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July 9, 2025, Adrian, Michigan – The Adrian Dominican Sisters and other congregations of women religious in Michigan and Indiana have launched a billboard campaign to share the Gospel message of love and care for others.
In Lenawee County, five billboards placed by the Adrian Dominican Sisters simply read, “Love is kind. – 1 Corinthians 13:4.” This message aligns with the Adrian Dominican Congregation’s commitment to help build the beloved community in which everyone is cared for, absent of poverty, hunger, and hate.
The Congregation issued a public statement on April 7, 2025, urging all people to help build a beloved community among the American people in the face of the many dehumanizing executive actions and decisions of the Trump Administration. In the statement, the Adrian Dominican leadership prayed that “the goodwill characteristic of the American people of all faith traditions will call us to kinder, more compassionate, respectful, and generous ways of being good, caring neighbors to one another – and to all the other beautifully diverse peoples of the world’s nations, neighbors in our common Earth home.”
The billboards are located at U.S. 12 and Miller Road, U.S. 12 and Matthews Highway, M-50 and Matthews Highway, U.S. 223 and Sandy Beach Road, and U.S. 223 and Humphrey Highway.
Five other congregations are placing billboards with messages urging care and concern for people and planet, displayed in Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo, Michigan, and South Bend, Mishawaka, and Plymouth, Indiana. Participating congregations are Grand Rapids Dominican Sisters and Sisters of St. Joseph in Michigan and Sisters of the Holy Cross, Poor Handmaids, and Sisters of Providence of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods in Indiana.
The leaders of the congregations collaborating on the billboard initiative are members of the regional coalition of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR). The association of more than 1,260 leaders of Catholic women’s religious congregations serves to further the mission of the Gospel by serving as a corporate voice for the most vulnerable and by promoting dialogue and collaboration among religious congregations and society. To that end, LCWR released “A Response from the Leadership Conference of Women Religious to These Times” in January 2025.
July 2, 2025, Pampanga, the Philippines – Sister Mary Ann Caulfield, OP, got a first-hand look recently at the work of a peace education organization for which she serves as a member of the Board of Trustees. She traveled to the Philippines to experience offered by Francisco “Frank” Vega, DMin, Program Director and Trainer, and Jean Marvel, Trainer, of the Peace Education Foundation, to local school faculty members, students, and Adrian Dominican Sisters.
Based in Miami Shores, Florida, the Peace Education Foundation receives grant funding from the Adrian Dominican Sisters Ministry Trust in support of its mission to teach conflict resolution techniques and violence prevention strategies to Dominican teachers and lay leaders in Argentina, Venezuela, Dominican Republic, and the Philippines. Adrian Dominican Associate Lloyd Van Bylevelt is President of the Peace Education Foundation.
Sister Mary Ann, Co-Director of Resident Life for the Dominican Life Center in Adrian, said that for the past two years, she, Lloyd, and Frank planned the workshop during Zoom meetings with the Sisters in the Philippines.
Because of her involvement, Sister Mary Ann felt it was important to attend the workshops in person. “I wanted to see how [the program] works, how they present it to the teachers, how you can bring this guided curriculum to the schools,” she said. “I felt blessed that I was able to go, to see how the program worked, and to be with our Sisters.”
The faculty workshops were held in schools where Adrian Dominican Sisters minister: a combined workshop for the Dominican School of Angeles City and the Dominican School of Apalit on June 3, 2025; Holy Rosary College, Tala, Caloocan, on June 5; and for professors and students representing diverse academic fields at the University of the Assumption on June 7, 2025. In all, 150 people attended the workshops.
The training team coordinated workshops with Sister Rowena Cruz, OP, Principal at Dominican School of Angeles City; Sister Lourdes Pamintuan, OP, Principal at Dominican School of Apalit; Josephine Vendiola, Director of Holy Rosary College; and Sister Marissa Figueroa, OP, of the University of the Assumption.
The team from the Peace Education Foundation also offered a day of recollection for all Sisters of the Our Lady of Remedies Chapter on June 8, 2025.
Sister Mary Ann characterized the workshops and the overall program of the Peace Education Foundation as “outstanding.” She was impressed by the way Frank and Jean worked together. “They interacted with each other on whatever lesson they taught,” she recalled. “They got the teachers involved in the project, helping them learn to teach the different themes to the children.” She said the workshops were interactive, including input and small-group activities.
The Peace Education Foundation offers training and follows up with the schools, families, and other organizations that it trains, Sister Mary Ann said. For the schools in the Philippines, for example, the Foundation will have follow-up Zoom sessions to check on the status of the schools’ peace training and to answer any questions. “We don’t leave them on their own,” she said.
The Peace Education Foundation offers a variety of training programs for teachers, administrators, counselors, students, parents, bus drivers, families, and communities. These training programs include conflict resolution, peer mediation, work with bullies, peacemaking skills for children, creating caring children, resolving family conflicts, and resolving issues drivers encounter.
The Foundation also offers books that schools can use in their curriculum, teaching peace skills at different, age-appropriate levels, from Pre-K through high school. “Each of the books has guidelines and teacher preparation and activity sheets,” Sister Mary Ann explained. “The children learn how to live peacefully. It’s a skill-based curriculum,” which can also be reinforced as all subjects are taught.
“Teachers are key,” Sister Mary Ann said. But once the children learn the skills and the principles, they can teach them or reinforce them with each other. For example, younger children can teach their peers that “hands are for helping, not hurting.”
Sister Mary Ann said the philosophy and teaching of the Peace Education Center “goes hand in hand” with the Vision of the Adrian Dominican Sisters: Seek Truth, Make Peace, Reverence Life. For example, she said, if you don’t know somebody well, seeking truth can involve asking questions of that person to increase understanding, respect, and peace.
“We can live in peace, each one of us, if we work on it, if we respect one another,” Sister Mary Ann said. “If each of us can, within our soul, live one day in peace – mind, body, and spirit – would we not want to live it always?”