HAPPY WEEKEND
Gina Dizon
I
came to know of Sister Mary Francis in my Sagada Minstrel days
in the late 70s to early 8os when I was a high school student
at St. Mary’s School. Soft spoken with a contented disposition
is what I remember of Sister Mary Francis.
A
fleeting form who pops in and out of my existence, Sister
once again came to my sight in the 80s when I entered the dormitory
at the Church of the Epiphany in La Trinidad.
Along
with other Sisters, she would often come in the mornings for
breakfast with Manang Penny Capuyan cooking their meals. Manang Penny was
our dorm supervisor and also one of the earliest orphans taken cared
of by the Sisters of St Mary the Virgin in Sagada after World War 2.
Two years ago, I
saw Sister again when Manang Penny invited me to do an interview at
the new Convent she built at the Resurrection Compound in Baguio
City. One meeting led to another meeting until I came to know of
her demise. I owe Sister a story. The most that I can do at the
moment is this piece I write for her. I hope to do a longer one some
other time. Sister Mary Francis, 95, died of septic shock June 22 this
year.
Sister
Mary Francis, from La Trinidad Benguet was christened Paula Dolo
before she was professed into the Order of the Community
of St Mary the Virgin after her secondary education. She finished her elementary
education at Easter School in Baguio City and proceeded to
SMS in Sagada for secondary schooling and graduated in 1939.
At
a young age, she demonstrated her love and care for children. “She
bathed and fed us and checked our hair for kuto and kilit
everyday ”, Manang Penny told this writer.
Taking
care of children was one of the major tasks of Sister Mary
Francis and the other Sisters among them Sisters Teresa and Sister
Clare. Other children from nearby communities joined
the earlier children at the Orphanage including those from Guinaang and
Dalikan in Bontoc and Tadian from where mission
stations of the Anglican Church were established.
The Orphanage was a living sign of humanity where orphans and
indigent children from different locations came in one house to find a second
home, or rather a first home.
Regular
attendance to church services was a must which children attended,
aside from receiving Bible studies from the Sisters who stayed at the Convent
of St Mary adjacent the Church of St Mary the Virgin in Sagada.
Aside
from tending to orphans, the Sisters taught Christian subjects
to children in nearby elementary schools of Ambasing and Bomabanga
in Sagada
Cleanliness
was one of major virtues Sister taught the orphans to
include having clean sleeping rooms, a clean kitchen,
clean bathrooms, and clean and green surroundings as well.
The
landscaped gardens with some of the colorful flowers at the
Orphanage-turned St Jo Café and the Convent -turned Parish
Office of the Church of St Mary the Virgin show signs of the green
thumbs of Sisters-among them Sister Mary Francis-who kept the gardens
managed green and lovely.
By the
early years of 2000, the Convent located in Sagada was turned to a
parish office by the leadership of the diocese of Northern Luzon led by
then Bishop Edward Malecdan.
The
remaining memories of Sisters in Sagada also disappeared with the leaving
of Sister Mary Francis who had no Convent to stay in anymore. Sister
Clare has gone to the US and other Sisters joined their Creator. Sister
Mary Francis, the last bastion of the Order of Community
of the Sisters of Saint Mary the Virgin left the Convent.
Glaringly
obvious, the conversion of the Convent into a Parish Office indicated the
mortality of Sisterhood of the Anglican Church in Saint Mary the Virgin in
Sagada.
I
don’t like the conversion. The Convent should have been made primarily a venue
for women and children to continue the works of the Sisters who
lovingly and in the most Christian manner cared for orphans and children
who did not have parents or whose parents find it difficult to rear
them. Relevant programs could have been done along this line.
Sister
Mary Francis had no station to stay anymore in Sagada so she went back to her
hometown in La Trinidad, attending church services at the Church of
the Epiphany and doing visitation of the sick as well along with other
members of the church of Epiphany. She continues to do her Christian
duties and do the vows she professed as a Sister of the Community
of St Mary.
With
her personal funds along with help from friends, she built the Convent of St
Mary the Virgin at the Church of the Resurrection Compound in
Baguio City in the earlier 2000 years with the blessings
of the leadership of the diocese of North Central Philippines led
by Bishop Joel Pachao. She was joined by Sisters Paz, Sister
Inez and Sister Safee.
She
founded the Associates of the Sisters of St Mary composed of some
members of the Episcopal Church Women who keep the vocation going
including provisions of material needs of the Convent. Among them
AttyInglayFokno, Mrs Epifania Daoey, and Mrs Hilda Tadaoan among
others. The Associates meet regularly at the Convent and
do Bible studies and visitations of the sick.
Sister
Mary Francis said she would like to see that the Convent continue
to exist with the presence of Sisters and Associates to continue
the task and vocation of Sisterhood for humankind and
manifesting virtues of Christianity.
A
mother and sister to many children, a teacher, and a nurturer, Sister Mary
Francis continues to touch the lives of every believer and nurturer
of Christian faith to the rest of humankind.
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