Academy was the only Catholic high school in Queens to be invited by the United Nations to attend this event. TMLA members of the Service Homeroom Program are currently researching the issues of human trafficking, the education of women, and the power of technology in society. This knowledge enabled students to add insight into conversations at the conference and to actively participate in what was truly a global discussion with women from all around the world. This opportunity to participate in the UN program came from S. Griselda Martinez Morales, CSJ, who is an NGO representative to the United Nations for the Congregation of Saint Joseph. Griselda worked closely with CSJ students from Mexico, in planning and facilitating their visit to New York during CSW 57. Through conversations with assistant principal, S. Filippa Luciano, it was decided that the students from Mexico would stay with host families from Mary Louis, and that students from TMLA would also have the opportunity to participate in the Commission on the Status of Women. A major topic of discussion was the Violence against Women Act signed into law by President Barack Obama on March 7, 2013. The Violence against Women Act, or VAWA, strives to prevent violence against women in the form of rape, domestic violence, and sexual violence. The VAWA enables women to take action against the injustices of our current society and become a united force in combating the issue of gender inequality. Mrs. Allyson Gutierrez, moderator of the Service Homeroom Program, describes her experience at the United Nations CSW 57: “Some of the highlights for me were an event about Sports as an innovative strategy to address gender-based violence during which we heard from women who have dedicated their lives to empowering young women through involving them in sports, mostly in areas of the world where girls are not expected to compete. To see the devotion of these women, and the results that their work was getting—girls going to school, university, going on to become coaches and advocates—was nothing less than inspiring. 14 Catherine Muldoon ’13, a member of the Service Homeroom Program, stated: “The first event that I attended involved a group discussion about the United Nations’ millennium goals. This session was intended for participants under the age of twenty-four, and really allowed us to engage in great conversation about these standards that the UN wishes to achieve. For the majority of this event, our discussions took place in a small group setting. During this time, I was able to speak with young women from Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Papa New Guinea, Los Angeles, and Texas. I felt extremely empowered to be a part of this pivotal movement that connects so many areas of the world. At TMLA we are taught to live our lives as women of dignity. To me, part of this responsibility includes doing whatever possible to ensure that women worldwide are also given the respect that they deserve. Attending the CSW 57 conference allowed me to feel as if I really could help make the change that our world so desperately needs.” S. Griselda Martinez Morales Somos MÁS There are more of us Annie Fernández, Academia María Reina, Co-Minister L ast summer I traveled to Brentwood, New York with a group of high school students. We were to join other representatives of our sister schools as participants in a leadership workshop provided by the Sisters of Saint Joseph. Held at the Congregation’s Mother House, the workshop taught us about the history, values and mission of the Sisters of Saint Joseph. These visionary women have been evangelizing, educating and serving women for more than three centuries. Over a four-day period we heard story after story about what humans can accomplish when we invest our hearts and our wills. Those days constituted a memorable interlude of peace, harmony and hope. We all felt inspired, but then…we were plunged back into reality! And we were asked to use the tools we had acquired to share with others what we had learned. That is how three Academia María Reina students, Camila Cayere, Camelia Del Valle and Cristina Rivera joined the CSJ It Forward group, in which three AMR students already participated: Graciela Arana, Elena Céspedes and Cristina De La Torre. Even before we returned to Puerto Rico we started to discuss what we could do to fulfill our promise of “forwarding” what we had learned. I proposed that we could use art to convey our message. Puerto Rico is undergoing a serious social crisis. It is therefore a most appropriate time to rescue and exalt the Christian values that characterize our people – the values of justice, generosity and reconciliation that are also the foundation of the Sisters of Saint Joseph’s mission. Our project took shape. We would do an exhibition of collective art in which each artwork would be a cry of hope. A theme emerged: “There are more of us…” (Somos Más, in Spanish) as our guiding principle. After all, we strongly believe that there are more of us who are good of heart. We rallied the entire student body asking them to participate in the project. Soon, it was not enough to limit this message to the confines of Academia María Reina. We wanted to engage more people. Thanks to student donations we were able to provide canvas to the social centers we serve through our Christian Community in Action (CCA) program. We joined efforts with our PTA and Alumnae Association. We made presentations about our project to other schools and seven of them joined in. Through word of mouth the idea caught on and 7 schools, 19 organizations, the municipality of Vieques and individual supporters also came on board. The result is an impressive exhibition of 1281 works of art. It was contagious. Painting one canvas was not enough –there was so much to say! We fulfilled our promise. The mission of the Sisters of Saint Joseph has again touched the lives of thousands of people, this time through art. And, in the process, we learned some very valuable lessons: • There are more Picassos out there than we ever thought was possible. • Art humanizes us and, when it is given its rightful place in a curriculum, extraordinary things happen. • We must dare to dream, and dream big because, as we have seen, hard work makes dreams come true. • And last, there are more of us, the good ones are more. Our values are not lost. We just have to rescue them, one canvas at a time. 15 Bees... Bees Associates forward the CSJ Mission Last night, as I was sleeping, I dreamt-marvelous error!that I had a beehive here inside my heart. And the golden bees were making white combs, and sweet honey from all my old failures... Spiritual Direction The Learning Connection Hospice Volunteer Eucharistic Minister The ceremony of commitment for new Associates was celebrated on April 13, 2013 in Sacred Heart Chapel. Associates and sponsors were S. Phyllis Esposito, Mary Ann Gassier-Sadler, Carole Perez, Maureen Clinnin, Carol DeMangin, S. Josephine Olimpieri, Mary Anne Geskie. Last night, as I slept I dreamt- marvelous error!that it was God I had here inside my heart. —Antonio Machado Phil Marinelli, Sacred Heart Academy, Co-Minister O n April 20 a group of bee lovers gathered in the Brentwood Ecology Center to listen to master beekeeper Richie Blohm speak about the life of honey bees and their vital beauty and importance in the web of life. From an informative power-point presentation we learned things trivial, fascinating and disturbing. We learned how each bee has a role to play in the construction of a hive, the gathering of pollen, the making of honey and the care for offspring. Honey bees consist of drones, workers and the queen. Drones are males and they are produced if the Queen chooses not to fertilize an egg. All the workers are female. In light of this fact, Richie reminded us of a quote from Margaret Thatcher: “If you want something said, ask a man. If you want something done, ask a woman.” Queen bees are created by worker bees deciding to feed the larva only royal jelly throughout its term, instead of switching to pollen, a source of protein. Whether Queen, drone or worker, all work for the common good of the hive and, ultimately the good of the planet. To the untrained eye all bees may look the same, but we saw pictures highlighting how the body of each type of bee is quite different in length and width. Bees collect pollen from all sorts of plants and use this pollen as nutrients in brood-rearing. As is widely known, bees are responsible for pollinating a host of plants. This pollination is utterly vital for the reproduction of food sources, not only for us two-leggeds, but for all animals and creepy-crawlies. So vital are bees and pollination to ongoing life and agriculture that pollination services are valued in the billions of dollars. 