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Jun 10, '12, 2:16 pm
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Join Date: February 5, 2012
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Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
From the diocesan newspaper:
Traditional sisters big hit with trendy teens
June 6th, 2012
By Lidia Wasowicz
Traditional sisters and trendy students may not seem like a compatible combination, but at Marin Catholic High School in Kentfield, they’re proving to be a propitious pairing.
Since arriving on campus in August 2011, Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist, Thomas Aquinas Betlewski, Miriam Holzman and Maria Jose Acosta have shattered stereotypes, debunked misconceptions and formed a unique union with the sophomores and juniors in the theology, science and math classes they teach.
The last woman religious, Sister Mary Ferguson, a Franciscan art instructor, had departed in 2004, so students at first weren’t quite sure what to make of the newcomers.
When Tim Navone, Marin Catholic’s first lay president, announced the sisters would be joining the faculty to reinforce the school’s Catholic identity, Allison Galuszka envisioned strict disciplinarians “whacking knuckles with a ruler.”
Henry Harmon, a non-Catholic, pictured them as “old, ugly and mean, like portrayed in the movies, which is the only place I had ever seen a nun.”
Even Torey Tarantino, an alumnus of St. Anselm School in San Anselmo, got it wrong: “I had a teacher who was a sister, but she did not wear a habit, so I thought for sure they would dress normally.”
Imagine the students’ surprise when they beheld three young, attractive, smiling figures garbed in floor-length, crisp, white habits and black veils, giant rosaries hanging from the waist – a style dating back 800 years.
Eye- and mind-opening revelations followed.
The sisters were as classic in their attitude about behavior and belief as in their attire. Yet, they were as youthful in approach – incorporating the latest technology into lesson plans – as they were in age, the average for the 116 members of their order, established in 1997, being 28 years.
They had neither boyfriends nor bank accounts – a “shock” to some of their adolescent charges – professing vows of chastity, poverty and obedience.
They personified goodness but portrayed a wicked sense of humor.
“At first, I didn’t know what to expect, but as I got to know them, I found they were kind, trustworthy, tough but fair and a lot of fun,” said junior Tarantino of San Rafael. “And when they say, ‘I’ll pray for you,’ it really means something!”
Sophomore Chris Ward, 16, of Terra Linda, laid aside initial misgivings about landing in all three sisters’ classrooms.
“They turned out to be unbelievably connected to us and to really understand where we’re coming from,” he said.
Harmon, a 17-year-old junior from Kentfield who felt “very nervous” the first week of class, has made the sisters his closest confidantes.
“They are so approachable, I can talk to them about March madness, my personal troubles, anything,” he said. “I feel closer to them than to other teachers.”
The sisters believe their traditional habits have a profound impact on the high schoolers.
“Because we wear a visible sign of our consecration to Christ, students are less likely to misbehave around us and more likely to take what we say seriously,” said Sister Maria Jose, a former computer analyst who teaches sophomore and junior geometry.
“The students know we’re not doing this for personal gain or to advance our careers or even for altruism but for the salvation of their souls,” said Sister Thomas Aquinas, who holds a master’s degree in theology.
The special relationship is evident as students stop to greet each sister welcoming them at the door. Settling at their desks, they listen earnestly, speak eagerly and volunteer enthusiastically.
They show genuine interest as Sister Thomas Aquinas explains the relevance of the beatitudes to the typical teen’s daily life.
When she announces “out of love and possibly a bit of craziness” a retake for students who failed a test, several faces grin with relief. No one protests the stringent conditions she places on the privilege.
The multimedia assignments for the next day clarified, 21 heads bow as sister leads the class in prayer.
In the chemistry lab taught by Sister Miriam, a pharmacist, 21 sophomores split work loads and share findings to calculate the effects of temperature change on a balloon’s volume. Several acknowledge the presence of a religious spurs the spirit of cooperation and collaboration.
In geometry, 22 students graph concentric circles with Sister Maria Jose’s patient assistance. They smile a polite, “Thank you, sister,” as she dismisses the class with, “God bless you; have a safe day.”
“I was very pleasantly surprised that while the sisters share their devotion to God, each is unique – one loves music, one is a science expert, one is great with the calculator and technology – just like regular people,” said Galuszka, a 15-year-old sophomore from Ross who attended a public primary school.
