May We Give Birth to This Dream

Janice_McLaughlinCropped“Our missionary vocation is essentially a work of great expectations and lively hope.” These words of our founder Mother Mary Joseph, spoken in 1949, were sent to us by the Eden community for this General Assembly. They have a special relevance, I believe, to the work that we will be doing during these two weeks as we explore the meaning of our missionary vocation for today’s world. What are our great expectations? What is our hope?

As we gather together, 146 delegates and 6 official participants, who come from 18 countries, including the United States and work in 24 countries (including the USA), we reflect this global world in which we are living.

We meet at a time of many crises in this global village. Unless we are walking through life with our eyes closed, the signs of death and destruction are everywhere: melting ice caps, extreme weather; struggles over resources; migration of peoples from violence and climate change on a scale never seen before and the resulting trafficking and enslavement of people; water shortages and hunger on every continent; wars in Syria, Ukraine, Iraq, between Palestinians and Israelis; radical jihadist movements in northern Nigeria, Somalia, Syria and Iraq. Ebola outbreak in West Africa. The list is long and could go on.

In the midst of so many problems, so much violence and destruction – what is our hope? What are our expectations?  What is our role? We are rooted in the life and mission of Jesus; in the Gospel vision of a new heaven and a new earth; of a world turned upside down in the prophetic words of Mary’s Magnificat.  We ourselves have been stretched, transformed, turned upside down by our relationships with the poor and marginalized people with whom we live and work. Yes, we have acquired the smell of the sheep!

We are also rooted in a vision that is still unfolding – an evolutionary consciousness informed by recent scientific discoveries. This vision liberates us from a dualistic mentality and opens us to the lure of the cosmic Christ; a God of the future who invites us to be co-creators of a new world order.

We face many challenges, both within and without, some of which have been named in the reports of the CLT and the Treasurer. We have the opportunity to make decisions at this Assembly that will enable us to reshape or re-position ourselves for the future.

We will hear more about what this may entail from Ilia Delio, our keynote speaker, and from our Advisory Board. There will be briefings from the pre-gathering of newer members and from the vocation and integration circles as well as others that you may wish to convene.

The 23 proposals that have been submitted will form the basis for our discussion and may lead us to new insights and fresh discoveries. We will begin with some visioning about the world we wish to co-create together with partners who share our vision. “Behold I am doing something new. Can you not see it,” we are asked in Isaiah 43. Isaiah goes on to say: “I am opening up a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert.”

May our deliberations open our eyes to the new that has been emerging during our futuring workshops, leading to IAC (our 2011 Inter-Assembly Conference), and then our Centennial year, the induction of MMJ into the National Women’s Hall of Fame and during these months of preparation for our Assembly.  Are not these experiences the opening in the wilderness? Have we not been drinking from the rivers of an awakening consciousness in the desert of today’s compelling questions?

On September 15, we will recall Mollie’s resolve – her commitment to mission in 1910, when she did not yet know how this would unfold and where it would lead her. This gathering gives us the opportunity to recommitment ourselves to our mission charism, without knowing fully what it will mean in the future and where it will lead us. Mollie’s times are not our times. Can we discern together what her commitment means for us today and into the next millenium?

I am holding a Makonde carving from Tanzania, a tree of life representing the inter-relationships among the human family; as well as our unity with our earth family, one with all that is – ostriches, dung beetles, baobab trees, the stars, the planets, and all things. It also represents our union with one another, our sisters in Maryknoll as well as with our partners in mission, who are represented by the official participants at this Assembly. May it remind us of the world that God created and continues to create together with us. May it symbolize our common desire to be sisters and brothers to one another, co-creating the future that will respect all life. In the words of the Earth Charter: “Let ours be a time remembered for the awakening of a new reverence for life….”

Let us be prepared to embrace the dawn, however dark the night. In the words of Maya Angelou, renowned author and poet laureate who died earlier this year:

I, the Rock, I, the River, I, the Tree…

Lift up your faces,

You have a piercing need for this bright morning dawning for you.

History, despite its wrenching pain,

Cannot be unlived, but if faced

With courage, need not be lived again.

Lift up your eyes

Upon this day breaking for you.

Give birth again

To the dream.

May we give birth to the dream at this Assembly, one in mind and spirit, energized by Mollie’s vision, ready to embrace the dawn.

With these few words, I declare this 17th General Assembly officially opened.

— Sister Janice McLaughlin, MM

 

Responding to a Felt Need in Korea

Korea10202014I became acutely aware of the need for more anesthesia providers in Korea as I was working at Maryknoll Hospital in Busan (previously Pusan). In many small hospitals, the medical doctor first gave the anesthetic, then operated, with no one watching the patient. This led to many unnecessary deaths which affected me deeply. Soon a kernel of an idea was beginning to take form–why not extend myself by teaching others to do anesthesia.

This is what I did. In 1970, with the support of our hospital administrator, the first class of nurses began. These men and women are still active in anesthesia, and have done exemplary work in the field over the years. I am so proud of them. As the students completed their study, they easily found placements in local hospitals which recognized their excellence in administering safe “watchful care” anesthesia.

By 1974, as we grew, the need became apparent to form an association of nurse anesthetists for updating, ongoing study, sharing of experiences and fellowship with each other. This was begun and the Korean Association of Nurse Anesthetists (KANA) was born. Our first meeting had 27 members. This past year, the group numbered over 600 members.

The next step was to have the program recognized as a certified program with the National Ministry in Korea. By the late 1970s, the program received approval as a certified program for nurse anesthetists, recognized by the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs. This was a moment of sheer joy for us all. I realized, in implementing the above and know now for sure, that it could not have accomplished this without the support, dedication and enthusiasm of the courageous men and women whom I had taught over the years.