16 Catechist Pastoral Care Work with Mentally Ill FORWARDING THE CSJ MISSION Drive Elderly Shopping Master beekeeper Rich Blohm presented at the Ecology Center in the Academy of St. Joseph building. Food Pantry Parish and Family Ministry Disturbing is the recent phenomena called Colony Collapse Disorder, where 35-70% of hives have died off in North America; a decline unprecedented in recent history. The reasons for this phenomena are not entirely known. It may be related to such factors as climate chaos, but Richie and many beekeepers are very concerned about the use of systemic pesticides like neonicotinoids that work their way in and through the plant and are harming bees’ brains, interfering with their ability to learn and remember. Throughout this fascinating presentation the humming of bees was present in the portable hive that Richie brought with him. During a break we were able to look inside the hive and see these beautiful creatures doing what they do best. The honey bees we were looking at are not aggressive. Neither are wasps who depend on their size to ward off aggressors. As most of us know, it’s those yellow jackets you have to avoid. Lector Maria Regina: Mary Ann Majeski,Vernessa Gomez, Rose Marie Rodda, Marie Gallagher, Audrey Montes, Ann Imperiale Consolation Ministry Maria Regina Residence Stella Maris Convent St. Joseph’s Convent CSJ Office of Spirituality Liturgy Committee EME Southside Hospital The Learning Connection: Donna Herrington,Tina Cafaro By the end of the presentation, we all left well informed about the life of bees and their importance to all of us. We also left with a sweet reverence for these little creatures and a desire to protect them. Providence House: (c.) Liz Tully St. Patrick’s, Smithtown: Florinda Minutoli As Co-Director of the Associates for the last seven years, Liz Tully has carried the work and spirit in a most effective manner, including a great sense of humor. Now, as she leaves this position, she also leaves a legacy of genuine service to and love for the whole Associate Program. May she thrive well in her new place of work as well as in her ongoing Associate life. St. Joseph’s Convent: (l.) Arleen Brigandi, (r.) Deborah Jean Cheshire Archives: Mary Anne Geskie St. Joseph’s Villa, Hampton Bays Retreat Work Thrift Shop Baby Blankets for Anti-Abortion Clinic Providence House Fundraiser for HOPE Program Member Council of Catholic Women Webmaster for Parish Website Parish Music Program Eucharistic Ministry to Homes RCIA Team Leader 17 P r o v i d e nc e H o us e Reflection Presented on Ribbon Cutting for New Permanent Supportive Housing Project St. Joseph’s Day Barbara Traola, St. Joseph’s College, Co-Minister Janet Kinney, CSJ, Executive Director O n May 10, 2013 the Providence House community along with local dignitaries, our benefactors and friends gathered for the ribbon-cutting for the new 46-unit permanent supportive housing apartment building located in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn. The building is named the D’Addario Residence for our long-time benefactors, Jim and Janet D’Addario. It was truly a celebration of the best of who we are, individuals from many different paths, working together to make our city a place where all are welcomed and helped to find a safe and affordable place to live. The presence of the Sisters of St. Joseph and our sponsored ministries was very much a part of the day. Students from Bishop Kearney High School and The Mary Louis Academy prepared welcome baskets for each new tenant; in addition, the beautiful photography of S. Pat Manning adorns the public spaces on the first floor. Members of the Congregation and sisters who lived in our Providence Houses participated in the day as well. In addition to the many sisters who attended, S. Helen Kearney, CSJ President, gave the invocation, and Sisters Marie Lenihan, Elaine Roulet, and Marion Defeis gave a blessing to the residence, during which all present joined in singing the David Haas song “All Are Welcome,” as we welcomed all who will live in this newest Providence House. The scarcity of permanent supportive housing for lowincome and special needs individuals and families was touched upon by all who spoke at the event. We know this challenge intimately at Providence Houses and so we stand committed to building more of this much needed housing. Next spring we will celebrate the opening of a 22-unit permanent supportive housing building in the Prospect-Lefferts Gardens neighborhood of Brooklyn. —Ribbon Cutting Ceremony on May 10, 2013 —Sisters Janet Kinney (Executive Director), Joan Dillon and Rosemarie Figlia with Kearney HS students —The D’Addario Residence CSJ DEVELOPMENT EVENTS It is the hope of the Providence House community that our contribution in building these residences will encourage the construction of additional affordable housing units in NYC so that our mission “to address the causes of injustice and work towards the full and fruitful participation in the community of those with whom we share life” be made a reality. As the Dalai Lama once said: “You are the people who are