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November 9, 2021, Adrian, Michigan – Archivists from a variety of U.S. congregations of Dominican Sisters gathered virtually October 19-21, 2021, to discuss best practices and common issues and to learn from speakers in related fields. Participating were Sister Beverly Bobola, OP, Assistant Archivist, and other members of Dominican Archivists for a Common Repository (DARC), as well as professional archivists and historians from related organizations. 

About 30 people attended the entire summit, while another 20 or so – including leaders of Dominican Congregations – joined the gathering when possible. 

Lisa Schell

Lisa Schell, Archivist for the Adrian Dominican Sisters and a member of the planning committee, said this year’s summit brought in speakers from a variety of fields and from organizations such as the Detroit Institute of Art, the Queens (New York) Memory Project, and the City of Chicago. “We wanted to look outside ourselves,” Lisa explained. “The idea was to collaborate outside of our comfort zone and be inspired.”

Archivists who work in organizations outside of congregations for women religious have much to teach the Dominican archivists, Lisa said. “We could still get the benefit of sharing best practices of archives and get a perspective of what’s possible.”

One keynote speaker – Eileen Markey, journalist and Assistant Professor at City University of New York Herbert H. Lehman College – noted the importance of archivists of women’s religious congregations. “She spoke of how important it is for archivists to understand that much of American history is patriarchal, centered in the male,” Lisa recalled. The archives of women’s religious communities are treasures that can profoundly influence the understanding of the role of women in U.S. history, Lisa added.     

Another speaker, Katie Gordon, is Co-founder and National Director of Nuns and Nones, which brings Catholic Sisters together with young Millennial spiritual seekers to share community, faith, and experiences. “She had a lot to say about Sister stories and how important they are, making them accessible and available to people of younger generations,” Lisa said.

For her part, Lisa especially loves the opportunity to tell the history and stories of the Adrian Dominican Sisters. A lover of history, she taught high school history for 15 years before changing course. She earned a Master of Library and Information Science degree with certificates in Archival Administration and Records Management from Wayne State University in Detroit and worked for eight years as a corporate archivist before coming to work for the Adrian Dominican Sisters in 2018. 
 
A year later, Lisa hosted the Dominican Archivists Summit in Adrian. The focus then, she said, was on standardizing the archival collections of the U.S. Dominican congregations. Participants at the 2019 Summit worked together to bring consistency to their collections and to the vocabulary they use for those collections in preparation for the time when they might be in a common repository.

Hopes are that the 2023 Summit will be in person. However, Lisa said, she is stepping away from planning the Dominican Archivists Summits after being elected Vice President and President-Elect of the Archivists for Congregations of Women Religious (ACWR), a professional organization of about 350 archivists serving congregations of Sisters in the United States.  

Whether working with Sister Beverly at the Adrian Dominican Motherhouse, with archivists of other Dominican congregations, or with Colleagues from the ACWR, Lisa relishes her work. “I love Sisters’ history and the Sisters here,” she said. “It’s so exciting to be part of a community that is in alignment with things I believe in … It’s a rare opportunity to be a professional woman and surrounded by women.”
 

Feature photo: Katie Gordon, Co-founder and National Organizer of Nuns and Nones – an alliance of Catholic Sisters and diverse spirituality seekers – offers a presentation on programming and outreach engagement during the summit of Dominican Archivists.


October 13, 2021, Adrian, Michigan – The Adrian Dominican Sisters launched the fourth volume of the Congregation’s history, Seeds of Change: A History of the Adrian Dominican Sisters, 1962-1986, on October 7, 2021, during a program that outlined the four-year process and celebrated the publication of the book.

The book covers years of significant change in the Congregation, marked by the Sisters’ three-year Chapter of Renewal beginning in 1962 and their response to the Second Vatican Council’s call for women religious to return to their roots and to relate to the world.

Previous volumes of Adrian Dominican history are Amid the Alien Corn, written by Sister Mary Philip Ryan, OP, covering the earliest years of the Congregation; Seeds Scattered and Grown, 1924-1933, by Sister Nadine Foley, OP; and To Fields Near and Far, 1933-1961, by Sister Nadine and Associate Arlene Bachanov.

Sister Patricia Siemen, OP, Prioress of the Adrian Dominican Congregation, gives background information on the writing and production of the fourth history book, Seeds of Change.

Sister Patricia Siemen, OP, Prioress of the Congregation, welcomed participants attending in person and via live stream and gave background to the process of writing and producing the book. “It definitely ‘takes a village’ to accomplish such a significant task as writing and publishing a book such as this,” she said. 

Early in her term as Prioress, she saw the importance of “capturing the history of our renewal years while we had Sisters who lived through that period of our lives.” In the late fall of 2016, she invited Sister Mary Louise Putrow, OP, to author the book. Beginning in January 2017, Sister Mary Lou was assisted by an Editorial Advisory Board, chaired by Sister Anneliese Sinnott, OP, and made up of now deceased Sister Rosemary Ferguson, OP, and Sisters Maribeth Howell, OP, Janet Schaeffler, OP, Patricia Siemen, and General Councilor Elise García, OP. 

Sister Patricia also acknowledged the early work of the late Rose Celeste O’Connell, OP, and of Arlene Bachanov, Editorial Assistant; Marie Joy Finfera, OP, Secretary of the Congregation; Lisa Schell and Beverly Bobola, OP, of the Archive; and Angie Kessler and Ashley Duke, of Communications. 

An experienced researcher and writer, Sister Mary Lou said the process for Seeds of Change was unique. “This was corporate biography,” she said. “It was our story. The primary topic was who we were and who we came to be in a period of 25 years.” It was a period marked by a number of changes in the way the Sisters lived out their vocation. 

Sister Mary Lou summarized the years covered by Seeds of Change in this way: “The most all-encompassing change which generated all the others was our relationship with the world, the world many of us had renounced at our reception; it was the world with all its joys and sufferings we were now told to embrace.”

Sister Mary Louise Putrow, OP, left, author of Seeds of Change, and Associate Arlene Bachanov, Editorial Assistant, with copies of the book.

Arlene, a Co-worker in the History Office, spoke of her experience interviewing Sisters and editing Sister Mary Lou’s work. “I learned what it was like to be in the Deep South in the 1960s and to be in south Florida when the Cuban exodus was occurring, and to be in Detroit at the time of the riots,” she said. The interviews were “a real cross-section of the Congregation over those 25 years or so, and certainly pointed to the diversity of thought and experience that was enfolded into the Renewal years and their aftermath.”

On a personal note, Arlene said that her experience of working on the book and learning about the Congregation’s history has been “invaluable” to the work she does every day as a writer in the History Office. “I want you to know that helping tell your story, in whatever way I can do that, is not only my mission in the world, but it’s the great privilege of my life,” she said.

Sister Janet Wright, OP, spoke of her inspiration as she painted the picture that was used on the book cover. “The book cover illustration is always intended to signify, support, and somewhat reveal the work of the author(s),” she explained. “It was done out of love and respect for our Sisters and in gratitude to Mary Lou, Arlene, the Advisory Board, Sister Pat, and our archivists for the honor of participating in this work.”  

Seeds of Change is available for purchase ($15) from the Weber Center Shop, 517-266-4035 or webershop@adriandominicans.org.

View a recording of the book launch presentation below.

 


 

 

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