I took the image accompanying this post this past
Sunday, when I traveled down to Convent Station, NJ, to visit Holy Family
Church, on the grounds of the home of the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth. There, a legacy room and history wall was
being dedicated in memory of Blessed Miriam Teresa Demjanovich, a New Jersey nun now being considered for sainthood
by the Catholic Church.
Sister Miriam (1901-1927) was the daughter of Slavic
emigrants who settled in Bayonne, N.J. She graduated from the College of St.
Elizabeth in Convent Station, and two years later entered the novitiate. Like
another nun 30 years before, St. Therese of Lisieux, she died while still only
in her twenties, but not before producing a notable work of spirituality (in
Sister Miriam’s case, Greater Perfection).
Starting in the mid-1940s, Sister Miriam was
seriously promoted for canonization. That effort reached its climax to date
five years ago, when Pope Francis declared her “Blessed”—i.e., one miracle has
been credited to her, with a second necessary for sainthood.
The last time I visited Convent Station was nearly 30 years ago, for
the funeral of my elementary school principal. This time, at
the Mass in dedication of the legacy room for Sister Miriam, I encountered several
other nuns that I knew at St. Cecilia Elementary and High School in Englewood,
N.J., who now reside in the “Motherhouse,” or convent of St. Elizabeth.
Abundant warmth and humor have kept them alive and in decent health well into
their senior years.
The legacy room and history wall featured the work
of Willy Malarcher and my St. Cecilia classmate and lifelong friend, Pat Norton
Portanova. You can see some of Pat’s fine handiwork in the ceiling in this
photo.
No comments:
Post a Comment