shaping a better world.” The Providence House community is grateful for the presence and support of so many in helping us create a more peaceful and equitable community through the building of the D’Addario Residence. It was indeed, a very special day. 18 Planned Giving Seminar: Marion Wagner, Elvira and John Reymond, Pamela Hammon, Barbara Townsend Guild Luncheon: Kay Myles Hartley who has been active in the Guild for over 50 years with daughters S. Elizabeth and Eileen W e come together to honor Joseph, the patron saint of St. Joseph’s College and the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph. In the manner of St. Joseph, these remarkable women have been models of grace, diligence, courage, and strength. They have left their indelible marks, particularly on one girl. I would like to tell you a story of that little girl who was influenced profoundly by the Sisters of St. Joseph. She grew up in Brooklyn more than 60 years ago. She lived across the street from a convent in the parish of Our Lady of Perpetual Help (fondly referred to as OLPH). Often, she would watch from her second floor window as these mysterious women in their unusual costumes (habits) would come and go in a quiet, prayerful way. She was intrigued as she watched the sisters hanging their wash on the clothes line, doing chores, sitting and praying in their garden. As she grew, her admiration and infatuation for the “sisters of the neighborhood” grew, too. She would dress up and play school. She even recruited her little brothers. Tommy, Jimmy, Billy, and Jackie, although reluctant to play, would be summoned as S. St. Thomas, S. James Edward, S. Willamina and S. John Michael. As the girl matured, she eventually became more aware of the apostolic works (ministries) of the sisters. She learned of the rich and fascinating history of the Sisters of St. Joseph. Through the historical research and writings of S. Joan Ryan in “A Look Back in Time…,” she learned that the story of the Sisters of St. Joseph began in a small village of Le Puy, France in 1650 with six ordinary women, Barbara Traola with her brother, Billy two of whom were only 15 years old, when they answered their call. (“S.Willamina”) at his First Communion These original six were courageous women who committed their lives to the service of God and their neighbors. Like Joseph, they were ready for anything and everything. They staffed orphanages, visited the sick, worked in parishes, were committed to learning, opened schools, founded convents. They served as nurses, cooks, and teachers. They were fearless pioneers and missionaries too. Some were imprisoned, others executed, some even beheaded at the guillotine during the French Revolution. Most importantly, they all offered their talents and gifts generously to serve all people, particularly the poor and oppressed. The story of the Sisters of St. Joseph matters today, just as it mattered over 360 years ago. The way in which the sisters live their lives in community has influenced, inspired, and encouraged so many, particularly that one little girl from 59th Street. Her admiration and respect for the Sisters of St. Joseph has not waned from kindergarten to elementary school, through high school, college and beyond, which is why her commitment to St. Joseph’s College has continued for over 40 years. Therefore, it is fitting that I (that little girl grown-up) and the community of St. Joseph’s College, which was founded by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Brentwood, recognize and celebrate these women. Together, let us thank all the sisters - past, present and future - for responding to their “Joseph call” to live a life that is simple, prayerful, courageous, and compassionate. With the grace of God, in the days and years to come, may the Sisters of St. Joseph continue to be committed to works of mercy in their teaching, health care ministry, religious education, social service, pastoral care, special education, prison ministry, counseling, retreat work, and shelters for women. We pray for God’s blessings on the Sisters of St. Joseph as they continue to go about doing “Whatever is possible for women to do, which we (all) know is simply everything.” (US Federation Sisters of St. Joseph Blog) http://sistersofsaintjosephfederation.org 19 LIKE A CELTIC KNOT Virginia Dowd, Archivist P did twenty children. A few days after the fire, a newspaper reporter interviewed Mother de Chantal about the tragedy and asked her to specify how many boys were in the orphanage at the time of the fire and how many were missing. She calmly explained why his questions could not be answered: many of the 