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News Archives: Year 2006
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Iconography Workshop:
taught by Father
Gianluca Busi
August 14-18,
2006
The Spirit Center at the Monastery of St. Gertrude will host
Father Gianluca Busi, a master iconographer who lives and works in San Leo
outside of Bologna, Italy. He has been 'writing' traditional icons for
over 10 years. Numerous apprentices and iconographers work with Father
Busi in his studio to fulfill the large number of commissions he receives from
all over the world.
Father Busi will work on an icon of Christ that he will
present to the Monastery at the conclusion of the workshop.
The workshop will teach the technical aspects of obtaining
light on the face of a saint and on fabric.
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Fr. Busi completing gold leaf on icon |

Sr. Carolyn receiving instruction |

Fr. Busi in his studio in San Leo |
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Benedictine sister to
teach yoga classes
By Lorie Palmer
IDAHO COUNTY FREE PRESS
September 12, 2006
COTTONWOOD -- What began 25 years ago as a "positive addiction" to help her quit
smoking turned into a life-style for Sister Michelle Bateman.
"That was long before religious life and yoga
became a passion for me," Sister Michelle said. "And since 80 percent of yoga is
breathing, I did quit smoking so I could enjoy yoga more."
Bateman, a member of the Benedictine sisters
at the Monastery of St. Gertrude, recently graduated from the Himalayan
Institute in Honesdale Pa., where she received intensive yoga training for three
weeks. Prior to that she completed an eight-month home-study course.
She will begin teaching classes Monday, Sept.
18, at the American Legion Hall in Cottonwood. Classes will be offered Monday
through Friday at both 6:30 a.m. and p.m.
"I hope people will understand yoga is a
science and philosophy, not a religion," she explained. "It's the union of body,
mind and spirit."
Yoga helps in a variety of areas including
flexibility, stress reduction and "inner healing."
"It's not about athletic prowess or
competition, and anyone of any age or ability level can benefit from yoga,"
Bateman emphasized.
Bateman asks anyone who attends classes to
wear comfortable clothing.
"I will provide mats and can modify the
postures and positions to meet each person's needs," she explained. "It's very
individualized and no one should think they cannot do it. Yoga can be done from
a chair, balancing by holding on to a wall, standing or sitting."
Bateman said yoga is such a passion to her
she wants to share it with others.
"It feels wonderful and I want to get the
message out," she said. "People will get out of yoga just what they put into it
and I hope it will become a part of life in a positive way for many people."
Call 962-3224 for registration and prices.
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Sisters host
gathering
The Sisters at the Monastery of St. Gertrude
hosted a group of 24 Benedictine Sisters for the 12th Annual Benedictine
Subprioresses and House Coordinators Gathering in September.
Those who attended traveled from 20 different
monasteries across the United States, including New Jersey, Florida, Kentucky
and more. They were enthralled with the beauty of the prairie, the autumn
colors, warm days and mountain views.
The theme for the week-long workshop was
Benedictine Leadership and how the sisters' spirituality influences all those
people with whom they share their lives and ministries.
Sisters Mary Forman and Barbara Jean
Glodowski, both of St. Gertrude's in Cottonwood, made presentations to the
group. Sr. Mary Forman spoke on "Ministry of Authority and Consultation: Rule of
Benedict and Monastic Life Today," and Sr. Barbara Jean gave a workshop on "The
Gift of Wisdom: Deepening Your Spiritual Vitality and Intimacy."
Sr. Carol Ann Wassmuth shared with the group
the sisters' Care of the Land Philosophy and gave them a Forestry 101 lesson.
Included in the workshop was a tour of the grounds, the cemetery, the forest
around the monastery and the upper meadow. Sr. Placida Wemhoff treated everyone
who could make it up the hill to a pancake dinner.
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She empowers the
powerless
Sister Bernadette Stang honored for her work
on behalf of poor migrant children in southern Idaho
By Jodi Walker
LEWISTON MORNING TRIBUNE
COTTONWOOD - Sister Bernadette Stang gently
lifts the lid from the official-looking blue box to reveal her prized American
flag.
"Senator (Larry ) Craig had this flown in my
honor," she says quietly, her humility overpowered by the meaning of the words.
Flying of the flag over the White House was
part of the honor Stang, 71, received last month for a decade of work with
minority students in southern Idaho.
After being named "Friend of the Farm
Workers," Stang was honored with a day named in her honor by Caldwell Mayor
Garret L. Nancolas.
