Five religious communities speak together against gun violence

May 26, 2022

 

As we mourn the loss of more than 30 lives in 10 days, our hearts break. In conversations with each other and in our prayers to God, we must ask,

“How long?”

“How many?’

“How can we end this violence?”

How long will we continue to accept mass shooting after mass shooting? How many more small coffins will be wept over, and how many more families will be destroyed?

We CAN take concrete steps to curb gun violence – but it requires action from our elected representatives, an end to partisan bickering and an end to monetary gain at the expense of innocent lives. It requires bravery and compassion – and it requires legislation and enforcement.

  • HR 1446, the Enhanced Background Checks Act of 2021, would require federal firearms licensees to receive a completed background check before giving a person a gun.
  • HR 8, the Bipartisan Background Checks Act of 2021, would expand background checks for all firearm sales or transfers in the country, including private sales.
  • The Violence Against Women Act would, among other things, prohibit “dating partners” as well as spouses from owning a gun if convicted of domestic violence.
  • R. 1808 would regulate the ownership of assault weapons.

These are small steps on a path to a safer nation – but they have been stalled in Congress for months, and even years.

We are not asking for a repeal of the Second Amendment, but rather, to have the right to bear arms to be tempered with the responsibility to use and regulate them wisely.

We lift our prayers not only for those lost to gun violence in the past 10 days, but to the 7000+ Americans who have died by gun violence in 2022 alone. We pray, we beg, and we demand that our elected Representatives and Senators ACT TODAY.

Dominican Sisters of Peace
Sisters of Charity of Nazareth
Sisters of Loretto/Loretto Community

Ursuline Sisters of Louisville
Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph

Posted in News

Windows Wide Open

Blog by Associate Mary Ellen George, OPA

Every morning when we open wide the windows in our dwelling places, we get ready to embrace a new day, never knowing what that new day will bring. As I write, our cat is peering out a window, looking curiously at what is outside.  I wonder what he sees and what is capturing his attention. His whole being seems invested in wonderment as I sense his excitement at whatever he is seeing and discovering.  As I watch him look patiently with eager anticipation at what awaits outside this window, I wonder myself what this new day will hold for me and if I can meet this new day with the same curiosity as our cat.

What happens when we open wide the windows?  What do we see?  What do we feel? What excites us? What captures our attention?  We know that some of us will see possibilities.  Some of us will see challenges. Some of us may feel a heart filled with gladness or one consumed by sadness. Our attention may be focused, or it may be scattered. What we see or what we experience when we look out the window may hold us in awe of life’s mysteries. Or we may be engulfed in questions about the difficulties pervading our space and casting a cloud over our vision.

I know for myself that it is not easy for me to be open with others about what is in my heart and what is going on in my mind. What I’ve learned as an Enneagram Type Six Personality is that fear is a constant companion that keeps me from unlocking doors. My type, is also, to my surprise, more head-centered, and so my challenge is to work at becoming more heart and body-centered. Even writing these blogs every month is an exercise in being vulnerable and letting go of my fears and calls forth a willingness to be open. But I’m finding it easier to share with each blog I write.

What are the windows you need to open? What are the doors you keep closed? I have found that sometimes we need help opening these windows or doors. Sometimes we need to allow a small opening or passageway in the doors we keep locked.  Sometimes we need to ask others for help, sometimes we need to turn our concerns over to God, and sometimes we must trust that the answers are already within us.  Within our seeking and our surrendering, we will discover God’s presence, God’s love, and God’s care for us.

If you are ready to open the window to see where God is calling you and desire a companion who can journey with you as you explore religious life as a Sister, I invite you to contact one of our Vocation Ministers. You could also open the door to explore possibilities for your life by attending our Mission for Peace event, June 22-27, 2022 in Kansas.

Posted in God Calling?, News, Vocations Blog

Prayer for the Laudato Si’ Action Platform

Creator, we are embarking on a journey
towards greater love for You,
our brothers and sisters, and Your creation.

Holy Spirit, we humbly ask that You guide us on our journey,
that You bring us Your illuminating and warming fire
as we seek to discern and respond to Your will.

Redeemer, we thank You
for the new hope that unites us with all those
who are healing their relationships with God,
creation, and the human family.

We pray for commitment and unity
as we live out an integral ecology
to protect all life on earth.

