One of the most valuable baseball cards in sports history – a Honus Wagner T206, as it is listed with collectors – was left to the School Sisters as part of the estate of Thomas Callahan, brother of Sister M. Vincent Callahan, a member of the Baltimore Province who had died in 1999.
Teaching English to women in the Asylee Women Enterprises (AWE) program has led me deep into a world in which there is no rule of law. The women I work with have broken no laws.
I'm trying to bridge an opposition in my life. It comes in little ways when I hear something I don't agree with, as I try to listen and integrate the questions raised by comments, political discourse, and violent responses.
The SSND Motherhouse Chronicle of 1917 tells the story of the how the School Sisters of Notre Dame’s Villa Maria in Notch Cliff, Maryland came to be...
Many, many moons ago when I was a young sister, I was stationed at St. Benedict, Blue Island, Il, where I taught some of the children from Robbins - a very poor village south of Chicago.
Sister Mary Enda Hughes was an educator and award-winning poet who produced scores of works of poetry and prose over her lifetime. Sister Enda was a professed member of the School Sisters of Notre Dame for 68 years.
How privileged I have been to “expand my understanding of interculturality and commit to develop skills for intercultural living.” I have had the privilege of ministering in Bolivia for nine years, in Peru for 33 years and in Paraguay for nine years.
I was introduced to SSND when I began first grade at the Institute of Notre Dame. I had wanted to go to school, but because my birthday was in February, our parish school wouldn’t take me until the following year. My parents tried IND, and they let me begin first grade a year early.
While traveling in Beijing during the Fourth World Conference on Women in 1995, I boarded a bus and grabbed the first empty seat. After getting settled, I turned to two young women sitting in my row and asked them, “Where do you come from?” They responded, “Lithuania.”
Sister Eugene Geiger received some very special guests this month. Her great grandnieces, Caroline and Paige – wiggly and pink six-month-old twins - came to Villa Assumpta to meet their great-great-aunt for the first time.
How does a math teacher become a caregiver? What does it mean to serve in that capacity within a religious community? Reflecting on my role for the last 19 years with our sisters, I realize that my past has helped to prepare me.
May has been a big month for Sister Mary Ann Tontalo, who celebrated her 104th birthday on May 1 and her 70th Jubilee on May 5. On the occasion of her 100th birthday, she shared the following about how she came to join the School Sisters of Notre Dame and the missions to which this decision has lead her:
“At the early age of five, I was taken by my saintly mother to St. James School where I learned to love and admire the good sisters. This love and admiration grew with the years and my only desire was ‘to be a sister’. On the day of my First Holy Communion I begged our dear Lord to give me the grace of a religious vocation and I felt He had answered my prayers.”
Sister Mary Foley, celebrated her Golden Jubilee as a School Sister of Notre Dame May 9th, and the State of New Jersey, County of Bergen, and Borough of Demarest all declared it Sister Mary Foley Day in honor of S. Mary’s numerous contributions to people throughout the world.
We’re all familiar with the photo of Mother Caroline, surrounded by four other sisters. It hangs above the computer in my office, so I look into the eyes of those five women every day....
Sister Jacci reflects on her mission work in Puerto Rico, where she ministered as an educator for nine years from 1968 – 1977, and on her 18 years of pastoral ministry in Peru, from where she has recently returned.
Sr Julita's Niece Kathy shares “I remember as a child going with my parents to visit Sister Julita. She would always show us her classrooms and walk us proudly through the schools where she ministered. She was so enthusiastic about the students she taught and cared for.”