800 children were scattered and had been taken in by kindly neighbors or their extended families, and had not yet been located. Years later, in response to a question about the St. John’s Home fire, she acknowledged that she remembered very little of that event because of the enormous emotional stress she suffered at the time. She recounted the difficulty of accounting for and gathering the children back to the Home. The photo in question is an informal picture of two Sisters in traditional habit. It is a black-and-white photograph that would be impossible to date, except for the rear end of what appears to be a horse-drawn carriage on the right side. Something above them has their attention, but it is out of view for us. There seems to be a third Sister on the wooden walkway behind the taller Sister who is pointing. The hills in the background and the rectangular structures in the field behind them offer no clue as to the location. The Sisters are smiling, and there is something familiar about them—even to me, who could never have known them. It was shortly after this fire that Sister Jane Frances, a young novice, was sent to St. John’s. The conditions were discouraging, with long-ranging after-effects of the fire undermining the children’s health, and they fell victim to scarlet fever and diphtheria. Those gifts that Mother de Chantal had early recognized in the young Margaret Dowling helped her address the situation, and must have brought some comfort to the grieving Superintendent. hotographs can be both the blessing and the bane of an archives. Finding a previously unknown photographic portrait of someone is a joyful experience. Likewise, a newly discovered photo of an event adds a richness to our understanding of it. But when an unidentified, undated photo is discovered, the guesswork involved in its identification can be frustrating when we realize there may never be complete certitude about it. Happily, the research benefits us with ancillary discoveries made along the way. I recently came across one such unidentified photo and puzzling it out led to some interesting insights into two of the most beloved Sisters of the Congregation. The Sisters seem familiar because they appear to be Sister (later Mother) Jane Frances Dowling and Mother de Chantal Keating. Hanging in the archives is a well-known portrait of them, unusual because it is a double formal portrait, and touching because it testifies to their unique bond. Sister Mary Ignatius Meany, in By Railway or Rainbow, noted that Mother de Chantal knew the young Margaret Dowling from when she was a “boarder at St. Malachy’s.” Years later, Mother de Chantal requested of Mother Teresa Mullen that Margaret, upon entering the Congregation, receive a form of her own name—a variation of St. Jane Frances de Chantal—and that she be sent to St. John’s Home to teach the boys. Mother Teresa obviously consented to both requests and Sister Jane Frances received her training from Mother de Chantal at St. John’s Home. She eventually became her Assistant, and, upon Mother de Chantal’s death in 1917, she assumed her mentor’s mantle as Superintendent of St. John’s. Ignatian principles and Salesian spirituality inspired their lives, and were as intertwined as their names. Jane Keating (even her baptismal name was prophetic!) was originally given Mary Frances de Chantal as a religious name; in time the Frances was dropped. When Margaret Dowling became Jane Frances 20 at Mother de Chantal’s request, the link between them was cemented. A census record from 1880 attests to the fact that 11-year-old Maggie Dowling was at St. Malachy’s when Mother de Chantal was Superintendent, for she is listed among the children in residence. It was not a boarding school, but a home or asylum for children who had lost one or both parents, or whose parents were too destitute to care for them. Maggie’s father, a policeman, had died four years earlier. Quite likely it was Sister Mary Joseph Flynn, her aunt, who arranged placement for the young Margaret Dowling at St. Malachy’s. In this light, their relationship becomes more poignant: Mother de Chantal not only knew the future Sister Jane Frances then, but nurtured her as a mother might. After the death of Mother Baptista Hanson in February 1883, Mother de Chantal left St. Malachy’s and took her place as Superintendent of St. John’s Home. Her gifts of compassion and organization and her experience with wounded Civil War soldiers in Wheeling, West Virginia, would more than fully prepare her for dealing with an orphan asylum of boys. She would spend her next 34 years ministering there, and Margaret Dowling would soon join