We ask this in the name of Jesus Christ, our Lord.

Amen.

Posted in News, Peace & Justice Blog

How do we End White Supremacy?

Sr. Pat Thomas, OP
Blog by Sr. Pat Thomas, OP, of the Peace Center in New Orleans

White supremacy is a sin. Period.

We have become accustomed to seeing the signs saying “Racism is a Sin. Period.” So we face that, but what about the rest of the problem?

“Racism is a Sin” was a statement made by the American Bishops in their 1979 pastoral letter “Brothers and Sisters to Us”.  The Dominican Sisters of Peace and Associates have made it a very public statement posted on signs in front yards, on windows and other places. Is this enough to counteract the sin of White Supremacy?

More and more acts of violence are perpetrated in the name of white supremacy. After all, we are the master race, correct? White folks need to get over this in a big way but how?

Did you know you can Google “how to prevent white supremacy?” What you will find is amazing. Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream company has created 12 ways; the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators has given us 5 ways; CivilRights.org shows us 10 ways and Green Peace also gives us 5. There are so many more groups that are trying to help us and suggest practical every day ways we can create a world that is safe for everyone.

Someone already gave us the Way to destroy White Supremacy. You might remember this. “Love one another, as I have loved you” Jn 15:12; and, “Love your neighbor as you would love yourself” Mark 12:31, LK 10:27; and “Whatsoever you do for the least of my people, that you do unto me” MT 25:40. Seems obvious yet so hard to accomplish.

Let us pray together that we can be true Gospel people, and realize that all the ideas from all of those other groups pretty much stem from ONE WAY.

Posted in Weekly Word

An Update from Ukraine

Dear Sisters and Brothers,

Recently I’ve spent most of my time sending letters. It was hard to find spare time to do it sooner, but it’s very important to me that thank-you notes from the brothers in Ukraine find their way to all the people supporting the Dominican mission in the country at war. Many people and many institutions around the world help us, so the work of sending letters will still take some time. Writing addresses, signing letters, and attaching post stamps might seem boring and purely mechanical. It isn’t so, however. For me, all these actions became emotionally absorbing, stirring my curiosity and, above all, bringing forth an enormous gratitude. I know that behind every name, address, priory, province, and institution are good and generous people. You are our friends — our sisters and brothers. Unfortunately, we don’t have the addresses of all our benefactors, so if any of you don’t receive my handwritten letter, please be assured that we remember all of you in our prayers. We are in Ukraine, and we serve all those in need on your behalf as well.

Two days ago Father Misha, with the help of volunteers from the House of Saint Martin in Fastiv, organized a picnic for the inhabitants of Borodyanka. Borodyanka is one of the most devastated cities around Kyiv. I’ve already mentioned it a few times because our brothers in Fastiv have been helping its citizens for a while now. Last year, Father Misha finally fulfilled one of his dreams and bought a food truck. It’s a truck that can be used to prepare and serve hot meals. This ancient vehicle, with two large propane tanks attached to the back, drove the 70 km between Fastiv and Borodyanka surprisingly nimbly. And the children weren’t the only ones who were excited. Although we didn’t manage to provide french fries, we were capable of making delightful hotdogs and hamburgers. I fully shared everyone’s enthusiasm. Nowadays it’s hard to find good fast food, even in Kyiv, because the most popular of these chains are closed. How much worse it must be in Borodyanka, so tragically destroyed by Russian bombs and tanks, where it’s hard to find even a grocery store.

The menu of our food truck, which offered everything free of charge, also featured coffee: real, delightful, and aromatic. That was the biggest hit among the adults. Only a few months ago, coffee was absolutely normal, and nobody paid attention to it. Before the war, while driving overnight from Kyiv or Fastiv to Warsaw, we would stop in the morning for coffee in this very city. Today you can’t buy coffee in Borodyanka. I learned that while trying to find one for myself. “If I could find the money, I would immediately open a coffee house in this place,” said Father Misha when we talked about it last night. “People are longing for it. They want to go back to normal, everyday comforts.” I agree with him wholeheartedly; I’m very happy that, apart from building materials for renovating destroyed houses and necessary items like medicine, flour, oil, canned meat and bread, the volunteers from the House of Saint Martin make a huge effort to provide some token of a different, normal, pre-war world for those who have been suffering. Mrs. Natalia, who lives in our Kyiv priory with her elderly parents, told me how much she longs for this lost, normal world — how much she would love to simply sit down in front of her house in the morning and peacefully drink a cup of hot coffee.