But her proudest achievement is not the day
or the flag; it is the students in a new tutoring center named in her honor in
the Farmway Village farm workers camp near Caldwell. Sister Bernadette
Escuelita --"escuelita" means "little school" in Spanish -- is a three-room
schoolhouse where children of migrant workers are tutored and encouraged to aim
for high achievement.
And succeed they have.
One of her former students, Ydalia, recently
received a $30,000 scholarship to Seattle University. Maria, another
student, is following her dream of becoming a dentist by maintaining a 4.0 grade
point average.
"Another success is for them not to drop out
of high school," Stang says, taking a break in a small library in the Spirit
Center at the St. Gertrude's Monastery campus.
Stang is home now in Cottonwood after a
lifetime spent serving others. She now works with the retreat ministry on
site.
But that hasn't always been the way for Stang.
She grew up in central Minnesota and was
trained to teach in a one-room schoolhouse. She then taught at a Catholic
school in Minnesota before entering the Benedictine order 50 years ago.
After taking her vows, Stang continued to
teach across the state, spending two of those years in Lewiston. She then
took her teaching prowess to an older audience as part of a religious education
team for the state of Idaho.
She did parish ministry in Burley and
Blackfoot, as well as a three-year stint in Colombia, South America. She
returned to Cottonwood, held leadership positions for seven years and then took
a sabbatical.
While in Louisiana on sabbatical, she was in
a car crash that killed the priest who was driving. She was seriously
injured and, while recovering, suffered a pulmonary embolism.
"The gift of life became even more precious
to me," she says, wringing her hands as she remembers those life-altering
events.
After returning to Cottonwood, she soon set
out again, this time for southern Idaho to help the women and children in
migrant families.
"It is the women and the children who needed
empowering."
The isolated village five miles from Caldwell
has a store, Stang says, but that is all. The villagers speak little or no
English and many don't leave the camp. The head of migrant education had
dreamt of opening a learning center, she says, and the two teamed up.
The "escuelita" or little school, was born.
It started with three children. Soon it had 10. Then 60 and then 80,
Stang says. "It was a wonderful setup."
But it was crowded.
"The children hung from the chandeliers, so
to speak."
With a grant from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, a new three-room facility was built and promptly named after the
woman who not only taught, recruited volunteers and kept the facility going but
who would visit homes, take pregnant mothers to the hospital and go out on a
limb when no one else would.
A year ago she left the camp and took on the
challenge of creating a children's center out of the old St. Mary's Church in
Caldwell. A parishioner had bought the old church and two other buildings
on teh site and donated them. Stang created a youth program that is
thriving beyond her time there.
Back in Cottonwood, Stang says she is
enjoying being home but is ready to listen if she is called back out to help
others.
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Sister Meg Sass
named to Parish Life and Faith Formation post
By Colette Cowman
IDAHO CATHOLIC REGISTER
Many of Sister Meg Sass's life activities
have prepared her for her new position as one of three Parish Life and Faith
Formation coordinators for the Diocese of Boise.
First, the Benedictine sister's time as
teacher and principal at Sacred Heart School, Boise, and at St. Mary's in Boise
and St. Maries and in Lewiston were good preparation.
"! still use my teaching skills," she said.
"I think everybody ought to have to teach for two years because it teaches you
to look at the big picture and then break it down into tiny steps.
What she hopes to do with the parishes and
groups of parishes in the Northern and North Central deaneries where she will
serve is "help them dream the big picture and then break it down into tiny steps
so they can get there."
Sister Meg, who grew up in Twin Falls from
about age 10, the oldest of six children, is the daughter of Peg Sass and the
late Deacon Robert Sass. She entered her Benedictine community in 1959 and made
her final profession in 1967 She holds a Bachelor of Science degree in secondary
education from University of Idaho, Moscow, and a Masters Degree in
pastoral studies with a concentration in group dynamics and leadership skills
from Loyola University, Chicago. Recently, she completed a certificate program
with the Center of Organizational Reform (COR) which is affiliated with Gonzaga
University, Spokane.
Her long-time interest in "groups" has also
been good preparation for her new position, especially the work she will do with
parish and deanery pastoral councils and all kinds of catechetical groups. Ever
since her graduate work at Loyola in the 1970s, Sister Meg has liked studying
why some groups get things done and others spin their wheels.
Her COR courses helped her understand the
factors that affect all groups — businesses, civic organizations, religious
communities and parishes, and provided information about how to help those
groups be more effective.
"First we realize that groups are made up of
good people," said Sister Meg, who comes to the Diocese from a job as
coordinator of building and renovation and assistant prioress at Monastery of
St. Gertrude, Cottonwood. "The reason the group is not effective is not because
there are not good people in it. Some factors that affect what gets done in a
group are the rate of change — new people moving in and out, new technology, new
directions from leadership (people are often asked to do more with less
resources) and the complexity of life."
