Monthly Archives: September 2010

Being “visited”

IHM Vocation team: Srs. Mary Bea Keeley, Julie Vieira, and Carol Quigley after their meeting with the Apostolic Visitators

I’m sure you’re aware of the Apostolic Visitation being conducted with religious women’s communities in America. Vocations/ Formation is a major focus of the AV. The Visitation of the IHM Congregtion here in Monroe has been taking place for the last two days.  Our IHM Membership team (including Srs. Mary Fran Gilleran, Carol Quigley and Helen Ingles, Monica Stuhlreyer, Julie Vieira and I) met this morning with Srs. Dominica and Angela, Dominicans from Springfield, Illinois and Nashville Tennessee respectively.  Sr. Carol Quigley set the context and Sr. Julie Vieira, and I gave presentations on vocations and  formation for vowed membership, and Sr. Monica Stuhlreyer,  the history and new movements in the associate program.   The visitors remarked afterward what energy they felt in the room as we shared. They had picked up our excitement about IHM vocations and hope for the future of religious life. It was a good meeting.
I have to admit to ambivalent feelings, though. There is a  warm, “sisterly” spirit about the the way our visitors have interacted with us.  They seem open and  appreciative about who we are. However, the lack of transparency from Rome about the reasons for the Visitation and also the fact that religious communities will not see a report after the Visitation fosters such uneasiness about the process.
So, how are we after our visit? Probably even more grateful for our IHM life. The last lines of  ”God’s Grandeur,”  a poem by Gerard Manley Hopkins come to mind. He speaks of hope in difficult times  He is hopeful:
“Because the Holy Ghost
over the bent world
broods
with warm breast  and
 ah! bright wings. “

What did I do today?

Srs. Anne Mamienski and Margaret Ann Henige at work

Would you believe, stand on a ladder in a pick up truck picking gingko leaves for over four hours? I did it with Sister Anne Mamienski , IHM who is actually still recuperating from a motorcycle accident in July; Sister Margaret Henige, IHM,  her long time partner in this project; and Pat Meyer, IHM Associate. I hope Pat won’t mind my saying that she and I were definitely the wimps. When we stopped after the four hours, Anne and Margaret Ann were going to start on another tree.

Let me tell you the story. For the last 16 years, Anne Mamienski, IHM, has taken time out from her full-time ministry to pick leaves. Each fall, Sister Anne, who currently ministers as pastoral associate at St. Thecla Parish in Clinton Township, Mich., harvests leaves from the gingko trees on the IHM Motherhouse campus. The leaves have been prized for centuries for their medicinal properties. With the exception of a step ladder, Sister Anne and a small, dedicated crew don’t rely on any modern equipment to help them with the harvest.

“The leaves are carefully hand-picked and gathered in leaf bags,” Sister Anne explains. “We twist the individual leaf off, rather than pull it off to minimize the chance of damage to the tree or to the leaf itself.”

Medicinal gingko opens capillaries in the brain so more oxygen gets in. When used in conjunction with Vitamin E, it may slow the onset or progression of Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia.

 Sister Anne learned about the gingko tree while studying for her master’s degree in holistic health. She knew there were several gingko trees on the Motherhouse property and contacted a local herbalist, who taught her how to harvest the leaves and agreed to purchase the harvest.

 Sister Anne brings the herbalist a sample of the leaves just as they begin to turn yellow, usually around mid-September. Based on the chemical components of the sample, he is able to tell her when they will be at their peak for medicinal purposes.

 “We have about a four-day window to pick the leaves,” Sister Anne says. “If we harvest too soon or too late, they’re useless. We can’t wait until they fall to the ground.”

 Typically Sister Anne and a few helpers harvest 125 pounds of leaves over three days. On average, the crew collects between 100-175 pounds of leaves annually. Depending on weight, the harvest earns between $1,000-$2,000 for the congregation. “We’ve never made less than $1,000,” Sister Anne notes.

 The herbalist takes the leaves to a processing plant where they are ground, soaked in an alcohol and water mixture for six months, then pressed to eliminate excess moisture.

“Anyone interested in purchasing medicinal gingko should work with a certified herbalist so you know exactly what you’re getting,” Sister Anne cautions. “The products in grocery stores, and even many health food stores, may not be the potency you expect or need and may also have additives and preservatives, so become an informed consumer.” Sr. Anne obviously knows what she is talking about!

IHM Peacemakers

  

Therese Terns, IHM Associate and Srs. Ann Nett, Alice Baker and Marie Cyril Delisi

The U.S. Social Forum (USSF) was held in Detroit June 22-26. It was not a conference but an opportunty to come up with the peoples’ solutions to global, national and local crises. The IHM Peacemakers participated in the march for the opening ceremonies. Joan Mumaw, IHM, reflects on this powerful experience.  