While attending international anesthesia meetings, I learned from others that Korea was not unique in its professional challenges. Many other countries are confronted with similar difficulties and challenges.  By supporting each other over country boundaries, we can succeed as one across the world.  So remembering this, I look forward with much hope to the future of Nurse Anesthesia (NA), not only in Korea but around the world and that it be recognized for the remarkable service it is giving to all people.

As I reflect on those early years of our growth, what was so quickly noticeable was: initiating the NA program was a response to a real, felt need in Korean society in the field of anesthesia. The development of the KANA responded to a need for stability and organization: united together, we could effectively face the obstacles in our professional development and delivery of anesthesia. The KANA succeeded because of its devoted and committed members. In the formative years we received much support and assistance from members of the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists (AANA), namely John Garde, Ron Caulk and Sandra Maree Ouellette, who came to Korea as  guest speakers several times at our annual meetings. We coordinated our meetings with those of the AANA and the IFNA, of which Korea is one of the Charter members.

I am pleased, honored and humbled to accept this prestigious award, the Hermi Lohnert Award–and very special thanks to the International Federation of Nurse Anesthetists (IFNA) board for selecting me, to the AANA for arranging this ceremony (held in Orlando, FL, on September 13, 2014), and to those who nominated me and supported my nomination. Also an enormous salute to Marianne Reisen of Switzerland, the other nominee for this year’s award. And thank you to my friends and colleagues in the field who have inspired me nationally and internationally, to ensure the relevance of nurse anesthesia in this changing world.

Lastly, I feel this award could rightly be given to the nurse anesthetists of Korea, for without them, nothing would have been developed over the years. I had the kernel of the idea, they were the leaven which made it increase and expand beyond our dreams or expectations!  Over the years, I  watched the development of the nurse anesthetists in Korea, and the advancements they have made personally and professionally in so many ways.  The people of Korea have been beneficiaries of excellent anesthesia care, and I realize how fortunate I am to leave this legacy to the nurse anesthetists of Korea, confident that they will continue to initiate timely advances in promoting the continued success of the profession on the Korean peninsula.

In closing, our Maryknoll Sisters foundress, Mary Josephine Rogers, left us a great legacy, and much wisdom. I quote her here, for it also applies to the work in Korea:

    “There is nothing more astonishing than life, just as it is,
Nothing more miraculous than growth and change and development,
Just as revealed to us.
And as happens so often when we stop to regard God’s work,
There is nothing to do but wonder and thank God,
Realizing how little we planned,
And yet how much has been done.”

                                                                              –Mother Mary Josephine Rogers, MM (1936)

I am extremely grateful for having been in anesthesia and having been assigned to Korea, where my life blossomed thanks to God’s grace and the many wonderful, faithful, creative and talented people with whom I met over the years. Thank you.
— Sister Margaret Kollmer MM

I Have Good News to Share

Fallon200x200_ClimateTo each one…

We wish to share the good news with each of you! At the People’s Climate March in New York City on Sunday (September 21, 2014), ten of our Maryknoll Sisters joined the marchers in a “quantum entanglement” of the peace-filled energy of the whole!

A coalition of more than 1,000 organizations, the People’s Climate March was a mass demonstration for climate action which they hope will inspire “action, not words” at the Climate Change Summit, taking place two days later at the United Nations. President Obama and other world leaders will attend the Summit, hosted by Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. It is seen as a critical moment to build momentum for a new international climate treaty that countries hope to finalize in Paris next December. Click to see more Maryknoll missioners at the march.

We hope you are entangled with us so that this threat to Earth will change to a new relationship with Earth and with each other…

That is what happened Sunday!

— Sister Jean Fallon, MM

What Humankind Is Meant To Be

ClimateMarch200x200We Maryknoll Sisters were holding our General Assembly in New Jersey. The beautiful closing ceremony was on Saturday evening, just in time for us to make it. The Peoples’ Climate March was to start at 11 a.m. Sunday (September 21) and some events were even scheduled to happen around 9:00.

The Creator wanted us to be there.  Our group-of-nine were able to get an early start by boarding a nearby New Jersey Transit train.  When we entered the car, we were greeted with a big cheer by the whole car…all going to join “our march on behalf of Earth” and all her creatures…including us!

So, the March had started, right there on the train. That Group took us in, shared their signs and information. One of their members was from Nigeria and she shared with us the disaster that the oil companies are generating there.  We practiced chants with them, offering one of our own from Japan, in English, of course:  “Turn down the lights – turn off the heat – when you go out, use your feet!”

We kept connecting along the way until we reached the subway, where the promised extra “C” trains never came!  You can imagine the hoards as we tried to board the one that finally did come.  Just like Tokyo!  So when the group said “we can’t get in,” three of us from Japan replied: ‘Oh yes, we can!” and I became an official pusher.  We all made it on and off at the right place while other groups in the car continued on to their designated areas.  It was a good start and the March continued!

When we arrived at Columbus Circle, one of my Dominican friends pointed out “our” area.  We had decided to join the section where all religions assembled together… We found them easily… I wish you could have seen it…hundreds of us…all diverse religious beliefs…all there for the same reason… all together in solidarity on behalf of Earth, the great gift given to humankind.  No matter Who we named as Creator…no matter how we differed in theology, we were all one, even as representatives of each religion spoke or prayed, this diverse mass of folks from all over prayed together, laughed together, sang together and cried together.  This is what religions are meant to be…the energy that draws us all together in our beautiful diversity to become one humanity!  This is what humankind is meant to be!  Climate change is the reason, but the threat to our Earth is the call.

We started to March a little after 1:30 p.m.  That meant we had been standing together for around four hours, so we certainly were ready to go when asked:  Are you ready?   In front of us was an Ark with folks from our religions on board along with some animals (stuffed). That was a statement of survival in itself.  Just as we started off, a young woman came running up and asked if we were Maryknoll Sisters!  She just returned from Alaska, where she had given two years of her life in service as a volunteer; she wanted us to give loving greetings to her Maryknoll Sister Aunt Katie!