"Sometimes it is just a group's own internal
structure that causes a bottleneck," she said. "Nobody intended it to do that,
it just does. So we have systems that we need to look at and find ways to
change."
Sister Meg feels the other good preparation
for her job was that she lived in the North Central Deanery for almost 40 years
"so I do know some of the people in the area and some of the things they
struggle with — one of which is being so far from Boise."
"I'm really hoping that I will be a resource
for them and a connector to help them share with each other as we go to clusters
of parishes," she said. "I'm hoping that one of the practical ways I can
facilitate that is to share our people resources."
All of Sister Meg's years of working in adult
education and adult retreats have given her a sense that "the people in our
parishes are really hungry for a deeper relationship with God that transforms
their lives." She hopes to mentor people in the parishes to grow in their
confidence to provide opportunities for spiritual growth for their parishes.
Her vision of church is that each person, by
his or her baptism and confirmation, is an essential tool in the hands of Christ
to transform our world. She wants to help people in the parishes do that.
"The Diocese of Boise needs to be
complimented on the reorganization (of the education office)," Sister Meg said.
"They are honestly addressing the needs of today's church. The reality is that
not every parish can afford lots of pastoral help. We have to share and learn
and work together. The reorganization also gives validity to the parish clusters
around the state and to the deanery pastoral councils. It is a very good
structure."
She sees it as a "blessing" that the Parish
Life and Faith Formation Department staff can brainstorm together in the office,
that no one member of the staff has be an expert in everything and that the
coordinators can then go out and share in the deaneries.
Sister Meg said her work for Catholic
Charities of the Diocese of Spokane, Wash., for 13 years in both parish social
ministry and senior services and her work as a RENEW coordinator gave her a good
sense of working on diocesan-wide programs.
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50th Jubilees celebrated
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Sister Jean Lalande (left) and Sister Chanelle Schuler |
Sr. Jean Lalande and Sr. Chanelle Schuler celebrated their 50th Jubilee as
Benedictine sisters on Saturday, July 8, 2006, at monastery chapel. Before
nearly two hundred gathered family and friends, the women renewed their monastic
promises of stability, obedience and fidelity to the monastic way of life.
“I am grateful
for this supportive community,” Sr. Jean said. “The example of the sisters helps
me live my life faithfully.”
Sr. Jean began
her years as a Benedictine sister teaching in the many schools the community
staffed. She loved the physical sciences and taught PE, biology and science at
schools around the state, including St. Gertrude’s Academy and Bishop Kelly High
School in Boise. In 1977, Sr. Jean was asked to minister at the monastery as the
formation director. By 1989 she had received her Masters Degree in Spirituality
at Gonzaga University, worked in parish ministry and earned her certification to
practice massage therapy.
In 1989 Sr.
Jean and her friend, Carolyn Johnson, started the Body Therapy Clinic, a massage
therapy business in Lewiston. "I loved running my own business. My science and
physical education background, plus my own contemplative and monastic nature,
provided a perfect fit for the business of healing with touch and massage.
Massage is a very spiritual occupation.”
Sr. Jean was
elected Prioress in 1999. During her six year term she led the community through
a visioning process that set the stage for building Spirit Center, 21,800 square
foot retreat and conference center.
“I am glad I’m
part of this community,” she said. “I am also glad that I have been able to
contribute to its growth, as well.”
Sr. Chanelle
loves the monastic life, too. "These 50 years have been a blessing,” she said.
“God was able to touch so many lives through me, and for that I am deeply
grateful.”
Sr. Chanelle
grew up knowing that she wanted to be a nurse. After making profession in 1956,
she began a nursing career that spanned 22 years. She ministered at St.
Benedicts Medical Center in Jerome and at St. Mary’s Hospital in Cottonwood.
In 1985, Sr.
Chanelle changed careers and became a hospital Chaplain, first at St. Benedicts
in Jerome, and then at Sacred Heart Medical Center in Spokane, WA. She worked
there for over 14 years, finding the ministry interesting and fulfilling.
"It was a
privilege to share times of need, pain and sorrow with patients and their
families," recalled Sr. Chanelle. "To ease patients' fears by singing and
praying with them, or to accompany them in their final moments of life, these
were sacraments, sacred times. These were moments when God was made present to
others through me."
In 2004 Sr.
Chanelle officially retired from Sacred Heart and returned home to St.
Gertrude's to oversee the Infirmary and general health care for the sisters.