Over the last week, I traveled a lot on trains. Partly out of comfort, partly out of necessity due to the lack of gasoline. Many trains in Ukraine consist mostly of sleeping cars. Each of these cars has its “providnyk”, a railroad employee who serves the passengers. “Have you been working throughout the whole war?” I asked the woman responsible for my car. “Yes, I’ve been riding all this time,” she responded. “I would like to thank you. You are a real hero to me.” She was a little surprised by what I said. She immediately stopped what she was doing and called over her colleague. I listened to their stories about how they served on the evacuation trains in the most dangerous moments of war. They showed me pictures of bullet-ridden cars and rockets flying over the Kyiv train station from the first weeks of war. People like them are real heros. Without their work, millions of human beings wouldn’t be able to evacuate to safety. Many Ukrainian railroad workers suffered as a result of war. Mr. Volodymyr showed me a picture on his phone of his relative whose face was covered with wounds after one of the most recent rocket attacks. As we were finishing our conversation, I ordered a coffee. The paper cup had an advertisement with a beautiful slogan: “Ukrainian things are becoming the best.” I don’t know how to say it better.

On the way to Kyiv, I overheard the conversation of the children running around in the car. They were traveling home with their moms. They didn’t know each other before, so they were describing their houses while they were playing. In their conversation, they mentioned alarms, explosions, artillery barrages. I wondered how deep the psychological wounds are, in all of us and especially in the young Ukrainians afflicted by this war.

The Institute of Saint Thomas Aquinas in Kyiv, run by the Dominicans, is operating online just like all the other schools and universities. It allows students who are spread around Ukraine, or even the world, to participate in the classes. Father Thomas, who moved to Kyiv about a year ago, recently started his topics course on the concept of a person in the writings of Romano Guardini and Joseph Ratzinger. The course is attended by seven people. That’s pretty good for our school and wartime. Father Petro, the director of the institute, has already opened a recruitment campaign for the new academic year. I’m very curious how many people, and who, will apply to begin studies in September. Among the prospective students, we have one soldier. He asked if we offer remote classes, since it will be very difficult for him to travel to Kyiv. I’m glad that in such a difficult time in Ukraine there are people willing to study theology.

Today our Dominican community in Khmelnytskyi is celebrating a unique solemnity of the elevation of the relics of Saint Dominic. A year ago, the brothers expressed their desire to have the relics of our Father and the founder of the Order in their house. These dreams were supported by Father Wojciech, the theologian of the papal household, who advised us to make a request for relics to the Roman monastery of the Dominican nuns on Monte Mario. The nuns responded favorably, and the relics of Saint Dominic and Saint Sixtus arrived in Khmelnytskyi. As preparation for the solemnity, Father Oleksandr from Kyiv preached the retreat at the parish of Christ the King in Khmelnytskyi, which is the parish of our priory. Today’s Mass will be presided by Bishop Nicholas. It’s another chance to see this Dominican brother who recently ordained Father Igor. Bishop Nicholas praised the pastoral work of Father Irenaeus in Mukachevo, who was evacuated from Kharkiv along with his parishioners at the beginning of the war. “Nicholas made me a confessor at the cathedral,” said Father Irenaeus, who spends a lot of time in the confessional but also helps the bishop by celebrating Masses in the neighboring parishes. God assures that people have access to the sacraments in this difficult time of war.

There’s a saying that you help more by giving a fishing rod than by giving a fish. Our sisters, brothers, and volunteers from the House of Saint Martin de Porres preferred to bring the people from Andriivka and Krasnohirka chicken rather than eggs. Both towns still look horrible, although their residents fixed a lot and cleaned up what was left by the unwanted guests from the east. Most of the household animals were lost during the war or were eaten by the Russian soldiers stationed there. That’s why a long line of smiling people quickly formed around our car to receive small chickens. We gave away over two thousand of them. After all, it’s Easter, and chicks symbolize new life, hope, and rebirth.

With warm greetings and request for prayer,

Jarosław Krawiec, OP,
Kyiv, Sunday, May 22, 10:45pm

Posted in News