The police certainly had it easy since the organizers took over directing the crowd of groups as we marched along.  There was a feeling of urgent peacefulness.  Figure that one out, but it was true; a totally cooperative 310.000 people walking together to say…”we have got to do it now!  Everyone of us, every level of us… from governments to corporations, from industries & banks to just you and I”

If we do not want us all to experience a Katrina or Sandy or Fukushima or places where floods, landslides & tornados have become a way of life, we need to change our way of life… learning how to live without all the frills and privileges we have become so used to!  Guess that means back to the basics!  Our March was scheduled to give this message…all of it…to the United Nations… we are ready!

The climate march showed us how, by doing it together, we can turn it around….one humanity on this, our one and only Earth.  Its scientific name is morphogenic energy and we experienced it.

— Sister Jean Fallon, MM

Now They Have A Hope & Vision

Vipaji_Gallery

By Steve Lalli

A new art gallery has just opened in Tanzania’s largest city, and a country’s once-hidden artists, long championed by the Maryknoll Sisters, now have hope and vision to  transform and share their lives.

The Vipaji Gallery is a dream three years in the making. It might not have been possible without the determination of Sister Jean Pruitt, a Maryknoll Sister who has advocated for the importance of artists in east Africa for more than forty years.The vision of the new art space is to enlarge Tanzania’s deep pool of talent and creativity. Both the artists and the surrounding community would benefit from the enhanced cultural expression for which people hunger.

“It is the hope of this project to take these artists out of the shadows and empower them to share their creativity and talents in schools, in museums, in exhibitions, and on the Web,” Sister Jean said.

In fact, Sister Jean gave the Vipaji Gallery’s opening-night remarks when it welcomed the public for the first time on May 14 in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania’s largest city.

The country has more than 150 active artists who over the years have contributed to several schools of art that have emerged on the Tanzania art scene over the years. “Henry Likonde, John Kuchele, Balozi, and Msafiri are all artists who have been painting for more than 35 years in the southernmost town of Mtwara,” Sister Jean said. “Msafiri has been the teacher for two of the painters showcased in this exhibition–Evarist Chikawe and Johnson Mjindo.”

ArtistsVoice062314dThe names may not ring a bell to you now, but Vipaji’s opening could soon change that and “ignite the passions of Tanzanian artists through a journey of connectedness in image, form, color, body, lines and shapes,” Sister Jean says, “that spiral and dance in the lives of all who connect with their dreams.” Their names have already been celebrated through the Sisters’ book, Inspired: Three Decades of Tanzanian Art.

Many of the artists exhibiting at Vipaji also have been touched by Nyumba ya Sanaa, the first-ever art gallery in Dar es Salaam, founded by Sister Jean in 1972. The center’s mission was to support local artists, and to help them display and sell their works, among other cultural activities. It also offered vocational training in the arts, including arts and crafts, fine art paintings, clay, wood and metal sculpture.

The new Vipaji Gallery is continuing in that eclectic tradition, bringing together artwork from Tanzania’s henna painting and sculpture communities, among others. The gallery is exhibiting some of the henna artists’ more recent works, while some of the sculptures on display will remind people of some of the great artists of Tanzania’s past.

“The work of ten women (whose Henna art is being exhibited at Vipaji) heralded a renaissance moment in color, style and technique in east African art when these women artist first created and exhibited their work in 2007,” Sister Jean remarked.

– See more at: https://www.maryknollsisters.org/articles/now-they-have-hope-vision#sthash.ppqOSWZI.dpuf

Congregation Elects New Leadership Team

new CLTMaryknoll, NY – Four members of Maryknoll Sisters were elected as new leaders of the congregation at its General Assembly, held September 7-21, 2014, in Woodcliff, NJ.

Convened once every six years to discuss key issues related to congregational life and fulfilling their calling as missioners as well as elect new leadership, the Assembly drew together 147 Maryknoll Sisters from 18 different nations. These Sisters served as representatives of the 458-member congregation in nominating and voting on new leadership, as well as reaching decisions on key issues about their mission and congregational life.

The new members of the Congregational Leadership Team, who will begin their six-year term of service in January 2015, include:

Sister Antoinette Gutzler, President. Sister Antoinette is a 2001 graduate of Fordham University, Bronx, NY, with a Ph.D. in systematic theology.  She also holds a Masters of Philosophy in Systematic Theology from Fordham received in 1997; an M.A. in Systematic Theology from Fordham, earned in 1995; a B.A. in theology from Mundelein College, Chicago, IL, earned in 1971, and an A.A. degree in education from Mary Rogers College, Maryknoll, NY, earned in 1968.

Born in Brooklyn, NY, Sister Antoinette entered Maryknoll in 1964 at its Topsfield, MA, novitiate from St. Gabriel’s Parish, Queens, NY. Following her formation years, she worked briefly in the Purchasing Department at Maryknoll Sisters Center, Ossining, NY.  Then she received her first overseas assignment to Tanzania, East Africa, in 1971.

After studying Swahili in Musoma, she was assigned to Mwanza where, from 1972-1974, she taught religion to secondary school students and helped begin a center for high school students.  She made her final vows there on March 10, 1973.

Sister Antoinette then returned to the United States, working first as a secretary in the congregation’s Education department from January – November 1975, followed by two years speaking about the congregation on behalf of its Development Department at local churches and schools in the New England area.

Sister Antoinette was then assigned to Taiwan in 1978.  She studied both Mandarin and Taiwanese and worked as director of the Solidarity Young Workers Center from 1979-1988.

Following four years as Director of Personnel at Maryknoll Sisters Center and six years earning her graduate degrees at Fordham, Sister Antoinette returned to Taiwan in 2001, where she began teaching at the School of Theology at Fu Jen University, while also doing research and responding to invitations to present lectures throughout Taiwan and other Asian countries.   She was elected President of Maryknoll Sisters at the congregation’s General Assembly in September 2014.

