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Sister Patty, a while women with gray hair wearing glasses, a burgundy sweater, and a pink scarf, stands at the podium while a Black woman with short black hair and glasses wearing a gray sweater stands next to her holding a plaque

January 22, 2024, Adrian, Michigan – Sister Patricia Harvat, OP, received the Community Service Award on January 15, 2024, during the Martin Luther King Jr. Day Celebration in Adrian. The event took place in the Tobias Center of Adrian College.

In her nomination, Sister Kathleen Nolan, OP, noted that Sister Patricia has been an active member of the Adrian Human Rights Commission and “instrumental in creating a number of programs and events to engage the Adrian community in exploring the issues and promoting cultural diversity, equity, and inclusion.” 

Sister Patricia was involved in much of that work as a General Councilor for the Adrian Dominican Sisters from 2016 to 2022, charged with leading the committee that addressed the Congregation’s 2016 Enactment on Diversity and Relationships. In turn, a Congregational committee – Toward Communion: Ending Racism, Embracing Diversity – worked with both Sisters and Adrian Dominican Associates to help them become more aware of racism. 

“Sister Patricia’s dedication and passion … helped create a space where people, regardless of race, religion, or ethnicity, can feel safe and are reverenced,” Sister Kathleen wrote.

“I am deeply grateful and truly honored and humbled to receive this award,” Sister Patricia said. “I accept it in the name of all the Adrian Dominican Sisters and Associates.” After learning she would receive the award, she said, “My head was filled with the wonderful people who mentored and accompanied me these years in working with the city of Adrian and with our Sisters and Associates.”

In particular, Sister Patricia paid tribute to a small group of local people of color who met with her beginning in 2016 to help her in her work focusing on undoing racism and embracing diversity. “They became not only my mentors [and] colleagues, but became my friends,” she said. “They not only taught me a wealth of knowledge, but they touched my spirit of what it meant to be strangers no longer.”

The group included Andre’a Benard of Christ Temple Ministries International in Adrian; Jeanette Henagan, President of the Lenawee County Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); Idali Feliciano of the Adrian Human Relations Commission; Rudy Flores, an advocate for migrants; and Dionardo Pizana, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Specialist for the Michigan State University Extension.  

In an interview, Sister Patricia said she wasn’t sure where to begin when leading the Congregation in living out the Enactment on Diversity and Relationships. “I reached out to people of color,” she said. The group met every two to three months. “We didn’t have a structure or an agenda,” she said. “We’d get together and start talking. We got to know one another … and then discussed how to educate the people in Adrian. We started to bridge the gap between people of color and people not of color understanding one another.”

Dionardo and Sisters from Pax Christi worked closely with the committee to discuss their experiences of race. “Members of the Toward Communion group came closer to one another,” Sister Patricia recalled. “We understood one another at a depth greater than ‘how are you?’ … It was respectful. We got to be seen.” 

In turn, the Toward Communion committee worked with Sisters and Associates to help them understand people from other ethnic groups and cultures. Kevin Hofmann, Director of the the Congregation’s Office of Racial Equity and Cultural Inclusion, continues the work that Sister Patricia started with Sisters and Associates. 

Before her election to the General Council, Sister Patricia served eight years as the Director of Lay Ministry Formation for the Hispanic Ministry Office of the Diocese of Cleveland. There, she worked with people from 23 Hispanic countries with distinct cultures. The people shared and celebrated their diverse cultures during an annual Faith and Culture celebration. 

“I learned the joy of diverse populations coming together and celebrating together,” Sister Patricia recalled. “There wasn’t one culture that was better than another. The Salvadorans were as respected as the Mexicans. The Guatemalans were as respected as the Venezuelans. They all had their distinctive food and language.” 

Sister Patricia also experienced the joys and benefits of diversity in her earlier ministries in Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic. One fond memory is professing her final vows in Puerto Rico among all the people she worked with and another is the work she did with children and their families in the Head Start program. Sister Patricia also spent time in the Dominican Republic visiting different parts of the island to teach theology to the youth workers.

Read more coverage of the Martin Luther King Celebration in the Daily Telegram, a newspaper in Adrian, Michigan.

 

Feature photo at top: Sister Patricia Harvat, OP, accepts the 2024 Community Service Award during the Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration at Adrian College’s Tobias Center. Eugenia McClain, right, presented the award. Photo by Anna Marie Anzalone, used with permission.


January 12, 2024, Adrian, MichiganLight from the Cage, a presentation to be offered on January 11, 2024 by Judy Wenzel on her 25 years of experiences of teaching inmates at the Federal Correctional Institution in Milan, Michigan, has been rescheduled. Her presentation is from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, February 6, 2024, at Weber Retreat and Conference Center and live streamed at https://adriandominicans.org/Live-Stream.

The free program is sponsored by the Adrian Dominican Sisters Office of Racial Equity and Cultural Inclusion as part of the office’s series of presentations to expose Sisters, Associates, and the broader community to the experiences of people of different races, faith traditions, cultures, and sexual orientations. 

Kevin Hofmann, Director of the Office of Racial Equity and Cultural Inclusion, said Judy will address the issue of racism in the U.S. criminal justice system. “She has first-hand knowledge of the disproportionate number of Blacks in prison,” he said. “Blacks are over-represented.” 

Judy will also speak of her experience with the general population of prison inmates, who often face a stigma. “She will show the humanity of those who have ended up in prison,” Kevin said. “It’s a story you don’t often get to hear – and hopefully, she’ll change our viewpoint of those in the system.”  

The presentation is free and open to the public. Registration is not required. To watch via live stream, visit https://adriandominicans.org/Live-Stream.

Weber Center is on the campus of the Adrian Dominican Sisters Motherhouse, Adrian, Michigan. Traveling east on Siena Heights Drive, pass the Adrian Rea Literacy Center 
and turn left just before the solar panel-covered parking lot. Follow the signs to Weber Center. For information, call the Weber Center at 517-266-4000.


 

 

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