"I can't
imagine myself anywhere else. There is nothing out there that could draw me away
from this life,” Sr. Chanelle said with a smile.
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Two Novices Make
Profession at Monastery of St. Gertrude in Cottonwood
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Sister Carla Fontes (left) and Sister Mary Mendez |
COTTONWOOD—Two women will commit to Benedictine spiritual life and to the
monastic community at the Monastery of St. Gertrude in Cottonwood, ID, on
Tuesday, March 21, 2006. The public is invited to attend the Rite of Temporary
Profession at 2 p.m. in the monastery’s chapel with a reception following.
Completing three years of study and service,
Carla Fontes and Mary Mendez have been committed participants in the monastery’s
formation program as affiliates, postulants and novices. Surrounded by friends,
family and the sisters of St. Gertrude, Fontes and Mendez will promise
“fidelity, stability, obedience and to seek God in the Monastery of St. Gertrude
until death” during the profession ceremony.
Novice Carla Fontes, 45, began thinking about
monastic life years ago after receiving encouragement from her friends at Sacred
Heart parish in Boise.
“One Sunday there were cards in the pews at
church asking, ‘Do you know someone who would make a good sister?’ Everyone came
up to me and said, ‘I put your name down.’”
But it was really a pilgrimage to Rome and
Medjugorje that prompted Fontes to seriously consider life as a sister. “I went
into the chapel at Medjugorje, and the nuns were there. A feeling came over me.
When you walk through the door, you just know.”
Novice Mary Mendez, 59, of Dinuba, CA,
understands exactly what she means.
“It just felt right,” said Mendez, a former
hospice nurse and mother of three grown children. “I sent my youngest daughter
off to college and thought, ‘What am I going to do with my life now?’ I knew it
would involve service.”
The answer came to Mendez during a 17-day
volunteer experience with a Benedictine monastery in North Dakota in 1999. “I
realized I was a mother of three with a Benedictine heart. My kids weren’t
surprised. They said, ‘Gee, Mom, it seems like the poorer you get, the happier
you get.’”
Following apprenticeships in many of the
monastery’s ministries, both women have settled into areas of specialization.
Fontes works in maintenance and manages the herb garden. She is studying to be a
master herbalist and helps create healing salves, oils and soaps. Mendez, who
creates stained glass art, manages the monastery’s Book and Gift Shop.
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Spirit and Soul
By Bill London
Cottonwood monastery provides quiet, quality
escape. Not everyone welcomes the holiday season. For some, the family and
economic pressures are almost unbearable. By mid-January, with anxiety still
simmering, they many think, "Whew! The holidays are over. I barely mad it
through this time."
Perhaps these traumatized folks need an
opportunity to assess and stabilize in a supportive spiritual environment.
In other words, they need a retreat. Maybe they would benefit from a visit to
the Spirit Center at the Monastery of St. Gertrude, located near Cottonwood,
Idaho, 90 miles south of Moscow.
We can almost hear the negative response to
the idea of hanging out with a bunch of nuns and sleeping in a painfully poor
and cramped conditions seeking vague enlightenment on someone else's schedule.
Those concerns regarding a retreat at St.
Gertrude's are misplaced. First, these are fun nuns, and second, these nuns just
opened a beautiful $3 million, 22-room retreat center that looks like a cross
between an upscale hotel and a college dorm.
Yes, these are fun nuns. Sure, they
have a specific religious belief structure. They are committed members of the
Benedictine order. However, based on my own experience interviewing many
sister from St Gertrude's for various magazine and newspaper articles over the
past two decades, these women do not let their own religion get in the way of
their spiritual selves. They really do not care if you share their own flavor of
Christianity, or if you even are a Christian believer. They respond to the
light of your humanity. They are uniformly gentle, sweet, and caring.
These sisters of St. Gertrude do not invite
visitors to their retreat center to gain new believers or to change their
guests' religious beliefs. Their goal is to enable the guests to attain their
own spiritual goals. Their plan is to melt into the background, unless the
visitors wish to join them in prayer, n meals, or in conversation. In sum,
they are great hosts.
For several decades, the sisters have
sponsored retreats, bringing about 10,000 guests annually to the monastery. They
have provided the food and accommodations for family groups, organization
meetings, and religious gatherings. They have offered workshops for the public
on a wide variety of self-help issues.
And they have provided accommodations for
those who want to separate themselves from the rest of the world and spend time
in quiet contemplation or by walking in the monastery gardens or
forestland. The sisters gladly facilitate private retreats by individual
or groups of friends or families who need to relax and renew.