Sister Antoinette’s recent publications include: “Lex Orandi, Lex Credendi: ‘Women Matters’ as an Asian Theological Concern” (2011); “Am I My Sister’s Keeper?” The “Internalization and Globalization of Women’s Homelessness: A Taiwan Perspective” (2010); “Navigating the Tradition: A Christian Feminist Perspective on the Power of Creedal Language to Shape the Lives of Women” (2008); “Entering the Silence: A Christmas Meditation” (2008) and “Shadow Lives/Public Faces: Women, Marriage and Family Life in Taiwan” (2008).

She is a member of the Catholic Theological Society of America (CTSA), The American Academy of Religion (AAR), consultant to the Ecclesia of Women in Asia (EWA), and a Standing Committee member of the Justice and Peace Commission of the Association of Major Religious Superior in Taiwan.

Sister Numeriana Mojado, Vice-President. Sister Numeriana is a 1998 graduate of Fordham University, Bronx, NY, with an M.S. in Religious Studies and received her R.N. from Far Eastern University, Manila, Philippines, in 1968.  She also holds a certificate in clinical pastoral education from the Department of Pastoral Care, Methodist Hospital, Brooklyn, NY, and studied pastoral counseling and spiritual direction at Fordham and theology at Maryknoll Seminary.

Born in San Isidro, Lilio, Laguna Philippines, Sister Numeriana is a Canadian citizen and entered Maryknoll Sisters from St. Patrick’s Parish, Montreal, Quebec, in 1976. She then served as a psychiatric nurse at St. John of God Psychiatric Clinic, Kwangju, Korea, from 1979-1982.

Following studies at Methodist Hospital, she returned to Korea where she worked among the urban poor and provided spiritual direction at a worker apostolate in Songnam City from 1984-1988. She then worked with the urban poor in Chulsandong from 1988-1990.  From 1990-1994 she served as Admission Director for the Congregation

Following completion of her master’s degree at Fordham, she returned to Korea, working in private counseling, spiritual direction and vocation ministry in Seoul from 1998-2007. During that time, she also worked with Filipino migrant workers, led retreats at Hwa Dong House, served on the Board of Magdalena House, a residence for women escaping prostitution, and on the Advisory Committee for Wellspring of Peace, a counseling center for sexual  abuse.

From 2007-2011, Sister Numeriana served as Personnel Director of Sisters for the congregation, was active in planning and preparation of several events for Maryknoll Sisters’ centennial year in 2012, and joined the congregation’s contemplative community in 2013.

Sister Anastasia Lott, Member. Sister Anastasia is a 1997 graduate of the Maryknoll Institute for African Studies, Nairobi, East Africa, with an M.A. in African Studies (a program under St. Mary’s University of Minnesota) and a 1979 graduate of the University of San Diego in California with a B.A. in Chemistry.  She is also a 1975 graduate of Bishop Amat Memorial High School, La Puente, CA, and a 1971 graduate of Blessed Sacrament School, Westminster, CA.  She was also a student at Mater Dei High School, Santa Ana, CA, from 1971-1973.

Born in Landstuhl, Germany, while her father was stationed there with the U.S. Air Force, Sister Anastasia was the first of nine children born to Vernon and Shirley Lott, presently of Springdale, AR.  She first expressed an interest in religious life while a student at Mater Dei.

While a student at the University of San Diego, she worked as a research assistant in its Environmental Studies Lab and Chemistry Department and as a resident assistant. Following graduation, she served as a Jesuit Volunteer working as a parish outreach worker for Catholic Social Services of Utica, NY, for two years. There she provided services to local parish and community groups, meeting with committees, making home visits, doing crisis intervention, project administration,  and initial case work.

Sister Anastasia’s journey with Maryknoll began as a lay missioner in August 1981. After a period of preparation at the Maryknoll Lay Missioners office, Maryknoll, NY, and six months of intensive Spanish language study in Cochabamba, Bolivia, she was sent to Barinas, Venezuela, where she served for the next four years. Her work included community organizing and pastoral ministry in urban areas, as well as assuming administrative and formation responsibilities on the local and diocesan levels and within the Maryknoll Region.

On September 7, 1986, Sister Anastasia entered Maryknoll Sisters at their motherhouse in Maryknoll, NY.  Following completion of the congregation’s candidate orientation program, she made her First Vows on November 1, 1987 at the motherhouse.

She was then sent to East Africa where, after a period of language study in Tanzania, she was involved in pastoral and medical work, as well as youth ministry in Bura-Tana, a rural village about 300 miles east of Nairobi in Kenya from 1988-1996.  She then moved to Nairobi and was active as a community development consultant, especially with local religious communities and the Jesuit Refugee Service.

In 1997 Sister Anastasia went to Namibia where she was involved with pastoral and leadership training for the Diocese of Rundu from 1997-2002. During this time, she also volunteered at the Rundu Branch office of the National Red Cross Society.  During 2002 and 2003, she served as Human Resource Development Officer for Catholic Health services and was a volunteer trainer for Criminals Return into Society (CRIS), teaching small business management and computer skills to ex-inmates.

In 2003, Sister Anastasia was appointed Director of Planned Giving for Maryknoll Sisters, a position she held until 2010, when she was named director of the congregation’s Development Department.  She was elected to serve on the Congregational Leadership Team at Maryknoll Sisters’ General Assembly in September 2014.

Sister Teruko Ito, Member.  Sister Teruko is a 1995 graduate of Fordham University, Bronx, NY, with an M.A. in Religion and Religious Education. She also holds a masters degree in religious studies from Maryknoll Seminary, Maryknoll, NY, and B.A.in Mathematics from Maryknoll College, Philippines.

Born in Kyoto, Japan, Sister Teruko entered Maryknoll Sisters in 1968 in Quezon City, Philippines.   Following completion of the congregation’s orientation program, she was sent to Tanzania, where she taught mathematics at Jargwan Secondary School in Dar Es Salaam in 1970, and at Kilakala Secondary School, Morogoro, from 1971-1973.

