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This page updated
06/25/2007.
Past Happenings
THANKING GOD FOR OUR JUBILARIANS, 2001
SR. JOAN LOHMER and OTHER EVENTS, 2002
SUMMER and FALL, 2002
EFFORTS FOR PEACE,
SPRING, 2003
SPRING 2004
FALL
2004
Fall Slideshow
WINTER
2004
Winter Slideshow
SPRING 2005 FALL
2005 FALL
2006 SPRING
2007 |
A
Transition in our Ministry to the Elderly
After 46 years of ministering to the elderly on the third floor of the
LaVerna Heights building, the LaVerna Heights Retirement Center is closing and nursing
services are being consolidated to the LaVerna Village Nursing Home. On February 7, 2003,
Sr. Kathleen officially announced the consolidation citing various factors impacting the
decision: increasingly higher insurance costs, both in general and professional coverage
and employee health; a lack of increase in state grants to residents who have financial
difficulty with private pay fees, and the reality of a decreasing pool of staff and
private pay clients.
We believe that this consolidation will help us continue to give quality care to our
residents and to persevere in carrying out our mission to the elderly and infirm. All of
the Sisters who have worked in the nursing home and shared the building with residents
feel privileged to have been able to provide this care for people of our area since 1957.
When we
Sisters of St. Francis purchased the Dr. Nichols' Cancer Sanitorium in 1957 to establish
it as our province house and subsequently set up a retirement home on the third floor, we
realized Mother Pia's dream of providing nursing care for the elderly. On June 21, 1957,
the first patient came. During the first six months of operation of the La Verna Heights
Retirement Center, eleven residents were admitted and ten employees were hired. The
sisters, postulants, and novices did a great deal of work. Sister Waltrud was the first
supervisor of the retirement home. She was assisted by Sister Veronica and a staff of
licensed practical nurses. Sister Magdalene was the first administrator. It was not long
before the 40 beds were filled and a good reputation attained. Over the years renovations
and many changes have occurred, but the core values of compassion, availability,
reverence, enthusiasm and stewardship have always been maintained. We are pleased that
over 700 residents chose to come to our nursing home and that we were able to meet their
needs during this fragile time of their lives. LaVerna Village Nursing Home, which was
established in 1974 and has served over a thousand residents, will now be the focus of our
continuing ministry to the elderly.
In many ways this is a very painful "letting go" of something very precious to
us. It is difficult to give up a ministry that has continued for so long and has been so
meaningful. Our residents and their families, our Board of Trustees, our staff and many
others are sad to see the change, but we and they are confident that continuity in the
essential mission to the elderly will be preserved and that God will indeed look on this
present reformation and give a blessing.
Photos: The first photo features Secretary Beth Miller,
assisting Beulah Harrison as she signs paperwork in the office at LaVerna Village.
The second photo is Tammy Myers, Sherri Huntsman, and Roseann Stewart,
staff of LaVerna Heights Retirement Center, bidding goodbye to Beulah Harrison as she
leaves for LaVerna Village.
Efforts For Peace
We know that as Franciscan Peacemakers in a chaotic world, we are called to be
persons of peace and to be a prophetic voice which speaks peace to our world. Therefore,
in opposition to the proposed war in Iraq, we have been actively pursuing peace.
Our efforts have
included writing letters to our President and law-makers, visiting regional
representatives offices, organizing and participating in numerous peace prayer services,
signing petitions, attending peace rallies and, most importantly, by prayer. At a time
when so many voices seem to call for war and revenge, for preemptive strikes and
retaliation, it is the cry for peace that is echoed in our home at Mass and Morning and
Evening Prayer and brought before the Blessed Sacrament at Holy Hour each day.
We pray that our loving God will enlighten our nation and all of us in
ways of peace. We pray that God will protect those who must leave their families and risk
their lives in order to serve their country in an unjust war. We beg God to grant us
wisdom in proportion to our power, and compassion in proportion to our wealth and might,
and to give us the capacity to truly forgive those who have trespassed against us.
Thus, may we trust solely in God and may our nation be blessed with an
earnest desire to help all peoples of every race and nation to walk in friendship with us
along the road to justice, liberty and lasting peace. For more information about the
Catholic peace movement, visit Pax
Christi.
Photo: Sr. Mary Ellen Reichert and Sr. Mary Chrisman at
the peace rally in Kansas City, holding a peace banner. |