What's new about the retreat options
available now at St. Gertrude's is the retreat facility. The sisters spent
several years in contemplation, trying to decide what they could do, within the
goals of their ministry, to bring income to the monastery to keep the facility
open. they decided to expand their retreat program by building the Spirit
Center.
The new center provides 22 rooms, each with
two single beds, a rocking chair an a private bath. Not lavish, but simple,
clean and comfortable. The center also houses a meeting room (complete with all
the latest high-tech gizmos for conferences and conventions) and a
Kitchen/dining hall.
The new kitchen and dining area is designed
for use by large conferences. Individual and small retreat groups still will be
expected to share in the meals with the monastic community in the main building
or to use the kitchenettes available in the lounges located on each floor of the
Spirit Center.
The options for retreat agenda are similar.
Guests can use the time for private contemplation or study, walking in the
gardens, visiting the well-respected museum (the best collection of local
historical items in the region) in the adjacent building, admiring the out-door
religious statuary, or hiking through the adjacent forest. Or guests can follow
a specified agenda created in collaboration with a spiritual advisor from St.
Gertrude's staff.
Visitors have been coming to St. Gertrude's
for a century to benefit from the peaceful spirituality there and to enjoy
rest-full walks around the grounds.
The Benedictine sisters established the
convent and school in 1907. The beautiful chapel building, which was finished in
1924 is still a visitor highlight. And now the Spirit Center has been created to
provide visitors with comfortable accommodations to retreat from the rest of the
world and assess themselves and their future.
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New retreat center reflects environmental
commitment
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Spirit Center front entrance |
The new “Spirit Center” at the Monastery of St. Gertrude
reflects the community’s commitment to environmental advocacy as well as its
desire to provide a contemplative venue for retreats and conferences.
Completed in June 2005, the 22,000-square foot center comprises a two-story
conference wing and a three-story sleeping quarters wing south of the existing
1920s era chapel, dining hall and other monastery buildings.
“From our very first meeting, it was clear that the sisters were committed to
stewardship of the land and that commitment would need to be reflected in the
building’s final design,” said Ann Schopf, design principal with Mahlum
Architects.
The Benedictine sisters are responsible for 1,400 acres of land, some of which
is leased as farmland and for grazing. Some is also used for a garden and
orchard, but the largest portion, 1,000 acres, has stands of ponderosa pine, fir
and spruce. The forest, a favorite area for retreatants, was named Idaho’s
Tree Farm of the Year in 2001.
The two wings of the building sit on a slope that looks out over the Camas
Prairie and are angled so that those staying in the sleeping wing have total
privacy and a stunning view. The all-wooden structure has hydronic
radiators for heating, a natural ventilation system rather than air conditioning
for fresh air, and operable windows. Each room has an air stack for
release of convected hot air through the roof.
A glass-walled lobby, offices, a workroom and covered walkway connect the two
wings. The conference wing houses four meeting rooms, kitchen, library,
archives and storage room for the nearby Historical Museum at St. Gertrude, one
of the oldest continuously operated museums in the Pacific Northwest.
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Exterior view of Spirit Center |
The
sleeping wing has 22 bedrooms that can accommodate 44 people.
Retreatants previously stayed in the main monastery building. The
monastery annex will be designated for use only by the sisters, providing them
with privacy they previously lacked.
“We wanted a building that blended into the landscape, that didn’t disrupt the
flow of the land,” said Susan Fore, project manager with Mahlum. “We also wanted
to create a structure that allowed for community space as well as some solitude
since the monastery is committed to providing a welcoming venue for retreats and
conferences.”
The exterior colors of the building – reds and greys – complement the landscape
and relate to the striking red bell towers of the historic monastery. The
interior colors are a mix of soft shades of light blues, yellows and greens.
Cost of construction and owner-supplied furnishings was $3.22 million.
Bouten Construction, of Spokane, was the contracting and construction firm.
Others involved included Coughlin Porter Lundeen, civil and structural engineer,
Keen Engineering Co., mechanical, and Travis, Fitzmaurice & Associates,
electrical.
The Benedictine sisters plan a phase two renovation of the historic monastery
building later in 2006. That project, estimated to cost about $1.95
million, will include replacement of windows, installation of a new elevator,
relocation and reorganization of public spaces and offices within the existing
monastery building, and replacement of the organization’s telephone system and
nurse call system in the infirmary.
Founded in Switzerland, the community has operated in the Pacific Northwest for
123 years, the last 98 in Cottonwood. The Benedictine Sisters follow the
Rule of Benedict.
Mahlum Architects, founded in 1938, is a firm of 100 people with offices in
Seattle and Portland. The firm is committed to creating enduring architecture
for the enrichment of the human experience.
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