her. There was a terrible fire at St. John’s Home in Brooklyn in December of 1884, a week before Christmas. It started in the laundry room of a building that included the infirmary for children with eye diseases, and the disaster was compounded by the first snowstorm of the winter which hindered the rescue effort. Sister Mary Josephine Brady, the infirmarian, perished in the fire, as Like her mentor, Sister Jane Frances quickly became known for the talent she had in dealing with the boys. Mary Woodlock, a niece of Mother de Chantal, once wrote to Sister Mary Ignatius that “she [Sister Jane Frances] was a perfect genius in dealing with the boys. The Home at its peak was home for almost a thousand, and with so many to handle some of the dear Sisters were a bit remote, even austere, in their methods. Not Mother Jane. She could look at a snivelling youngster just ‘committed,’ and see clear through to his essence, and know the best way to deal with him and win his confidence.” After the fire, so an old story goes, the Sisters received all kinds of donations, including some bolts of fancy fabric out of which they made ties for the boys. Some wealthy gentlemen sponsored an outing of Home boys and Sisters to Coney Island, and the orphans were dressed in their best clothes, including the ties and straw hats. The sponsors insisted that they would mind the boys on the beach, while the Sisters enjoyed themselves on the boardwalk. Mother Jane, with some misgiving, agreed, but had not gone too far when she was called back. The boys had immediately, in various stages of dress and undress, plunged into the water and, to the desperate pleas of the men to “Come IN!” were shouting back gleefully, “Come OUT!” However, as soon as Mother Jane appeared on the beach, there was instant silence, and they all scrambled out of the water, grabbing whatever clothes they could find. The last youngster out found that his clothes had been taken by someone else and was left with only hat and tie. These boys, who proudly called themselves the “Army of Jacks,” revered Mother Jane Frances just as their predecessors had Mother de Chantal. Both women were “a powerful influence for good” in the lives of these boys and perhaps that is the greatest compliment of all. The Irish immigrant girl and the half-orphan, an unlikely pair in terms of age and experience, shared a common bond expressed in their vocations as Sisters of St. Joseph. One left a legacy of heroic work in a time of war while the other became Superior of the Congregation. Both will be remembered for the motherly concern they lavished on their “Home Boys.” Was it the inspiration of the great name they shared that tightened the bond of their friendship? Mother Jane Frances Dowling and Mother de Chantal Keating 21 Jean Philip Brady, CSJ and Miriam Anna Morgan, CSJ had a newly renovated Hall named after them in Epiphany Church in Williamsburg where they had each served for 40 years. The Hall will be used for a soup kitchen and a meeting place for CCD classes. Sisters in the News The Christine Mulready, CSJ Peacemaker of the Year Award was given to Janet Kinney, CSJ by the Metro New York Chapter of Pax Christi for her leadership and continued expansion of the Providence Houses. This occurred on Sunday, May 19, 2013. Janet was also recognized as one of Brooklyn’s Extraordinary Women by D.A. Charles Hynes. On April 26, 2013, a Doctorate of Humane Letters was conferred on Joan Gallagher, CSJ by St. Francis College, Brooklyn for helping to transform our educational institutions from knowledge factories to Wisdom Schools. —S. Janet Kinney —S. Phyllis Esposito —S. Mary Ross —Sisters Miriam Anna Morgan and Jean Philip Brady At the NCEA Convention held in Houston, TX, Roberta Oberle, CSJ received the NY Region 2013 Distinguished Principal Award on April 2, 2013. The Tablet carried a lengthy article covering the award. —S. John Raymond McGann Elizabeth Hill, CSJ received the Rev. Thomas J. Hartman Award for Life Achievement in the Field of Higher Education at the 50th Celebration of the Advancement for Commerce, Industry and Technology. On Easter Sunday, Helen Kearney, CSJ was interviewed on WABC Radio by host Deacon Kevin McCormack. During this sharing, she was able to give the history of the Community, praise Pope Francis for his sense of community and unity and his passion for the earth and its natural resources, share CSJ Directives and encourage all in the Baptismal call we all have as Church. She stated that we must let the desert places in our hearts bloom! On February 21, 2013,Vice President Joe Biden spoke at Western Connecticut State University on issues involving