The sisters, coming from more conservative and less affluent areas than Marin County, have had to make their own adjustments.
“I’m used to schools where nearly all the students are Catholic,” said Sister Thomas Aquinas, who has taught in Florida, Michigan and Texas.
Walking out of St. Francis Chapel following the 7:30 a.m. Mass, she expressed surprise at the attendance of only six of the school’s 719 students, 68 percent of whom are Catholic.
“Of my teaching experiences, Marin Catholic has given me some of the most unique challenges,” she said. “This is the first time I’ve encountered students who don’t have a very religious background so we have to start at ground zero.”
They are making headway.
“The sisters have really deepened my understanding of God and brought me closer to him,” said Tarantino, 16. “I see their goodness in everything they do.”
Sister Maria Jose hopes the sisters’ example will inspire some of the students to follow in their footsteps.
“Because we’re close to the students’ age,” she said, “they may consider a religious vocation is not just for the old but also for them.”
From June 8, 2012 issue of Catholic San Francisco. Link to article which includes several photos:http://www.catholic-sf.org/ns.php?newsid=27&id=60011
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Jun 10, '12, 2:56 pm
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Senior Member
Prayer Warrior
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Join Date: May 20, 2011
Posts: 13,397
Religion: Catholic. Gender: Female
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
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Jun 10, '12, 3:37 pm
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Forum Elder
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Join Date: September 6, 2006
Posts: 18,815
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
From the news article
Quote:
Imagine the students’ surprise when they beheld three young, attractive, smiling figures garbed in floor-length, crisp, white habits and black veils, giant rosaries hanging from the waist – a style dating back 800 years.
Eye- and mind-opening revelations followed.
The sisters were as classic in their attitude about behavior and belief as in their attire. Yet, they were as youthful in approach – incorporating the latest technology into lesson plans – as they were in age, the average for the 116 members of their order, established in 1997, being 28 years.
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Their presence may encourage students to consider vocations. Some readers might recall that Sister John Mary Fleming, was recently named executive director of the Secretariat of Catholic Education of the USCCB. She joined the Nashville Dominicans straight out of high school because she was so impressed by the sisters who taught in her school.
I think the presence of role models is for the religious life is important. And young, culturally relevant sisters can be approachable and easy to identify with.
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Jun 10, '12, 3:40 pm
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New Member
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Join Date: February 5, 2012
Posts: 72
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dale_M
From the news article
Their presence may encourage students to consider vocations. Some readers might recall that Sister John Mary Fleming, was recently named executive director of the Secretariat of Catholic Education of the USCCB. She joined the Nashville Dominicans straight out of high school because she was so impressed by the sisters who taught in her school.
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I do think the habit makes a statement.
Have you heard Rosalind Moss on this? Her reaction as a pre-20 orthdox Jew in NYC at the time of V2 and the discarding of habits by many.
I live in the Bay Area and have never seen a nun in habit. That is how rare/non-existent it is here. And the Bay Area is the 4th largest metro area in the US with 8 million people!
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Jun 11, '12, 10:55 am
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Senior Member
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Join Date: July 3, 2004
Posts: 7,822
Religion: Catholic
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
We need more of this.
__________________
 duly deposited.
Z
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Jun 11, '12, 4:04 pm
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Regular Member
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Join Date: March 22, 2012
Posts: 623
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
Quote:
Originally Posted by vz71
We need more of this.
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Agreed!
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Jun 11, '12, 9:58 pm
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Regular Member
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Join Date: August 2, 2011
Posts: 5,106
Religion: Latin Rite Catholic
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tobias2
I do think the habit makes a statement.
Have you heard Rosalind Moss on this? Her reaction as a pre-20 orthdox Jew in NYC at the time of V2 and the discarding of habits by many.
I live in the Bay Area and have never seen a nun in habit. That is how rare/non-existent it is here. And the Bay Area is the 4th largest metro area in the US with 8 million people!
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The religious habit, I would say, is in fact one of the primary factors--likely one of the top two--influencing people's respect for religious.
__________________

Modernity is old-fashioned. Pray for the close of the baby slaughtererhouses.
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Jun 11, '12, 11:26 pm
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Senior Member
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Join Date: November 19, 2008
Posts: 8,375
Religion: Roman Catholic
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
Way, way overdue.
