Nuns Provide Support at Sandy Hook Elementary Shooting

Two unidentified nuns leave the scene of the aftermath at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. At least 27 people, including 18 children, were killed. — Don Emmert, Getty Images, Dec. 14, 2012

Relatives react outside Sandy Hook Elementary School following a shooting at the school in Newtown, Connecticut. — Michelle McLoughlin, Reuters, Dec. 14, 2012

Mourners gather inside the St. Rose of Lima Roman Catholic Church at a vigil service for the shooting victims.  — Andrew Gombert, EFE, Dec. 14, 2012

 

 

Gangnam Nuns

Salesian style…

 

Nun Arrested for Vandalism at Nuclear Facility

An 82-year-old nun will be appearing in court, after being arrested for vandalism and trespassing at a nuclear facility, The Tablet website reports today (August 7, 2012).

Sr. Megan Rice — a Sister of the Heart of the Child Jesus — is part of a group called Transform Now Plowshares, who broke into the Highly-Enriched Uranium Manufacturing Facility (HEUMF) in Oak Ridge, Tennessee last week.

The facility is the American Government’s only facility for handling, processing, and storing weapons-grade uranium.

Sr. Megan and two other activists allegedly broke through four perimeter fences and walked for two hours through a “fatal force zone” patrolled by guards and attached two banners to the pillars of the building housing the HEUMF saying: “Transform Now Plowshares” and “Swords into Plowshares Spears into Pruning Hooks — Isaiah.”

Source

 

Sister Mary Joseph on the Ordinariate, and More…

The interview of Sister Mary Joseph over at Ascent of Carmel, speaks powerfully. Here are some extracts:

Sister Mary Joseph is someone I am proud to call a friend. Having just come into the Church through the Anglican Ordinariate, I really feel that she is one of those hidden pillars holding up the Church.

Years ago, as an anti-Christian, I hated religion and Catholicism in particular so much that I remember seeing her one day and sneering at her audibly. I don’t know if she even noticed, but for years I carried it in my heart. Not only am I now truly humbled to be able to know her, but now, I am proud to present the following interview with this remarkable woman. The following is truly an opening of the windows and letting in a little fresh air of hope – enjoy.

1. Tell me a little about yourself, your conversion to Catholicism, and the Anglican Ordinariate.

My background is Anglican. Both my grandfathers were deeply religious men, one was an Anglican priest, he died when I was 9 yrs, and the other wanted to be an Anglican priest but was unable because he was profoundly deaf, he died before I was 2 yrs. I do believe their prayers have helped me in my own Christian pilgrimage. My father lost his faith during the war and was for many years very opposed to my vocation as a nun. It was only during his last years he became at first reconciled and then supportive of my vocation. Through my mother we went to church every week (and Sunday School for my siblings and me) as a family but that was the extent of our Christian education, no prayers of any kind at home. And yet, my earliest memory is when I was 2 1/2 years praying on my own. And when I was nine talking to my father and realising he didn’t believe in God and feeling very upset that I would not see him in Heaven.

When I was 11 yrs we moved to New Zealand and family church going stopped. I found the nearest Anglican church and started attending on my own. When I was 13 years I found the Catholic church in our small town and began to go there after school to pray before the Blessed Sacrament. Soon after I felt a call to the Religious Life. Somehow I acquired a manual on the Catholic faith put out by the Catholic Truth Society. I read and reread it gradually realising this was for me the whole truth. Over the years there was a continual pull to the Catholic Church but also a longing for unity between the Catholic and Anglican church. So I prayed for that unity and stayed in the Anglican church, though very much the Anglo-Catholic end of the Anglican Church. When I was 21 years I moved to England and still the pull to the Catholic Church., and still the prayer for unity. I entered the Religious Life and in time took my vows, at the same time feeling discouraged at what was happening in the Anglican church and the widening gulf between the Catholic and Anglican Church.

When I came to Canada at the end of 2000 I was dismayed to find an even more liberal atmosphere within the Anglican Church. Eventually I found it no longer possible to stay in the Anglican Communion. I was introduced to the Anglican Catholic Church of Canada (ACCC) and was very attracted to its mandate for unity with the Catholic Church. I was required to assent to the Catechism of the Catholic Church which I was happy to do. I was very excited about the possibility of union with Rome and knew that some of the Bishops of the ACCC had traveled to Rome to present the request of the ACCC for this unity. The answer came in November 2009 with the ” Apostolic Constitution of Pope Benedict VI that establishes Personal Ordinariates for those of Anglican heritage entering into full communion with the Catholic Church while maintaining distinctive elements of their theological, spiritual and liturgical patrimony”.( taken from the web page of the Fellowship of Blessed John Henry Newman, http://www.blessedjohnhenrynewmanfellowship.ca) On January 1st the Ordinariate of the Chair of St Peter was established for North America. Sadly some in our ACCC parish decided they did not want to take this step. If was hard to leave the church building, it was much much harder to leave many of our fellow parishioners behind, but we did and our small group kept the faith, formed into the Fellowship of Blessed John Henry Newman and was received into the Catholic Church on April 15th after the appropriate preparation. Our liturgy is Anglican Use which while being fully Catholic maintains elements of our Anglican patrimony.