gun control and mental health. As Coordinator of the Instructional Leadership Doctoral Program at the University, Karen Burke, CSJ was invited to meet with the Vice President and ten family members of those killed in the Sandy Hook tragedy to respond to his talk. —S. Mary Albert Thompson —S. Elizabeth Hill —S. Joan Gallagher with family —S. Pat Chelius (l.) with Sisters Paul Marita Ducharme and Pat Walsh —S. Marge Miller (c.) with Sisters Suzanne Franck and Diane Androvich Virginia Lake, CSJ was the Grand Marshall of the St. Patricks Day Parade in Bay Ridge. Kathryn Schlueter, CSJ received the same distinction in Hampton Bays! —S. Agnes White (r.) with S. Mary Ellen Vesey Mary Albert Thompson, CSJ was honored by the Diocese of Rockville Centre at the Annual Vespers for Religious and later by her Parish, St. Joachim in Cedarhurst. Maryann McHugh, CSJ was an Honoree at Fontbonne Hall Academy’s 11th annual Fleur de Lys Dinner Dance. She was inducted into the Hall of Fame at the event that took place at Gargiulo’s on May 1, 2013. In May, Mary Ross, CSJ was appointed Administrative Judge at the city level on Rikers Island. She will be handling parole violations. 22 —S. Kerry M. Handal —S. Kathryn Schlueter —S.Virginia Lake with Sisters Rosemarie Baglivio and Maureen McDermott Along with eight other Principals from the Diocese of Brooklyn, the Diocese of Rockville Centre and the Archdiocese of New York, Agnes White, CSJ and Patricia A. Chelius, CSJ were recipients of the Catholic School Education Leadership Award on May 14, 2013.The award was given by The Fordham University Graduate School of Education in recognition of their extraordinary faith-filled leadership during the crisis and in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy. The Brooklyn Diocesan Office of Faith Formation honored Helene Conway, CSJ and Dolores Crepeau, CSJ for 40 years and Flora Marinelli, CSJ for 30 years in service to the Ministry of Faith Formation. In recognition of her lifelong contribution to Catholic Faith and Formation, Angela Gannon, CSJ received the Faith and Service Award. This occurred on May 23, 2013 at the Immaculate Conception Center. Phyllis Esposito, CSJ was named Woman of the Year in the Area of Religion by the Town of Islip. Margaret Mary (Marge) Miller, CSJ received the prestigious Stewardship Award on March 22, 2013. It was awarded by St. Martin of Tours School in Amityville at their Spring Gala. Maria Pascuzzi, CSJ Dean of the School of Theology and Ministry at St. Thomas University and Elsie Miranda from Barry University (both in Florida) were interviewed and participated in discussion on WPBT2’s “Issues” on March 28, 2013. The topic concerned the newly elected Pope Francis. Delighted that he seems to be bringing his community experience of Jesuit life to the pastoral care of the people, both agreed that the Pope’s merciful and compassionate demeanor will encourage on-going dialogue with people of all faiths and countries. —S. Roberta Oberle In March 2013, Kerry M. Handal, CSJ was appointed to the Diocese of Rockville Centre Bishop’s Advisory Committee for Catholic Education. In April 2013, she was asked to serve as the Chair of the Diocese of Rockville Centre’s Education Commission. John Raymond McGann, CSJ received an honorary degree from St. John’s University on May 31 as a lifetime achievement award in recognition of all she has done since she received her “real” doctorate from St. John’s 50 years ago. —S. Maryann McHugh (l.) with family The Haven Society honored Elaine Roulet, CSJ on May 31 for her 25 years working with “Our Journey,” the retreat program for exoffenders. 23 Non-Profit Organization US Postage PAID Brentwood, NY PERMIT NO. 10 St. Joseph’s Convent 1725 Brentwood Rd. Brentwood, NY 11717 beyond our CSJ Boundaries: We realize that as we look towards the future, our charism calls us to engagement in ever wider circles of unioning love. We celebrate the many “futuring” conversations taking place in our congregation, conversations that encourage us to look beyond structures so that we might imagine what is possible for those who love and serve God and the dear neighbor. Draw us to contemplation and silence so that we might see, in wonder, our lives intertwined with all of creation. Help us to see the birth, growth, death and rebirth so as to give us courage in the ongoing creation story. In the spirit of our patron Joseph, we are called to be dreamers, to envision a world where peace and unity abide and where we, with all of God’s creation, will live in harmony. —Linda Pero, CSJ, Assembly Litany, March 16, 2013 Theme Photographs, Niagara Falls, Pat Manning, CSJ 24