The Tapestry

 

Sister Dorina

I was born in 1928 in the northernmost part of Maine in a place that bordered the St. John River.  The Frasier paper mill attracted many workers and their families and soon the town of Madawaska was established with a church and a school of our own.

Like many of the families there, my parents were strong Catholics. They had little formal education, wonderful creative talents, and a faith that could move mountains - a blessing they passed on to their nine children. Being the oldest, my parents taught me responsibility at an early age. I learned how to sew, knit, crochet and cook as a child. I can still remember standing on a chair near the table to bake my first cake!

In this atmosphere of love, faith, and happiness, God started a tapestry that wove secretly in our daily living. I remember seeing the Sisters of St Joseph when my mother and I visited my father in the hospital. At the age of 3, I didn't appreciate the loving attention the sisters gave me and would often cry when they fussed over me. However when I got home, I would put a towel over my head and walk about like a Sister! My role playing became more focused after my First Communion, when I would play "school" with my siblings. I played the teaching Sister on mission to China - a fantasy that would stay with me for some time.

By 16, we moved to a farm in Van Buren. That's where I met the Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Everyone knew them as the "Good Shepherd Sisters". Although I thought about becoming a Daughter of Wisdom (the congregation my aunts had joined), I soon discovered that God's tapestry was weaving a desire to become a Good Shepherd Sister.

Sister Dorina in AfricaUpon finishing High School, I entered the novitiate and happily pronounced my first vows in 1948. I was a teaching Sister for ten years in Maine and often thought about my childhood fantasy of mission work. By this time, my attention was turned to Southern Africa in a small country called Basutoland (later named Lesotho). In 1953, I flew there to dedicate 35 years of service as a teacher and principal of a girls' high school.

Sister Dorina recieving her degreeI was occasionally joined in mission by students from Grinnell College in Iowa. Here, the college showed their appreciation by giving me an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree. When I returned in 1993, I was asked to be the convent superior - a position of service - for our American province in Maine.

God has woven the years of my life into a tapestry filled with multiple colors of love, prayer, service, community, and friendship. I love my religious life and I'm very happy that I answered His call. Of course, there are sacrifices. I might have liked to become an opera singer. But I can still sing to God's glory in the convent and I wait to perform my aria in His heaven.

God is weaving a unique tapestry for you. I pray that you will enjoy His work in your life as much a I have. God bless you.

Sr Dorina

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