2. What is your prayer life like?

As a Religious I pray the Divine Office…

There is much more here, including some spiritual advice, and:

7. What was it like to be received into the Catholic Church from the Anglican Catholic Church of Canada?

The desire for unity with Rome was what drew me into the ACCC. Of course I also loved the traditional liturgy and the Anglo- Catholic style of worship but the possibility of unity with Rome was the draw, this I had been praying for so many years. And then to be offered that unity while at the same time being given the opportunity of maintaining elements of our Anglican patrimony, that is such a generous and gracious gift of the Holy Father. So in answer to your question – it was pure joy, the fulfillment of so many years prayer going right back to when Iwas a teenager, I have come home and that is the best thing in the world!

 

Nun Spared Jail Time for Gambling, Embezzlement

On The Deacon’s Bench:

And it nearly landed her in jail.  Details:

Sister Marie Thornton gambled her life away playing the one-armed  bandits in Atlantic City, losing nearly $1 million she pilfered from the  coffers of upstate Iona College, where she worked as a trusted  financial officer.

Sister Susie, as she is known, was spared  three years in federal prison by a compassionate Judge Kimba Wood in  Manhattan Tuesday, after pleading guilty to one count of embezzlement.

But  the 65-year-old nun has been sentenced to a lifetime of shame, shunned  by Sisters of St. Joseph, the order she has served for 48 years. As an  act of contrition, the lying nun spends her days and nights in solitary  confinement in a small dorm-like room inside a Philadelphia convent.

She does not take her meals with the sisters, nor do her superiors  allow her to work inside the Mother house doing small clerical jobs or  even weeding the garden, according to court records and a source  familiar with the case.

She is not allowed to leave the nunnery  to visit relatives or friends or be seen in public at all. Her only  escapes are trips to her therapist and group counseling.

“She  can’t even go to the store and get milk,” the source said. “My belief is  she will never be allowed to have contact with people again.”

The  high-rolling sister holds a doctorate in education, served as an  elementary-school principal and later as an assistant school  superintendent for the Archdiocese of Newark, but there seems little  chance the order will allow her to teach again, the source said.

For  10 years, until she was caught in 2009 for stealing $850,000 from Iona,  Sister Susie would drive to the Jersey Shore on weekends, usually with  an unsuspecting relative or friend, and spend the day there.

Although she didn’t have a favorite casino, her M.O. was the same: using the college corporate credit card for chips.

One weekend she blew $10,000 on the slots. Usually it was $2,000 to $5,000 a visit, the source said.

“She  covered up the thousands she would lose by systematically submitting  false vendor invoices for reimbursement to Iona College and submitting  credit-card bills for personal expenses to be paid by Iona College,”  according to US Attorney Preet Bharara.

Read more.

 

Border Nuns

Franciscans risk stoning to provide aid to poor along border fence.

CNS:

The compact car lifted a trail of dust as it traveled slowly along the 18-foot-tall chain-link fence, attracting the attention of the U.S. Border Patrol agent sitting in his green and white SUV.

When the vehicle stopped and two women got out, he was concerned contraband might be tossed over the fence into the United States to the waiting vehicle. Instead, the women began throwing items into Mexico.

The two women were Franciscan Missionaries of Mary who come to the fence periodically and toss whatever they can get to give the needy families of Puerta de Anapra, one of the poorest and most violent suburbs of Ciudad Juarez.

“The agent said it was OK for us to be here, but only for a short time,” said the older nun, who identified herself as Sister Marie. Her companion on the goodwill venture into this remote area of the fence — where Texas, New Mexico and Mexico converge — was Sister Karen. Both sisters requested their last names not be disclosed.

“It’s sad, they are so poor,” said Sister Marie. “It breaks my heart see them have to live like this and how they live in such fear.”

The presence of the sisters attracted nearly 20 people, who rushed down dirty, garbage-strewn alleys to make it to the fence to receive their gifts.

As the children pressed their faces against the tight fence, Sister Karen pushed the licorice through the narrow spaces to the tiny fingers of the children. The small spaces make it much more difficult for migrants to get a good footing to cross into the United States.

“Hey, how many do you have there, make sure you share,” Sister Marie said to a boy about 12, as she kept a close watch to ensure everyone who showed up to the fence got something,

The boy looked at Sister Marie and knew the fence allowed him to ignore her request, but he looked at the crowd for another child that did not have a piece of the candy and relinquished his extra.

Sister Marie began these periodic jaunts to the border fence five years ago, after attending the annual Border Mass held in early November and celebrated with congregants facing each other while divided by the fence.

“The people would come to the fence and tell us they desperately needed things,” Sister Marie said.

The “things” were not specified but the abject poverty the Anapra residents live in is evident. Sister Marie, and whoever would help her, would pile pre-worn clothes, shoes, toys and blankets into her car and drive to the fence.

“When we got there people would just show up, and we would throw the items over the fence,” Sister Marie said. “It’s so sad, these people live in shacks, they have nothing.”

