This is belated, for which I apologise – but, like wine, thanksgiving keeps, warms and enriches!
I want to say a fervent ‘thank you’ for your support, interest and prayers for our 140th year, and particularly for its culmination in the Mass celebrated in Soho on the 11th February 2012. Let me tell you a little about it.
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We felt very privileged to celebrate our special anniversary there, particularly as our Foundress and the early Sisters in the Congregation worshipped there. They walked the wide squares and narrow streets of the area way back in the late nineteenth century, visiting the tenements and crumbling houses which were the places where the poor lived then. Perhaps ‘existed’ might be a better word, for the great facades of the time hid the dirty, fetid, unhealthy rooms where they huddled around a few sticks in a grate – if they were lucky – to warm themselves.
Soho was then a violent, corrupt place, where pimps operated ruthlessly to extort money from the poor women who plied their trade as prostitutes to provide bread and other necessities for their children. It was to these that Frances Taylor – Mother Magdalen – reached out. She understood their sense of hopelessness and their fears. Because she believed passionately in the dignity of each human being, she fought to give back to these young women the self-worth and confidence they had lost. She gave them a listening ear, a smile, a respect they very much appreciated. She taught her sisters to do the same, and never to judge them as many others did.
So for us, Soho is a special place. One of the Convents they lived in is now occupied by the Fox Film Company. It is right opposite the Church. I went in there the day after the Mass, and the people who worked there were very interested in our history and in what the early Sisters had done in that building and in the surrounding districts.
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L to R: Cardinal Murphy O'Connor, Bishop Kieran Conry,and Fr. Alex Sherbrooke, Parish Priest of St. Patrick's Soho |
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Sr. Mary Whelan, SMG and Kenneth Campbell |
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Painting of the Sacred Heart pleading by Gagliardi |
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Marriage in Cana, Giotto c. 1304 |
Fr. Alexander Sherbrooke, the parish priest spoke movingly of the work of the Sisters and how it is carried on today in the parish – the Holy Hours before the Blessed Sacrament, the outreaching to the poor, and much more. It was very uplifting to hear him. At the end of a wonderful celebration, Sr. Frances Ennis also spoke in her inimitable way of the life, times and continuing inspiration of Mother Magdalen in a world of darkness and division.
I do not have space to say much more, but the kaleidoscopes keep returning – the meeting for refreshment after the Mass, the delight at seeing old friends and colleagues – the noise, laughter and joy... the enjoyment of the huge birthday cake, and so much more.
We were so privileged to have Kenneth Campbell, his sister Julia and his daughter Jacqueline with us. Kenneth and Julia are the great grandchildren of Charlotte Dean, Mother Magdalen’s sister, so they are very close relatives of Mother herself. Charlotte became a Catholic two years after leaving the Crimea. She was very close always in thought and in affection to her youngest sister, and having experienced the horrors of the Crimea together, the bond was strengthened. To talk to Kenneth, Julia and Jacqueline brought the whole story of the SMG’s to life – this was part of the family from which the first SMG came. It was awesome!
We’ll end where we began – with a fervent thanksgiving. Thank you to all who organised the service and did the refreshments, to all those who so lovingly participated, and to all of you who faithfully prayed for us.
Let’s remember to say together: “My soul glorifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour!”
Thank you.
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Sr. Mary Whelan, SMG with Kenneth Campbell and Sr. Joseph, SMG |
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Kenneth Campbell and niece Julia |
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Let’s remember to say together: “My soul glorifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour!”
Thank you.
Thank you Sister Brenda for such a vivid pictuire of the celebration in Soho. It surely brought us who could not be there very much into the spirit of family, of love ,of gratitude and what what we SMGs do so well, of celebration. May the witness of that day help to bring us closer to the day when the Woman of the Story, Mother Magdalen, will be a Heroine for the whole church, and will be called 'Blessed'. Ad Majoram Dei Gloriam
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