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Jun 11, '12, 11:40 pm
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Forum Elder
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Join Date: September 6, 2006
Posts: 18,815
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tobias2
I live in the Bay Area and have never seen a nun in habit. That is how rare/non-existent it is here. And the Bay Area is the 4th largest metro area in the US with 8 million people!
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Its been a couple decades since I lived in San Francisco, but there are some orders there which wear traditional habits.
One is the Sisters of Perpetual Adoration, located in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood.
http://adorejesus.org/Index1.html
They are cloistered, so don't get out much. But the public is welcome to come to their chapel and participate in Mass or adoration. And every now and then, they do venture out of the cloister (see picture below)
And as the article in the first post mentions, the Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist have invaded California and are building a priory in Sacramento. Three of them are teaching in Marin Catholic High School, which is in Marin County so maybe there are plans to cross the Golden Gate Bridge?
Anyways, here is a photo of the Sisters of Perpetual Adoration
(click on picture to make bigger)
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Jun 12, '12, 7:51 am
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Regular Member
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Join Date: October 24, 2008
Posts: 1,583
Religion: Catholic
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
Quote:
Originally Posted by vz71
We need more of this.
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Absolutely! Way overdue, indeed!
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Jun 12, '12, 8:49 am
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New Member
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Join Date: February 5, 2012
Posts: 72
Religion: Unaffiliated
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dale_M
Its been a couple decades since I lived in San Francisco, but there are some orders there which wear traditional habits.
One is the Sisters of Perpetual Adoration, located in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood.
http://adorejesus.org/Index1.html
They are cloistered, so don't get out much. But the public is welcome to come to their chapel and participate in Mass or adoration. And every now and then, they do venture out of the cloister (see picture below)
And as the article in the first post mentions, the Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist have invaded California and are building a priory in Sacramento. Three of them are teaching in Marin Catholic High School, which is in Marin County so maybe there are plans to cross the Golden Gate Bridge?
Anyways, here is a photo of the Sisters of Perpetual Adoration
(click on picture to make bigger)
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It sounds like the order normally goes to more "middle class" Catholic schools with a larger percentage of students being Catholic.
Marin Catholic is in the middle of the higest income county of the 9 Bay Area counties. It has a large percentage on non-Catholics. Which the article notes is unusual for schools at which the sisters teach. Tuition is through the roof.
Problem with crossing the GG bridge is that SF's SI is much like Marin Catholic. Very expensive, very exclusive and not much more than 50% Catholic in it's student body.
It sounds like this is not the focus in types of Catholic school that the order is targeting.
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Jun 12, '12, 9:12 am
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Senior Member
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Join Date: November 19, 2008
Posts: 8,375
Religion: Roman Catholic
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
Tobias, just FYI: Regardless of the similarities you mention, Marin Catholic and SI have decidedly different campus atmospheres. It is not just percentage of Catholics which determines campus culture; there are other factors involved as well.
The logical location for such an overflow (of this or a similar Order) would be Cathedral Prep, and secondarily ICA. And it's my belief that the cultures there would definitely welcome them, and are in need of a professed sisters witness.
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Jun 12, '12, 9:24 am
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New Member
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Join Date: February 5, 2012
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Re: Traditional sisters come the SF Bay Area/Marin
Quote:
Originally Posted by Elizabeth502
Tobias, just FYI: Regardless of the similarities you mention, Marin Catholic and SI have decidedly different campus atmospheres. It is not just percentage of Catholics which determines campus culture; there are other factors involved as well.
The logical location for such an overflow (of this or a similar Order) would be Cathedral Prep, and secondarily ICA. And it's my belief that the cultures there would definitely welcome them, and are in need of a professed sisters witness. 
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I'm sure there are other locations/schools in the Bay Area that could use this witness.
Given the few nuns actually teaching at this time I don't know if the order establishes or would establish more than one apostolate in a given metro area. Even if it is the 4th largest as is the Bay Area.
There is a huge Catholic school complex in Utah. Juan Diego is the name as I recall. That seems like a logical place for expansion too. Catholic young people in Utah are being lost to the LDS church and the witness of sisters in habit in a Catholic educational complex is needed.
I'm sure there are other targeted regions/schools which could really benefit too from a presence of young teaching nuns.
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