Returning to Maryknoll, NY, in 1974, Sister Teruko worked in the congregation’s Development Department from 1975 to 1977, and in 1978, was sent to her native country of Japan. There she did social work for alcoholism-related programs, first in Tokyo from 1978-1980, then in Kyoto at Hope House from 1980-1982.

She then returned to Tokyo, where she worked at Maryknoll Alcohol Center from 1982-1988, until she was appointed Co-Director of Orientation for the congregation, a position she held until 1993.  She was then sent to Guatemala where she was involved in the Ministry of the Promotion of Women for the Diocese of San Marcos from 1995-2004.

Sister Teruko then returned to Japan, where she has been in family ministry since 2009.  She was elected to the Congregational Leadership Team at Maryknoll Sisters’ General Assembly in September 2014.

Pictured above, from left to right, is Maryknoll Sisters’ new Congregational Leadership Team: Sisters Numeriana Mojado, Vice President; Anastasia Lott, Member; Teruko Ito, Member; and Antoinette Gutzler, President.

‘Trailblazers in Habits’ to Air on ABC

trailblazers in habits4_0Trailblazers in Habits, a new documentary about the pioneer work of Maryknoll Sisters, the first U.S.-based congregation of Catholic women religious dedicated to foreign mission, will air on ABC-TV affiliates across the nation, beginning Sunday, September 28, 2014.

The program, which is available to stations for broadcast through Thanksgiving Day, November 27, 2014, tells the story, in the Sisters’ own words, of the congregation’s work in education, health care, and the cause of social justice. A moving and absorbing chronicle that spans 100 years and several continents, the film celebrates the intelligence and tenacity, the love, compassion and generosity of these early feminists.

Production of the film was almost entirely funded by donations from the thousands who attended Maryknoll schools around the world. Maryknollers wanted a way to tell the full story of the Sisters’ contributions to their communities, from the building of schools and hospitals around the world to helping lay the foundation of Hong Kong’s social welfare system.

By turns tragic and joyous, yet always inspirational, this insightful documentary by award-winning director Nancy Tong, is a revealing portrait of these courageous women and a timely testimony to the Sisters’ lifelong dedication to helping the disenfranchised.

Three Sisters to Make Final Vows

Maryknoll, NY – Sisters Abby Avelino, Anastasia Lee and Julia Shideler will make their final vows as Maryknoll Sisters of St. Dominic at a Mass on Sunday, September 28, 2014, at Annunciation Chapel, Maryknoll Sisters Center. Watch the liturgy live beginning at 10:30 a.m. Sunday.

Avelino, Abby_0A Filipina from the Los Angeles Archdiocese, Sister Abby was born in Tanauan City, Philippines. She holds a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the Colegio de San Juan de Letran in Calamba, Philippines. She also received training as a Quality Assurance Auditor in Manila. She immigrated to the U.S. in 2000 and worked for JTL Precision Machining and Waltco Engineering, both in  Gardena, CA.

Sister Abby entered the Maryknoll Sisters in NY in August 2006 from St. Philomena parish in Carson, CA, attracted, she said, by their down-to-earth, humble attitude of service in mission in many countries all over the world.

Prior to her choosing religious missionary life, Sister Abby was a member of the Los Angeles Maryknoll Affiliate chapter. She visited the Maryknoll Sisters retirement house in Monrovia, CA getting to know the Sisters with their rich experiences in mission.

Following her first vows in 2008, Sister Abby was sent to Japan where she has worked with migrant families from the Philippines for the past six years.

Lee, Anastasia (YunJoo)_0Born in Seoul, Korea, Sister Anastasia was attracted to Africa from an early age and dreamed of being a missionary there. After graduating from University, she taught English for 10 years.  In 1999, she became a Catholic and began thinking of combining religious life with that of a missionary. While searching the internet for missionary groups, she came upon the Maryknoll Sisters website.  The importance they placed on living in community, combined with the types of work they did and their openness to receiving women from many different nations into their congregation, stirred her to apply.

Sister Anastasia joined the Maryknoll Sisters in 2005 at Maryknoll, NY. After being trained in Chicago, she took her first vows at Maryknoll, August 12, 2007, and was sent to join the Maryknoll Sisters Peacebuilding Team in Kenya, in East Africa, where she has served for the past seven years.

Julia Shideler 2012_0Born in Oakland, CA, Sister Julia entered Maryknoll Sisters on August 14, 2005, from Assumption Roman Catholic Church in Bellingham, WA, and has spent the last six years of her life serving the economically poor in East Timor, a half-island nation just north of Darwin, Australia.

Baptized Catholic at the Newman Center in Berkeley, she spent her early years at St. Augustine’s Parish in Spokane. When she was in second grade, her parents left the Catholic Church and joined the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Spokane.  She received Unitarian Religious Education throughout high school and integrated Unitarian values and a commitment to spirituality and justice.

Moving to Orcas Island, WA, in 1997, Julia began searching for deeper understanding and a more personal relationship with God. She went for a cultural “work-exchange” in Guadalajara, Mexico, where she gave English and French lessons in a private school and lived with a family. Her three-month live-in with a devoted Catholic family prompted her to reflect on her faith and the personal meaning of her baptism. It also gave her a greater desire for cross-cultural work.

In college, Julia realized she was not satisfied with the Unitarian Fellowship she had joined in Bellingham. At Western Washington University, she began exploring her Catholic roots. She attended some Campus Ministry masses at the Shalom Center that touched her deeply.

Within a year she decided to return to the Catholic Church and joined St. Anne’s Parish in Spokane in 2000. It was there she began to hear a call to Religious life. Sr. Alice Ann Byrne O.P., a Sister at the parish, was the only one she could talk to about her sense of calling. At the time she was preparing for a trip to Cote d’Ivoire with Whatcom College. The local parish she joined in Grand Bassam for three months gave her a wider sense of the universal Church and nurtured her desire for mission.

