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    • Meet our Sisters
    • Find a Sister
    • Community Mission
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Meet a few of our sisters:

Sisters by name
 
Stories:
S. Pat Chaffee
S. Carla Mae Streeter
 
Not all sisters are listed on our website. 
Please contact us for information on a particular sister.
 

 

 

Sister Pat Chaffee: Activism and Community

 
27 Years of International Activism
Sister Pat Chaffee is an international activist, living the Racine Dominicans mission “committed to truth, compelled to justice,” in each of her ventures.  Her work has taken her thousands of miles from her comfort zone into life-threatening situations and has earned her a reputation as a justice advocate.  S. Pat is an advocate of God, evident in her missions, her community’s unwavering support, and her commitment to human rights — the basic dignities to which all of God’s children have a right.

Her portfolio is comprised of impressive 27-years of activism, starting in Nicaragua in 1984.  Her most recent mission was intended to be sailing with the Second Freedom Flotilla to Gaza.  All participants in this human rights mission however, were prevented from leaving Athens, Greece, their planned city of departure.  S. Pat had first become familiar with the Palestinian situation in 2007 when she took the first of three trips to the region as a member of a Christian peace-making team.  She met and spoke with Palestinians and experienced first-hand “what it meant to be occupied.”  

How she chooses her missions
S. Pat’s criterion for choosing her missions is simple:  the injustice imposed on a people is the direct result of the U.S. government’s policy or practice. This criterion has landed her in countries across the globe including El Salvador, Columbia, Afghanistan, and others.
 
What is it that compels Sister Pat to activism?
Jesus is the model by which she is compelled to act.  In her words, “Jesus had an obvious concern for those oppressed and was willing to be in the face of oppression.”
 
While S. Pat’s activism takes her to far-away places, she finds Jesus equally in her Racine Dominican community.  “With my sisters,” she says, “I recognize both the suffering Jesus and the healing Jesus every day.”  And she adds, “There is no way to fully describe the support I receive from my community.   I feel I am held in loving arms.”  
 
 

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Journey to Sisterhood

Becoming aware
“It was in the midst of absolute agony,” brought on by an allergic reaction, that Sister Carla Mae Streeter realized her primary intimacy was to be with God.  She recounts the moment when she was wearing a yellow, laced and plaid hand-me-down dress during her confirmation ceremony as a young girl.  It was wool and she was allergic, but a definite and clear recognition of her calling was evident within her consciousness.
 
Signs
Prelude to the moment during her confirmation, Streeter had been growing aware of the relationship one was capable of acquiring with the Divine.  She notes two particularly important events that helped her come to this awareness.  Both occurred during her childhood, and the first came on an afternoon like any other.  She had developed the habit of sitting in the quiet of the church after school, and one day a boy - a sturdy and strapping eighth-grader - marched to the front of the sanctuary. Oblivious to her being there, he knelt down and began to pray.  Carla Mae recalls that he must have been experiencing difficulties with his family, because he “poured his heart out,” as if talking to someone he absolutely knew and trusted.  Carla Mae sat in the back of the church, fixated on the boy.
The second notable moment occurred when Carla Mae stumbled upon her father, a large and commanding man, kneeling in prayer. He was so deep in prayer that he, like the boy, was oblivious to her presence.  Carla Mae began to realize that a relationship with God was real, that God was “a somebody” and not some great “power in the sky.” She wanted that relationship.     
 
Answering the call
As the proverbial “ball” started rolling in her journey to sisterhood, Carla Mae recounts her haphazard discovery of a pamphlet about the Racine Dominicans featuring a picture of a nun tending to chickens. Being incredibly shy, the prospect of a life of tending to animals and far from the public eye felt like the perfect fit for Carla Mae. 
Sister Carla Mae calls the rest of the story “a joke on me,” explaining that because the flyer was so old, the animals were long gone from the Racine Dominicans’ convent.  Instead she found upon visiting, that the sisters were her parents’ elementary school teachers.  This familiarity, coupled with the fact that Racine was the Dominican convent closest to her home in Milwaukee, made the Racine Dominicans, the first and last stop in her search for a community. She laughed as she recounted the irony of the fit: the girl, who was terrified of speaking; joined the Order of Preachers.  To expound on the “joke,” Sister Carla Mae herself, became a teacher. 
 
Teaching
Teaching is where Sister Carla Mae found herself most energized.  She started her teaching career with fourth graders in Saulk City, WI and proceeded to teach throughout the state and in Minnesota.  As her life has unfolded, Sister Carla Mae has been a teacher, an administrator, a student, a college professor, a researcher, a writer, and a volunteer. 
 
With a willing and open heart
As Sister Carla Mae examines the events in her life, she attributes her spiritual and educational progression to a series of ‘calls.’ People have continued to offer her opportunities saying “why don’t you…” and she has continually responded with a willing and energized heart.
Sister Carla Mae is currently writing two books.  The first is an examination of consciousness and the “Foundations of Spirituality”, and the second is being co-written by Streeter and a female Rabbi, featuring a discussion on “feminist interfaith.”
Sister Carla Mae lives and works in St. Louis, Missouri.  She will be on sabbatical from Aquinas Institute this fall when she intends to examine the work of Jewish-Catholic sister, and holocaust victim, Edith Stein. 
 

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Jubilarians 2010

Aceto, S. Lois  

Blomme, S. Joann

Boehmer, S. Cecile

Bohn, S. Margaret Rose  

Byrne, S. Kateri

Diedrick, S. Marian 

Hebel, S. Beverly

Hetzel, S. Marlene  

Hoffman, S. Fran

Lawinger, S. Virgine

McClenahan, S. Linda 

Novinski, S. Evelyn

Rademacher, S. Alice

Rotarius, S. Therese

Vollmer, S. Karen

Watson, S. Mary

Weyker, S. Janet

Jubilarians 2011

Antoine, S. Evelyn

Bogdanowitz, S. Gayle

Burg, S. Jeanne

Catanach, S. Dolores

Dischler, S. Clara

Forga, S. Ione

Hietpas, S. Germaine

Hild, S. Margaret

Kimmel, S. Roserita

Kubat, S. Shirley

Mlodzik, S. Rose Ellen

Pevas, S. Mary Ann

Szambelan, S. Esther

Vaculik, S. Mary

Van Thull, S. Therese

Vander Velden, S. Rita

Walsh, S. Brenda

Wester, S. Carol

Request information on a sister that is not listed.

 


      







     



Our Sisters who
 have died in the
past year:

 

S. Mary Florian Schneider

S. Clarice Mickey

S. Monica Gabriel

S. Jane Kutchey

S. Joanette Nitz

S. Regina Williams

S. Cecilia Olle

S. Helene Marie Doll


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Racine Dominicans, 5635 Erie Street, Racine, WI 53402  (262) 639-4100              

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