According to the Border Patrol agents who kept a close watch on the group, what the sisters do is very dangerous. One agent who declined to give his name — very few people agree to provide their full name at the border — said this area has seen an increase in violence not only against the people in Mexico but against Border Patrol agents. He pointed to his patrol vehicle, which had grates and fencing on all of the windows.

“They throw rocks at us all the time and just recently began throwing cats and dogs over the fence at our vehicles,” said the agent.

One woman who brought her children to meet the sisters was Brenda Alicia, 31. She pointed to her home next to the border fence, adjacent to a wall with gang graffiti on it. Brenda Alicia said she has three children, 13 and 12 years old and 3 months. The two older children were at her side, chewing on newly acquired red licorice.

“I like when the sisters come, we need so much here, especially now that it’s getting cold,” Brenda Alicia said.

The poverty the people in Puerta de Anapra suffer is only a short drive from a large casino, horse race track and amusement park in Sunland Park, N.M. — amenities Brenda Alicia and her children are oblivious to, given their circumstances.

“It’s getting worse here, there are more killings,” Brenda Alicia said.

She said she is fearful that her older son may be enticed to get involved with the gangs because of the easy money.

Sisters Marie and Karen know the danger they face when they come to this remote area of the border.

“I come here fearless,” Sister Marie said.

Their missions are conducted under the watchful eye of Border Patrol agents, who give the nuns their tacit but reluctant approval.

With the trunk of her car now empty, Sister Marie, with the aid of Sister Karen, began handing out pastel-colored rosaries, accepted as eagerly as the licorice. As that supply dwindled, a burly Border Patrol agent approached the sisters.

“Sister we have some bandit activity on their side further up the fence, and we don’t want them to come and take the things away from the people,” said the agent.

Often, youth gangs beat the group and take the items the sisters had just given them.

“OK, thank you,” Sister Marie said.

The Border Patrol agent walked off, allowing the sisters to say their goodbyes to the group, but returned within a minute with greater urgency after receiving another radio call.

“Sisters you need to leave now because they are throwing rocks at our agents and we don’t want you getting struck.”

“We’d better go now, thank you and God bless you,” Sister Marie said to the agent, giving him a hearty handshake.

Well, God bless these nuns and their excellent work.

 

Nun Forced to Leave India after 29 years of Helping Leprosy Patients

Because the government of India has refused to renew her residency:

A Catholic nun from Britain who has spent 29 years caring for leprosy patients in Bengaluru, India, is being forced to give up her work and leave the country after Delhi refused to renew her residency permit.

London-born Jacqueline Jean McEwan, now known as Sister Jean, or the Mother Teresa of Sumanahalli, runs a mobile clinic for leprosy patients. She has been ordered to leave without explanation by the union home ministry and if her appeal for permission to stay goes unanswered by 2pm on Monday she will have to board an evening flight bound for London.

“It’s in God’s hands,” said the 63-year-old nun, who spent her early years in Newcastle but has been working at the centre, run by the Sumanahalli Society, since 1982.

“I work with leprosy patients in two city slums and a nearby village. They’re old and neurologically damaged, and suffer from ailments such as cancer. I’ve spent a long time with my people in Bengaluru, but wherever God wants me to be I won’t remain idle,” she said…

The rest on this deportation here.

UPDATE:  Good news. India assures a long stay for British nun working with leprosy victims!

Reebok Nun Spices Up Royal Wedding

A Reebok-wearing Anglican nun and a cartwheeling verger attracted attention at the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton at Westminster Abbey on Friday.

Eagle-eyed viewers also noticed that the nun was wearing black Reebok Classics trainers underneath her traditional outfit, the Daily Mail reports.

Sister Annaliese Brogden was photographed sitting next to Prince William and his bride Kate Middleton, now known as the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, wearing a pair of comfortable trainers, AEDT adds.

The internet was awash with rumours of Sister Annaliese’s role at Friday’s ceremony, with some musing she may be an MI5 agent tasked with protecting the royal heir and dubbing her the “Ninja Nun.”

But the truth is more straightforward, according to her father, Geoffrey Brogden.

“She wore the trainers for comfort and always has,” he said. “It has all caused great amusement here and at the convent…

The above was here.

Nun Stuck in Elevator for Four Days

CNN is reporting:

When a nun got stuck in an elevator for four days she survived on a diet of celery sticks, water and prayer.

Apparently the Catholic Nun from Northeast Baltimore was trapped in an elevator for almost 4 days after her fellow sisters had left for a convention and she was alone in the convent. But the whole episode was turned into a positive experience…

Watch her story here.

 

Catholic Nun Burns Herself to Death

Wow!

Police are investigating an incident in which a Catholic nun committed suicide at the weekend at a church compound in Muchatha, Kiambu.

The nun identified as Karimi Njue, burned herself after she received a letter from their headquarters in Nairobi informing her she had been defrocked.

Kiambu OCPD, Samuel Mukinda, said they were told the religious woman set herself on fire using petrol.

“She burnt herself after receiving the letter as her colleagues attended church service on Sunday,” said Mukinda.

Police said they were yet to establish the reason for her defrocking, adding investigation was in progress…

Very sad news this indeed…

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