Graduating from WWU in 2002 with a degree in Spanish, she moved back to Orcas Island to continue discerning her call to Religious life. She joined St. Francis Church of the San Juan Islands. This grace-filled time helped her clarify the Spirit’s guidance of her life and she chose to join Maryknoll.

To further discern her call to Mission and to Maryknoll, Julia went to live in Korea. She taught English for a year in Suwon and got to know the Maryknoll Sisters community. In 2004, she spent four months with a Maryknoll Community in Majuro, Marshall Islands Republic (in the Pacific) for a live-in experience. Julia entered the Maryknoll Sisters in 2005, spending her Orientation Program in Chicago with a multicultural community. Her experience of prayer, community life and ministry during her novitiate was a powerful and transformative experience, which prepared her to live as a Sister in service to God’s mission.

See ‘Trailblazers in Habits’ Live in Chicago

Tanzania_B401_F03_P047_0Trailblazers in Habits, a new documentary about the pioneer work of Maryknoll Sisters, the first U.S.-based congregation of Catholic women religious dedicated to foreign mission, will be shown on Friday, October 3, 2014, at 7 p.m. at Catholic Theological Union Academic and Conference Center, 5416 S. Cornell Avenue, Chicago, IL 60615.

The film, which is being shown free of charge, tells the story, in the Sisters’ own words, of the congregation’s work in education, healthcare, and the cause of social justice. A moving and absorbing chronicle that spans 100 years and several continents, the film celebrates the intelligence and tenacity, the love, compassion and generosity of these early feminists.

Production of the film was almost entirely funded by donations from the thousands who attended Maryknoll schools around the world. Maryknollers wanted a way to tell the full story of the Sisters’ contributions to their communities, from the building of schools and hospitals around the world to helping lay the foundation of Hong Kong’s social welfare system.

By turns tragic and joyous, yet always inspirational, this insightful documentary by award-winning director Nancy Tong, is a revealing portrait of these courageous women and a timely testimony to the Sisters’ lifelong dedication to helping the disenfranchised.

For more information please call 866-662-9900 or visit www.maryknollsisters.org

President-Elect and Six Others to Mark 50th Jubilee

Sister Antoinette Gutzler, MM, president-elect of Maryknoll Sisters, will be one of seven members of the congregation marking 50 years as Maryknoll Sisters at a Mass being celebrated Sunday, October 12, 2014, at 10:30 a.m. in the Main Chapel at Maryknoll Sisters Center. The Mass will also be broadcast via livestream on the Maryknoll Sisters website.

A theologian who is currently teaching at the Fu Jen University Faculty of Theology of St. Robert Bellarmine, Taipei, Taiwan, Sister Antoinette was born in Brooklyn, NY and entered Maryknoll in 1964 at its Topsfield, MA, novitiate from St. Gabriel’s Parish, Queens, NY.

A graduate of Fordham University, Bronx, NY, where she earned an M.A., M. Phil. and Ph.D in systematic theology, she also holds a B.A. in theology from Mundelein College, Chicago, IL, and an A.A. in liberal arts from Mary Rogers College, Maryknoll, NY.

Following her formation years, Sister Antoinette worked briefly in the Purchasing Department at Maryknoll Sisters Center, Ossining, NY, concentrating on earning her A.A. at Mary Rogers College from 1968-1969 and then her B.A. in theology from Mundelein in 1971.

In 1971, she received her first overseas assignment to Tanzania, East Africa.  After studying Swahili in Musoma, she was assigned to Mwanza where, from 1972-1974, she taught religion to secondary school students and helped begin a center for high school students.  She made her final vows there on March 10, 1973.

Sister Antoinette then returned to the United States, working first as a secretary in the congregation’s Education department from January – November 1975, followed by two years speaking about the congregation on behalf of its Development Department at local churches and schools in the New England area.

Sister Antoinette was then assigned to Taiwan in 1978.  She studied both Mandarin and Taiwanese and worked as director of the Solidarity Young Workers Center from 1979-1988.

Following four years as Director of Personnel at Maryknoll Sisters Center and six years earning her graduate degrees at Fordham, Sister Antoinette returned to Taiwan in 2001, where she began teaching at the School of Theology at Fu Jen University, while also doing research and responding to invitations to present lectures throughout Taiwan and other Asian countries.

Sister Antoinette’s recent publications include: “Lex Orandi, Lex Credendi: ‘Women Matters’ as an Asian Theological Concern” (2011); “Am I My Sister’s Keeper?” The “Internalization and Globalization of Women’s Homelessness: A Taiwan Perspective” (2010); “Navigating the Tradition: A Christian Feminist Perspective on the Power of Creedal Language to Shape the Lives of Women”(2008); “Entering the Silence: A Christmas Meditation” (2008) and “Shadow Lives/Public Faces: Women, Marriage and Family Life in Taiwan” (2008).

She  is a member of the Catholic Theological Society of America (CTSA), The American Academy of Religion (AAR), consultant to the Ecclesia of Women in Asia (EWA), and a Standing Committee member of the Justice and Peace Commission of the Association of Major Religious Superior in Taiwan.

Other Maryknoll Sisters also marking 50 years with the congregation include:

Sister Joanna Chan, MM, an award-winning artist, playwright and director.

The author of over 20 original plays and director of more than 60 stage productions, Sister Joanna has also produced more than 20 multimedia programs for the Diocesan Audio-Visual Center in Hong Kong.  She also serves as a playwright, director, playwriting/acting coach, and Scripture studies coordinator for inmates at Sing Sing Maximum Security Prison, Ossining, NY, where she has served since 2006.

Born in Hong Kong on August 14, 1939, Sister Joanna entered Maryknoll Sisters at their residence in Quezon City, Philippines, on June 1, 1964, making her final vows at the Sisters’ retreat house in Watch Hill, RI, on June 21, 1975.

