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March 17, 2017, Adrian, Michigan Sister Maurine Barzantni, OP, and Sister Patty Harvat, OP, accompanied students from St. Mary’s Dominican High School, New Orleans, on their recent Alternative Spring Break to the Dominican Republic. Sister Maurine and the late Sister Renee Richie, OP, had founded a school, Centro Espíritu Santo, in the Dominican Republic and watched the school grow and thrive. Sister Maurine reflects on her experience of returning to the school.

By Maurine Barzantni, OP

When I was recently asked about my most important experience during my recent trip to Centro Espíritu Santo in the Dominican Republic, it took me more than a minute to think of which of the many remarkable learnings was most important. I finally said that it was hearing that more than a dozen of our former students are teachers or teacher’s aides in our school. 

Our journey with the people has been such a joyous part of the Adrian Dominican story in the Dominican Republic. Parada San José, formerly known as Cruce de Arroyo Hondo, remains a very poor community, but it is rich in faith and hope. The families believe that anything is possible. Why wouldn’t they, when they have watched their community change from a desolate collection of houses without electricity, water, or school to a thriving place with an excellent school? 

It took 25 years for the transformation, which was brought about by cooperation among the families, government, the Adrian Dominican Sisters, and the Jesuit-sponsored network of schools called Fe y Alegría. The school is well-known as an Adrian Dominican School, and graduates from the Colegio Santo Domingo take pride in it. Six Adrian Dominican Associates from the community are involved in the school and take pride in their connection to the Sisters.

Three of our Sisters minister at Centro Espíritu Santo: Sister Basilia De la Cruz, OP, as the director; Sister Eneida Santiago, OP, as chair of the Counseling Department; and Sister Neri (Luchy) Sori, OP, as a high school teacher. 

These three women are highly respected. As I walked around the community, I heard so many comments about how blessed the families feel to have the Sisters serve in the school. Together, the Sisters and the faculty have weathered storms of change within the educational system of the Dominican Republic.

Just over two years ago, the Dominican Republic decreed that all schools must offer a full day of school, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Because of high enrollment and lack of space in the school facilities, Centro Espíritu Santo had offered only half days of school. Some students attended in the morning and others in the afternoon. 

To offer a full day of school for all of the students, Centro Espíritu Santo needed double the classrooms and employ twice as many faculty members to serve the 1,350 students. Somehow, the school community met this goal, resulting in a beautiful, clean, and large campus filled with students receiving a good education. According to the Provincial Office of Education, the number of our graduates who go on to the university is remarkably high.

I witnessed the strength of Adrian Dominican education – and I am so proud of it! 

Sister Maurine Barzantni OP with faculty members of Centro Espiritu Santo

Sister Maurine Barzantni, OP — back row, fourth from right — with faculty members of Centro Espíritu Santo


Feature photo at top: Sister Maurine Barzantni, center, with Sisters Eneida Santiago, OP, and Basilia De la Cruz, OP.



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March 16, 2017, Adrian, Michigan – George Heartwell, former Mayor of Grand Rapids, Michigan, spent the day March 15 at the Weber Center speaking to Lenawee County leaders and residents about ways to build a sustainable community in light of the ramifications of global climate change.

In a program for Lenawee County leaders, Mr. Heartwell talked about how Grand Rapids moved from a community dealing with wastewater overflows and localized lead poisoning issues to a sustainable city. In addition to ditching the city’s strategic plan in favor of a sustainability plan, he said, every department moved from a single bottom line measurement of success to a triple bottom line that takes into account economic impact, environmental impact and social impact.

Creating aggressive goals is also critical, he told the group of 40 Lenawee leaders. He spelled out some of the many ways the city has become more energy efficient, offering inspiration for local communities to follow suit.

In the evening, which was open to the public, Mr. Heartwell spoke to a crowd of about 45 residents on the topic of “Climate Change, Cities and the New Reality.” 

Mr. Heartwell emphasized that global climate change is “the most urgent and pressing problem facing humankind today.” Mayors and other local community leaders worldwide play a special role in mitigating climate change, he noted. While national and state leaders focus on more abstract areas, such as their party’s ideology, mayors must deal with more down-to-earth issues: helping their communities through heat waves, crop loss, and the effects of extreme storms. 

“The president doesn’t have to figure out how to stretch an already-tight municipal budget to fund infrastructure improvements to manage extreme rainfalls, but that’s what mayors do,” he said. 

When he took office in 2004, Mr. Heartwell said, he was the 123rd mayor to sign the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement. Currently, the agreement has 1,060 signatories.  “One thousand sixty mayors have gone on record as saying that they’ll put their best efforts into addressing the threat of climate change.”

Some of the actions taken by mayors include investing in renewable energy, reducing demand for energy by introducing efficiency measures in buildings and service delivery processes, planting trees and expanding park land, protecting sensitive wetlands, and building streets out of permeable materials to absorb the rain.

“We’re doing things large and small in order to reduce our carbon footprint, reduce our production in our cities of greenhouse gasses that lead to warmer global temperatures,” he said.

In recent years, mayors also became aware of the need to adapt to situations already brought about by climate change. “There are still enormous impacts to climate that will affect us for decades, likely generations, to come,” Mr. Heartwell noted. Communities need to make adaptations to these conditions.

Mr. Heartwell represented Grand Rapids as one of five U.S. cities and five European cities that were invited by the International Organization of Cities to develop a model for climate adaptation and resiliency for cities. He was also invited to be part of a White House taskforce to work on community resilience to climate change. The taskforce presented President Barack Obama with 75 strategies for resilient communities facing climate change.

“We concluded that many of the initiatives that worked for adaptation were the very things that were needed in the long run for mitigating climate change,” Mr. Heartwell explained. President Obama in turn issued executive orders in response to those recommendations. 

The election of President Trump has brought some reason for discouragement, Mr. Heartwell said, noting the president’s denial of climate change is reflected in his appointments to head vital organizations such as the Environmental Protection Agency. Still, he remains hopeful. 

“One of the uncontainable forces that has been unleashed during the Obama administration is the power of local government to act in the best interests of its citizens,” he said. “No mayor is going to cave to the federal government if she feels that her citizens are at risk.”

He also takes hope from the initiatives of businesses. “American manufacturing is too far down the road on design and in plant retrofit to turn back now – design and retrofit that’s been done in keeping with the best science that’s available on climate change,” he said. “Business sees too much opportunity today for innovation and for entrepreneurship in clean energy technologies to be deterred.”

Finally, he said, the “juggernaut of American resistance has been unleashed. Masses of people who cherish the natural environment and want to ensure that generations to come will enjoy its beauty and its bounty as they have are ready to take to the streets. … This passion, this urgency and this focus, will not soon be put back into a bottle.” 

What’s important, he added, is that everyone makes decisions that minimize climate impacts, whether it’s choosing to plant a garden, use public transportation or to recycle. He also encouraged everyone to raise the issue of climate change whenever possible, to educate others about climate issues, and to become politically active.

“All of us need to make it a part of our lifestyle,” he said.

 


 

 

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