The Life & Inspiration of Sister Suzanne Guillemin DC
From 5-21 May 2010 Sister Kieran Kneaves, A Daughter of Charity from the USA West Central Province, is spending time with the Sisters of the British Province giving a programme of workshops and a retreat based on the life and inspiration of Sister Suzanne Guillemin, Superioress General 1962-1968.
| 5th May | Sr Kieran arrives in London |
| 7th May | Workshop in St Catherine's, Lanark |
| 8th May | Workshop in Southport |
| 10th May | Workshop in Mill Hill |
| 12-21 May | DC Retreat in Brighton |
Here is a short summary of the input Sr Kieran has been sharing with us. Mother Suzanne Guillemin DC was the Superioress General of the Daughters through the Second Vatican Council. She was brilliant, good, holy, and fearless. A born leader, and yet completely approachable. She was among the favourites at the Council. For she was an “auditrice,” one of 23 women auditors officially invited to the Council.
Concerning
her participation in the Council, it is said that it was no
surprise that she was invited. She was already pioneering in the
Sister Formation movement and led the Daughters of Charity in the
revolutionary act of modifying their habit in September 1964. She
was as well known in European circles as any prominent Cardinal.
She has been called “a twentieth-century religious, a modern woman
cast in the mould of Pope John 23rd.
Her life must have been hard, for everything was changing in the Church, and she was charged with changing the order and yet also making sure the order stayed together in one piece. But the structures needed to change, and she took up the challenge with everything she had. Her words are still worth hearing. In her famous speech to the French bishops in Rome, October 26, 1964, she argued that new structures were critical if the Daughters were truly going to accomplish their original mission:
“Entering actively into the movement of the church and adapting ourselves to the world of today are a matter of life or death for a community. … Our manner of going to God, our mode of union with God, and the place of our contemplation, are located within our action, in the meeting of the people we encounter side by side at this moment. As St. Vincent said, ‘A Sister who finds the poor ten times in the day will find God there ten times a day… This calls for a renewal of spirit and structures.’”
In 1967, she spoke her inner fears to the Sister Servants on retreat in Paris.
“I hope, Sisters,” she said, “that religious life will be strong enough to retain what is essential, but the difficulty lies in determining the essential."
Mother Guillemin said it this way:
“In reality, the … renewal of the Community [depends on] the journey and the effort of holiness of each member … All decisions can be made, all the Constitutions can be renewed, revised, updated, nothing else will matter if everyone does not put forth this essential effort, this vital effort of holiness. … The adaptations that we are making are to deepen justly our spiritual renewal, to allow us to have a more authentic relationship with God and to allow … our witness of religious life to be read, to be recognized by the world."
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She was a prophet whose words give clarity about : - Who we are - What we are about - With whom we stand She is there encouraging us to become what we claim to be and to find God in the EVENTS of our lives! |

