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New column: L’Osservatore Chicago
(POSTED: 8/4/09) The Vatican Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life is currently looking into the quality of life of religious women in the United States.
If they stop by here, I will tell them an old, but revelatory, story of Sister Justitia and the auditorium drapes. I think it says a lot about Sisters in America.
When Sister Justitia Coffey needed to hang drapes in the auditorium of her new Mundelein College in 1929, she called the local fire department. When the chief arrived with his men and his battery of equipment, he asked a natural question: "Sister, where's the fire?"
"There is no fire," Sister Justitia answered coolly. "I need your men to hang the drapes in my auditorium. The windows are too tall for our ladders."
The fire chief was polite, but firm, "Sister, we don't do drapes."
She was also polite, and equally firm. "Sir, I have locked the doors."
Whether or not Sister Justitia had actually locked the doors, she knew her power. Firemen and policemen who "had gone to the Sisters" for education in Chicago at that time were so programmed to say, "Yes, Sister," that they couldn't refuse her request.
They hung the drapes.
There's a lot in that story I would tell an apostolic visitor. It tells of the power of the Sisters. It also tells of their imagination, their resourcefulness. The story may be old, but the strength and ability to make situations work for them for the sake of others is still part of Sisters' m.o.
The apostolic visitor needs to hear the Sister Justitia story.
By Margery Frisbie
Margery Frisbie, a graduate of Mundelein College, has raised lots of kids and written lots of columns. She is the author of several local histories, two graphic histories published in Europe, and An Alley in Chicago, the Life and Legacy of Monsignor John Egan.
Contacts: margeryfrisbie@sbcglobal.net or info@chicagocatholicnews.com
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