Category Archives: Meet IHMs

Info from IHM Web in Joining section

Words from Another IHM Pro, Sr. Pat

When Sr. Pat Glaab and I sat down to talk about vocations today she shared that the word ”home” has impacted her whole life.  She said it is that place where she somehow knows she “fits.” Here’s more of what she said:

More from the pros!

Sr. Donna Hart (below) is one of the wisest women I know.  When asked for advice she is most likely to reflect a minute and then say something like, “Mary have you thought about…?” She makes it impossible to feel judged or dumb. While I was discerning a call to this ministry of vocation/formation director, talking with her about it was very helpful.  She listened, asked questions, and then a few days later sent me an email with more questions I might reflect on.
Yesterday I asked her if I could video what she would offer to a woman considering religious life. You will see that she offers you questions to ponder as well.

Meet Sister Kate Pierce, IHM

 

Sister Kathryn T. (Catherine Ann) Pierce,IHM, expected to be a classroom teacher for many years, but working in cross-cultural settings changed her mind.
Sister Kate taught in both the Catholic and public school systems in Puerto Rico for 14 years while earning a master’s degree in cross-cultural education. After she left Puerto Rico, she lived in the south Bronx.
“I intended to prepare to go to Tanzania for mission work,” she recalls. “Instead, whileserving on the IHM Vice Provincial leadership team, I became acquainted with the Maryknollers when I was studying for a degree in liberation theology and scripture at their School of Theology.
“When I completed my degree, Tanzania and Uganda were at war, so I wasn’t able to follow my original plan. The Maryknoll Society asked me to work in its newly created Center for Mission Studies. They provided a basic outline but I had the freedom and responsibility to decide what the center would do.”
The center initially focused on easing the transition for those who planned to minister in a different culture and those returning to their home cultures. As the center evolved, Sister Kate added programs about cultural diversity and acculturation, developed for international priests and religious entering ministry in the United States.

Sister Kate spent 27 years with Maryknoll cross-cultural services. When Maryknoll closed the center in 2006, she moved the office to Detroit and, with the support of a 12-member board, the work continues asIntercultural Consultation Services  (ICS).

 

Sister Kate takes ICS programs overseas twice a year,but spends most of her time traveling throughout the United States preparing religious groups and others for intercultural ministry.

“Before people can effectively minister in another culture, they must be very aware of themselves and their own cultural biases,” she says. They need to spend time reflecting on and discerning their call.”

Respecting cultural diversity, learning cross-cultural conflict management and developing skills for intercultural living and working are critical components to Sister Kate’s ministry. Equally important is helping people who are returning to their country of origin – what she calls their “passport country.”

“When I came back to United States, I really didn’t give much thought to how I’d changed after 14 years in Puerto Rico,” Sister Kate reflects. “I learned firsthand how important it is to spend time on the re-entry process and ask the question, ‘Who am I now  as a result of my experiences?’“After spending years away, your country of origin isn’t ‘home’ anymore,” she explains. “You have changed. Your family and friends have changed and you see your country from a different perspective. It can take two years or more to re-create it as ‘home’ as you honor your intercultural experiences.” In 2000, Sister Kate received the Mission Award from the U.S. Catholic MissionAssociation for her dedication and commitment to cross-cultural mission issues.

Our Sr. Nancy Lee, Iconographer for Immigrants


Nancy Lee Smith, IHM, was commissioned to write an icon of St. Toribio Romo Gonzalaz to be installed, along with a first-class relic of St. Torbio, at Holy Redeemer Church in Detroit.

 St. Toribio was murdered by Mexican government troops in 1928. Since the early 1970s, there have been reports of his assistance to Mexicans crossing into the United States surreptitiously. He is considered by many to be the patron saint of undocumented immigrants. 

The icon depicts St. Toribio holding a road-crossing sign depicting a fleeing family in black silhouette. It was commissioned by a Holy Redeemer parishioner. 

The relic, a bone fragment, came from Santa Ana de Guadalupe in Jalisco State, Mexico, to the Archdiocese of Detroit on Nov. 3. After a brief stop at St. Joseph Studio on the IHM Motherhouse campus, it was received by Archbishop Allen Vigneron. Currently, the relic is being taken to various parishes within the Hispanic community. It was installed at Holy Redeemer in a glass-fronted reliquary. Nancy Lee’s icon will hang above it.

Dangerous Ministry in Mexico

Sisters Maria Antonia Aranda Diaz, Carmen Armenta Lara, Maureen Kelly and Julie (Marie Benedict) Slowik minister in Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico in pastoral care and human rights advocacy.

The sisters work to educate people about their rights; help provide the training needed for self-sufficiency; work toward community-building through personal contact with residents; and organize reflection groups to help achieve a vision of peace.

With the current situation in Juarez, the sisters also pray with, console and provide emotional support for the families affected by the violence.

This is excerpted from IHM Overseas Update.

During these last two years, the people of Juarez have experienced a very high level of daily violence because of a war between drug cartels and the failure at all levels of government to control and prevent this insecurity. Currently, Juarez is considered to be the most violent city in the world, with more than 5,000 assassinations related to the drug trafficking in the last two years. The majority of these killings have not been solved despite the city, state and federal police forces present in the city.

We experience the suffering and death of Jesus as a daily reality in the lives of the families with whom we live and work. We hear the voices of the women in Juarez, mothers, wives, daughters, sisters of people who have been killed.

The women say the police and the soldiers have not been able to control the violence. Family members have left Juarez because of threats of kidnapping. Many people cannot work openly or lose their jobs unjustly. Unemployment is high. Businesses have closed because of extortion - pay, close or be killed. Schools have been deserted because of gangs and lack of money. Normal activities are limited, both day and night.

The women say they feel like prisoners in their own homes. Their children cannot play in the park because of the insecurity. There is a sense of powerlessness, hopelessness and anger against, and fear of, the authorities.

But families try to respond positively to the situation. They maintain communication with one another and know where family members are. They avoid late hours, teach the children prevention and to look out for one another, pray with neighbors and try to create opportunities to share and celebrate together.

They do their best to continue their normal lives. Although some families say they have responded to the violence with fear and apathy and the hope that they won’t be attacked, others denounce the injustices and abuses, offering moral support to those in need. They accompany people who are suffering and try to share words of comfort.

As one woman said, “While we are alive, we must struggle for those who have died unjustly. We are the voice of justice.”

2010 marks 25 years the IHM Sisters have ministered in Mexico.