A graduate of Columbia University, where she earned a Master of Arts in communications in 1971 and a Master of Education in 1974, Sister Joanna also holds a B.A. in mathematics from Maryknoll College, Manila, Philippines, and a diploma in science from Chung Chi College, Hong Kong.

Sister Joanna’s first assignment was teaching high school mathematics, Chinese literature and art at Maryknoll Convent School, Hong Kong, from 1961-63, and mathematics at Maryknoll High School, Quezon City, Philippines, from 1967-1978.  She also worked at Transfiguration Church, New York City, from 1969-1986, serving as its religious education coordinator from 1969-1976, as a teacher of English as a Second Language from 1973-1975, and as director of youth services and choir conductor from 1970-1976 and 1979-1986.

In 1970, Sister Joanna became co-founder of Four Seas Players, a community outreach program in New York City’s Chinatown for young people and recent immigrants. Its  purpose is to promote a spirit of harmony and cooperation through artistic involvement and to nurture an interest in and appreciation for the dramatic arts, especially in the tradition of Chinese culture and its relationship with the Western art form as seen in New York. The name “Four Seas” represents the first two Chinese characters in the ancient saying: “Within the four seas, all men are brothers .”

Sister Joanna served as artistic director of Four Seas Players until 1992, when she co-founded Yangtze Repertory Theatre, also in New York City, to produce works for and by Asian artists. Since then, it has become New York’s most significant entry point for dramatic works from Chinese-speaking countries and a place of collaboration for artists from various parts of Asia. Sister Joanna has served as artistic director of Yangtze since its inception, penning original works for the troupes, and adapting others for their use.

Sister Joanna’s other achievements include:

1970-1976    Committee Member, Chinese Cultural Festival, New York City
1971-1976    Member, Board of Directors, Arts Resources for Teachers and Students, Inc., New York City
1974-1977    Member, Chinatown Improvement Council, New York City
1975        Program Director, Opening Nine-Day Festival, U.S. Bicentennial, Chinatown, New York City
1975-1976    Program Director, The Chinese Community Salutes the Bicentennial, New York City
1976    Exhibition Creator, A Pictorial History of New York’s Chinatown, Chinese Beneveolent Association, New York City
1976-1977    Manager, Maryknoll Sisters Communications Office, Maryknoll, NY
1977-1979    Founder and First Supervisor, Diocesan Audio-Visual Center, Hong Kong
Member, Diocesan Advisory Commission on Social Communication, Hong Kong
1979-1982    Overseas Producer, Diocesan Audio-Visual Center, Hong Kong
1980-1986    Coordinator, Maryknoll China History Project, Maryknoll, NY
1986-1990    Artistic Director, Hong Kong Repertory Theatre, Hong Kong
1991-present    Creator and Director, Maryknoll Sisters Heritage Exhibit, Maryknoll, NY
2005-2007    Member, Coordinating Committee, Mother Mary Joseph Rogers 50th Anniversary, Maryknoll Sisters Center, Maryknoll, NY

Sister Virginia Farrell, MM, a nurse practitioner who has served in Vietnam, Peru, Nicaragua and Kentucky.

A graduate of the University of Connecticut, with both Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in nursing, Sister Virginia entered Maryknoll at its residence in Valley Park, MO, on October 18, 1964, and made her final vows at Regina Maris, the Maryknoll Sisters retreat center in Watch Hill, RI, on June 22, 1974.

A veteran of the US Army Nurse Corps, who served in Korea, Germany, Vietnam and Nicaragua, before entering Maryknoll, Sister Virginia always wanted to be a nurse.  On a tour of duty in Pusan, Korea, during which she received the Bronze Star for meritorious service, Sister Virginia met the Maryknoll Sisters for the first time.  The Sisters, both of them physicians, were running a clinic in the city following the war, and Sister Virginia often volunteered there.  The US newspaper, Stars and Stripes, once referred to the Maryknoll clinic as “the longest charity line in the world.”

Sister Virginia encountered the Maryknoll Sisters again in another tour of duty, this time in Nicaragua. She worked as a volunteer once again for them, eventually doing so full-time in the gold mining town of Siunca in the Nicaraguan rainforest from 1963-1964.

Following her formal entry into Maryknoll, Sister Virginia served with the US Agency for International Development (AID) in Vietnam from 1968-1970, and with the World Health Organization, treating the injured in Peru following an earthquake in 1970. In 1971, she returned to Nicaragua where she organized a health clinic for WHO and Hope Hospital in Managua.

The following year, Sister Virginia returned to the States, working for a time with elderly and infirm Sisters at the Maryknoll Sisters Center in Ossining, NY.  She then became head nurse of an extended care facility and coordinator of a hospital-wide education program at Appalachian Regional Hospital, Hazard, KY, from 1972-1976.  At her request, she was then appointed director of nursing services for the hospital, a position she held until in 1978 when continuing tensions resulting from a strike and financial difficulties at the hospital caused her to resign.

In 1979, she became hospital outreach coordinator at Ephraim McDowell Community Center Network in Hazard, KY, a position she held until 1980, and founder/executive director of Hazard/Perry County Community Hospice, a program she would oversee until her retirement in 1992. The hospice honored Sister Virginia for her work by naming a new wing in her honor on November 6, 2011.

Sister Maria Homberg, MM, director of Maryknoll Mission Institute, Maryknoll, NY, from 1997-2014.

Born in New York City, Sister Maria entered Maryknoll in 1964 at its Topsfield, MA, novitiate from Holy Rosary Parish, Hawthorne, NY. A graduate of Columbia University Teachers College, New York, NY, where she earned both an M.A and Ed. D. in education, as well as an M.Ed. in nursing education, she also holds a B.S. in nursing from College of Mt. St. Vincent, New York, NY.

