What's Happening

rss

Statement of Adrian Dominican Sisters Decrying Trump Administration’s Inhumane Apprehension and Detention of Children

Adrian Dominican Sisters General Council statement

February 16, 2026, Adrian, Michigan – On behalf of Adrian Dominican Sisters and Associates, the General Council issued a statement decrying the practice of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers capturing and detaining children and calling on the Trump Administration to put an end to this inhumane treatment of the most vulnerable in our society.

As American citizens and women of faith, we are alarmed and deeply distressed by the inhumane capture and detention of more than 3,800 children by our government since the Trump Administration took office last year. 

Infants, toddlers, and school-age girls and boys have been and continue to be apprehended from their homes, schools, and neighborhoods by armed and masked ICE agents and then transported to distant warehouse detention centers. The terror and trauma these children are experiencing at the hands of our own government is shocking to the conscience – and an egregious breach of our nation’s legal and moral values of ensuring child protection. 

We have one searing image of the trauma that our nation is inflicting daily on hundreds of children. It is of 5-year-old Liam Ramos as he was returning home from his pre-school with a light blue rabbit-eared cap covering his head and a Spiderman backpack. He and his asylum-seeking father were apprehended in Minneapolis last month by ICE agents and transported 1,200 miles away to the Dilley detention center in South Texas. After a public outcry, Liam was released. But, as an immigration law professor at Columbia Law School has said, “There are many, many Liams.”  

According to the Marshall Project, a nonpartisan investigative news organization, the detention of children has “skyrocketed, jumping more than sixfold since the start of the second Trump Administration” – with an average of 170 children detained by ICE each day at the Dilley site alone. In mid-January, of the 1,400 people detained at Dilley, 500 were children with 450 parents. News reports describe children receiving little education, poor medical care, moldy food, and foul-tasting water. Children are losing weight, experiencing anxiety and depression, and getting sick, including two with confirmed cases of measles. 

Since the Trump Administration took office last year, according to a December 2025 Marshall Project analysis, ICE has swept into detention at least 3,800 children under the age of 18, including 20 infants. More than 1,300 were held longer than the court-ordered limit of 20 days. 

In our Judeo-Christian tradition as Catholic Sisters, we follow the Nazarene who said, “Let the little children come to me and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these” (Matthew 19:14). This cruel hindering of little children by our own government is unconscionable. 

We call on President Trump and his Administration to put an end to this inhumane treatment of the most vulnerable in our society – God’s precious little ones. 

#   #   #

Members of the Adrian Dominican Sisters General Council are Sisters Elise D. García, OP, Prioress, and Frances Nadolny, OP, Lorraine Réaume, OP, and Corinne Sanders, OP, General Councilors.
 


INAI at Madden Gallery to Open with Women’s Art Exhibit

Image of a textured quilt with a series of circles, quartered in diverse colors

February 9, 2026, Adrian, MichiganEngage: The Art of Women, the first exhibit of the new INAI at Madden Art Gallery, will open on Sunday, April 12, 2026, with an artists’ reception from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.

The new gallery moved to Madden Hall from its original home on the Adrian Dominican Sisters Campus. The original INAI, founded by the late Sisters Barbara Chenicek, OP, and Rita Schiltz, OP, offered exhibits for more than 40 years. The INAI at Madden Gallery has space near Holy Rosary Chapel and is accessible from Weber Retreat and Conference Center at the Motherhouse Campus. 

Sister Sue Schreiber, OP, who coordinated INAI from 2018 to 2024, is working with others to bring about a new feel. “We cannot reproduce the physical ambiance of INAI, but in Madden, we have developed a quiet room, a meditation area, and a small gallery,” she said.

Engage: The Art of Women was chosen as the first exhibit to focus on the Adrian Dominican Congregation’s Enactment on Women, approved by the Sisters in 2022. The Enactment reads, in part, “Valuing human dignity and aware of the injustice of patriarchy … we strive to attain gender equity and women’s full and equal participation and decision making in Church and society.”

Exhibiting artists include Amy Philp, Kris Schmidt, Doris De Nudt, Pi Benio, and Amy Anderson; Adrian Dominican Associates Laura Law and Judi Engel; Sisters Janet Wright, OP, Kathleen Voss, OP, Alice Van Acker, Nancyann Turner, OP, Sue Schreiber, OP, Barbara Quincey, OP, Aneesah McNamee, OP, Cheryl Liske, OP, Janice Holkup, OP, and Carol Fleming, OP; and deceased Adrian Dominican Sisters Mary Irene Walker, OP, Sarajane Seaver, OP, Rita Schiltz, OP, Ursula Ording, OP, Pauline Opliger, OP, Virginia Hafey- Wells, OP, Barbara Chenicek, OP,  Barbara Cervenka, OP, and Celeste Bourke, OP. 

INAI (pronounced in-EYE and meaning “within” in Japanese) is a contemplative space 
and art gallery on the campus of the Adrian Dominican Sisters. Offering the beauty and thoughtfulness of artistic expression in its art exhibitions, as well as a peaceful space for 
personal reflection, INAI supports the Adrian Dominican Sisters’ Vision to seek truth, make peace, and reverence life. 

 

Caption for above feature photo: Danish Circles, a quilt created by Sister Barbara Quincey, OP, is one of the many artworks on display in the opening exhibit of INAI at Madden.


 

 

Search News Articles

Recent Posts

Read More »