For me, this quote from Robert F. Kennedy says it all. “Each time people stand up for an ideal, or act to improve the lot of others, or strike out against injustice, they send forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, these ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression .”

And we were there.

 There was little press coverage of the event in spite of more than 10,000 people gathered to strategize in preparation for the next World Social Forum in Dakar, Senegal in 2011. Coverage preceding the forum spoke fearfully of activists coming to the city. But all was peaceful as participants joined in hundreds of workshops focused on raising awareness of the many social issues of our time.

 This was truly a hope-filled experience for me and I am convinced that the work we have done, and are doing, as IHMs to create a more just, peaceful and sustainable world is being carried on by young people the world over. ■
 

  

 
 
 
 
 

 

And we were there.
From the very start of the march, the energy and enthusiasm of thousands of people, mostly young, were contagious. Groups representing the poor and marginalized around the globe joined the march as it wound down Woodward Avenue and on to Washington Boulevard toward Cobo Hall. I found colleagues from Africa Action, Michigan Peace Team and many other familiar and not-so-familiar groups joining in a groundswell on behalf of the voiceless and those marginalized by society.

Meet our Sisters in South Africa

2010 marks the 25th anniversary of IHM Sisters ministering in South Africa. IHM Sisters Judy (John Vincent) Coyle, Peg (Cornelia) O Shea, Sue Rakoczy and Annette (Madonna Marie) St. Amour currently minister there.

In 1983, the Redemptorists in South Africa invited IHM Provincial Mary Jo (Patrick Ellen) Maher, IHM, to establish a mission community in the country. Sisters Judy Coyle, Eileen (Amy) Karrer and Annette St. Amour began a two-year process of preparation. Sister Annette Boyle, who already had extensive experience in South Africa through a prayer ministry in the mid-1970s, was the fourth original member of the mission.

In 1985, apartheid was in full force, and the country was experiencing violent civil unrest. In spite of the very real danger, the IHM missionaries arrived in South Africa in October.

Over the past 25 years, IHM South African ministries have included parish administration, pastoral ministry, nursing, opening preschools, teaching sewing classes and college courses, fundraising and ministry to people of all ages infected and affected by AIDS.

Sister Judy Coyle says, “After 19 years at St. Joseph’s Theological Institute in Natal, I am now in my fifth year as a lecturer at St. Augustine College in Johannesburg, an independent Catholic college that opened 11 years ago.

“The college is on the edge,” Sister Judy continues. “Our numbers are small, our space is limited and funding is a constant concern. Nonetheless, its ethos is a distinct alternative to the vast state universities, and it is a contact point with other Catholic institutions worldwide seeking some connection to the continent.”

“The gift of working here is learning from the people we have come to serve,” says Sister Peg O’Shea. “My ministries in South Africa have included sharing the spirituality of St. Alphonsus with Redemptorist postulants and students; working at Redemptorist Pastoral Publications; and serving in pastoral ministry.

“Parish ministry in Howick has given me the opportunity to reach out to the poor and abandoned through a preschool for poor children, activism for street children and education and support for people affected/infected with HIV/AIDS. My ministries help me reflect upon the values of South African cultures - and especially the ability of people to address suffering and challenge with hope.”

Sister Sue Rakoczy says, “I am a lecturer in spirituality and systemtic theology at St. Joseph’s Theological Institute, Cedara, where I also coordinate the post-graduate program with the University of KwaZulu-Natal. I feel especially committed to preparing the next generation of women theologians in Africa. Women’s voices and contributions are vitally needed by all Christian communities on this continent.”

Sister Annette St. Amour’s early years in South Africa brought rich experiences through pastoral work, visiting five rural mission communities of farm workers and building Gospel-sharing groups and catechumenate communities. 

“A highlight was participating in voter education, serving as a monitor/official observer and as a permanent resident, voting in the monumental first democratic election of 1994 when Nelson Mandela was elected president,” she recalls.

Currently, Sister Annette ministers in Durban as diocesan catechetical coordinator. Her work focuses on supporting parish coordinators and formation of catechists. Responsibilities have included compiling an age-appropriate AIDS curriculum for catechetical sessions, developing a holistic moral curriculum for adolescents and training for the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd as well as creating deanery training teams.    

If you would like to partner with the IHM Sisters

Why not?

Why not “Come and See” IHM life at our Motherhouse in Monroe, Michigan? Sister Julie and I are excited about our upcoming Come and See weekend, October 8-10.  The weekend provides a chance to meet and talk with other discerners, get some tips on discernment and, of course, get a feel for the IHM spirit.