Following her formation years, Sister Maria served as Director of Nursing Services at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Manapla, Philippines, from 1967-70, and as a college and residence nurse, as well as adjunct faculty member, teaching psychology in the Department of Social Work at Maryknoll College, Manila, Philippines, until 1972.

Upon her return to the United States in September 1972, Sister Maria worked briefly as a nurse in the Maryknoll Sisters Center infirmary until January 1973. She was then employed as an assistant professor of nursing at Pace University, from 1973-1980.

From 1981-1992, Sister Maria was an associate professor of nursing at Bethlehem University, Palestine, where she served as Dean of Nursing. At Bethlehem University, she instituted a post-graduate midwifery program to meet the needs of Palestinian women. She then was a member of the nursing faculty of the College of the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, from 1993-1996.  She was named director of Maryknoll Mission Institute in 1997.

Sister Josephine Kollmer, MM, an educator and program founder who served for many years in Africa..

Sister Josephine taught elementary school students in the Massapequa Public Schools, Long Island, NY,  for 12 years prior to entering Maryknoll in 1964 at its motherhouse near Ossining, NY, Sister Josephine was born in East Moriches, NY, and entered Maryknoll from St. Catherine of Siena Parish, Mineola, NY.

A graduate of Adelphi University, Garden City, NY, where she earned both a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in education, Sister Josephine used her talents and skills as a teacher in Kenya, Zambia, Botswana and Lesotho from 1970-1978, making her final vows in Kenya in 1971.

Elected to the congregation’s central governing board in 1978, she served there during some historically difficult years, during which two of the congregation’s own members, Sisters Maura Clarke and Ita Ford, were killed in El Salvador.

Following completion of her term of leadership in 1984, Sister Josephine was sent to Zimbabwe, where she worked with an ecumenical team for leadership training of South African women  in a program sponsored by the Council of Churches in Zimbabwe.

In 1993, she relocated to Namibia, where she established the National Catechetical Program for the Namibian Bishops Conference and worked for 15 years in the formation of young women religious, seminarians and priests, as well as training lay catechists in parishes and mission stations throughout the country.

Sister Josephine returned to the Maryknoll Sisters Center in 2010.  She is now a member of the Eastern Region, living in Yonkers, where she is using her many skills as a volunteer in different programs.

Sister Marilyn Snediker, MM, missioner to Tanzania and Guatemala.

Born in Kankakee, IL, Sister Marilyn entered Maryknoll Sisters at its Valley Park, MO, residence in 1964. A graduate of Mt. Carmel Hospital School of Nursing, where she received her R.N. in 1952, she also studied at Purdue Univeristy, W. Lafayette, IL, as well as Mary Rogers College and Maryknoll Seminary, both in Maryknoll, NY, and received a certificate in midwifery from studies completed in London, England, in 1969.

Sister Marilyn began missionary life in 1968, administrating and training staff at a small rural hospital in Tarime, Tanzania, where she placed strong emphasis in her classes on preventative health care. Returning to the Maryknoll Sisters Center, Maryknoll, NY, in 1972, she served as assistant director of the congregation’s Health Services Department, until her return to Tanzania in 1976.

Following eight months of language study, Sister Marilyn taught English as a Second Language and biology at the Diocesan Junior Seminary in Soni, Tanzania, from 1977-1979, returning to the Center in 1980, to work in Congregational services and as a member of Maryknoll Sisters’ Social Concerns office, where she served until 1987.

Sister Marilyn was then assigned to Guatemala, where she worked with a diocesan program for the promotion of women in Peten, a region located in the nation’s tropical rain forest, until 1993. Along with three other Maryknoll Sisters, Sister Marilyn provided basic evangelization classes, as well as courses in health and nutrition, handicrafts, and others, as requested by the students.  She then did pastoral work with women of San Jose Communidad in Mixco, a suburb of Guatemala City from 1994-1998.

Returning to the Maryknoll Sisters Center in New York in 1999, Sister Marilyn worked in the Information Service Office until 2007.

Sister Mary Vertucci, MM, founder of Emusoi Centre, an internationally recognized center for Maasai girls in Arusha, Tanzania.

Born in New Brunswick, NJ, Sister Mary entered Maryknoll at its Topsfield, MA, residence in 1964 from St. Matthias Parish, Somerset, NJ.  A 1970 graduate of the College of St. Elizabeth, Convent Station, NJ, with a B. S. in chemistry, Sister Mary also earned an associate’s degree at Mary Rogers College, Maryknoll, NY, in 1968, and studied clinical pastoral education at Central Islip State Hospital, Central Islip, NY, in 1981-1982.

Following four  months of  language study  in Makoko, Tanzania, Sister Mary taught science and religion at Korogwe Girls Secondary School, Tanga, Tanzania, from 1972-1978,  making her final vows in Morogoro in 1972.  She then served as her congregation’s regional coordinator in Tanzania from 1978-81.

After a year spent in renewal, Sister Mary served in her congregation’s admissions office from 1982-1986, becoming its director in 1983.

She returned to Tanzania in 1987, where she was a teacher and youth worker for the Arusha Diocesan Youth Center and, later, Sekei Secondary School until 1992. She then served as bursar and teacher of math and bookkeeping at Murigha Girls School, Singida, and as regional treasurer for her congregation from 1993-1995.

After approximately a year on sabbatical, Sister Mary returned again to Tanzania and participated in a year and a half long research project among the Maasai of Arusha and Manyara Regions, looking into the educational needs of these areas. After working for a few months in the Arusha Diocese Financial Office, she founded Emusoi Centre in 1999 to provide high school age Maasai women with an opportunity for education. The Center’s success has gained it international attention, receiving visits from world leaders, among them Great Britain’s Prince Charles and Duchess Camilla, and U.S. President George W. Bush.

In addition to directing Emusoi, Sister Mary has also served as Eastern Africa Coordinator for Dominican Sisters Africa from 1998-2004, and Treasurer for the same organization since 1998.