Sister Mary Celine Weidenbenner, OSU: Joyful and creative

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Sister Mary Celine Weidenbenner, OSU: Joyful and creative
Sister Mary Celine Weidenbenner, OSU: Joyful
and creative
        “I have told you this so that my joy might be
in you and your joy might be complete.” John, 15:11
        The first noticeable trait of Ursuline Sister
Mary Celine Weidenbenner is how easily she smiles.
        “People will say to me, ‘What are you so
happy about?’” she said. “Being joyful just comes
naturally to me.”
        Add in her inherent creativity, which she uses
in both her craft work and in her classroom, and it’s
no wonder people describe Sister Mary Celine as a joy
to have around.
        “I’ve been involved in schooling for 48 years,
two-thirds of that as a principal, and she is truly
exceptional as a teacher,” said Mike Clark, the
principal at Mary Carrico Memorial School in                Sister Mary Celine stands in the hallway at
Knottsville, Ky., where Sister Mary Celine has taught Mary Carrico Memorial School, which was
since fall 2007. “She has an incredible energy, and a       decorated for Lent.
passion for teaching and the students’ learning.”
        Clark calls Sister Mary Celine “a powerful presence in the school and in the community” of St.
William and St. Lawrence parishes. “The students are very fond of her and very responsive to her,” he
said. “We’re very blessed by her presence.”
       Within the first few minutes of her fifth-grade social studies class, it’s apparent there will be no
boring recitation of facts. After a brief discussion of the Revolutionary War, Sister Mary Celine
announces it’s time to shoot hoops. A plastic basketball goal, about 6 or 7 feet high, is set up and
students on competing teams line up for a couple of shots with a small basketball. If they miss, their
teammates tell them it’s OK. This is part of Learnball.
Sister Mary Celine Weidenbenner, OSU: Joyful and creative
Learnball is an international
                                                                 classroom management program to
                                                                 improve student attendance,
                                                                 discipline, and schoolwork. “It
                                                                 involves consensus decision-making
                                                                 techniques and win-win point
                                                                 scoring—to create a novel learning
                                                                 environment,” according to its Web
                                                                 site. Sister Mary Celine began using
                                                                 Learnball in all her classes after taking
                                                                 a sabbatical in 1989.
                                                                          “All the kids love it, they love
                                                                 shooting hoops,” she said.
                                                                          She teaches social studies to
                                                                 fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth
 Sister Mary Celine gathers in the gym with her fifth-grade      graders, with no more than 11 students
 Learnball winners of the week. The winning team got an ice in a class. She teaches combined
 cream treat.                                                    religion courses, with no more than 19
                                                                 students, and also teaches art and
square dancing. She had some students display their square dancing talents at the Mount last year.

       “I learned from the old 78s
from Sister Ruth Helen Flaherty at the
Mount,” Sister Mary Celine says, as
she pulls one of the 78-rpm records
from a cabinet in her classroom. “The
student council got me a new record
player. Now we’re doing some line
dancing.”
       Any way she can be creative in
the classroom, she’ll try. There are
only 85 students in Mary Carrico,
which appeals to Sister Mary Celine.
       “It’s not so big I can’t do
creative activities,” she said. “In lower
                                          Sister Mary Celine square dances with her fifth and sixth
grades, I did plays. In the third and
                                          graders as they performed for the sisters in Saint Joseph
fourth grades, I was bogged down in
                                          Villa during Long Term Care Week 2008.
content. Now I can do content and let
the children express it in their own way,” she said.
       She has quick praise for the supportive staff at the school, which struggles each year to find the
money to continue.
Sister Mary Celine Weidenbenner, OSU: Joyful and creative
“I think she’s wonderful,” said Tamara
                                                  Fulkerson, a teacher’s aide and a substitute teacher at
                                                  Mary Carrico. She said the school is fortunate to have
                                                  Sister Mary Celine.
                                                           “She’s somebody from a different vocation,
                                                  and we get a different perspective,” Fulkerson said.
                                                  “She’s so full of energy. Teaching these students is
                                                  her No. 1 priority.
                                                           “It’s very important for our kids to see that,
                                                  they don’t know what vowed life is,” Fulkerson said.
                                                  “We’re struggling with having enough priests and
                                                  sisters, they need to see their life.”
                                                           Students at Mary Carrico come in ready to
                                                  learn, and seem to have a sense that they need to do
                                                  their best to keep the school open, Sister Mary Celine
                                                  said.
                                                           “I like the small school, you really get to know
                                                  the kids, and know them outside the classroom,” she
                                                  said. “I go to their ball games and different
                                                  extracurricular activities. I helped clean up the side of
  Sister Mary Celine and her first-grade          the road for their class trip.”
  teacher, Sister Frances Miriam Spalding,
  visit the statue of Saint Therese of Lisieux on Cotton patch kid
  the Maple Mount grounds. The two share a                  Born Theresia Marie Weidenbenner, she grew
  devotion to the “Little Flower.”                  up in the Missouri boot heel of Glennonville, a place
                                                    that has produced several Ursuline Sisters. Her
parents were Isaac and Frances, who worked a small farm raising cotton, corn, beans, and alfalfa. “It
was very tight knit. I grew up on a
farm where church was central and
school was central to our life,” she
said. “We were very supportive of
each other.”
          She was taught by Ursuline
Sisters, first in the public school, then
in St. Teresa, and admired their life. “I
was interested in a religious vocation,
I just loved the sisters,” she said.
“They were such a part of our life. If
we brought in watermelons, we sat a
box aside for the sisters.”
                                           Sister Mary Celine enjoys the chance to pray and share with
         School started in July, and by    her bonded group. She is joined by, from left, Sister Pam
mid-September the students would           Mueller, Sister Amelia Stenger, and Associate Karen
take a “cotton vacation” for six weeks Siciliano.
to pick the crop. “We couldn’t wait for
the sisters to come back,” she said. One of the sisters who had an impact on her in those days was Sister
Sister Mary Celine Weidenbenner, OSU: Joyful and creative
Frances Miriam Spalding, who is now retired at Maple Mount.
       “I taught her in the first grade. She says I was instrumental in her entering the convent,” Sister
Frances Miriam said. The first-grader thought sisters just prayed all the time and never got to play, but
that changed when she met Sister Frances Miriam.

        “I went out at recess and played with them – jump rope, cat and mouse, drop the handkerchief,”
Sister Frances Miriam said. “When she found out she could pray and play, that’s what she wanted to do.
She still has a playful heart,” Sister Frances Miriam said.

                                                              The two have been friends since Sister Mary
                                                      Celine joined the Ursulines. They celebrate birthdays,
                                                      go shopping, play cards, or just talk about their life in
                                                      community.
                                                             “She has a deep spirituality. She loves God
                                                      very much,” Sister Frances Miriam said. “She still has
                                                      a youthful spirit in her heart.”
                                                             Sister Mary Celine had many cousins who
                                                      were sisters in various religious orders, so the thought
                                                      of a vowed life wasn’t uncommon. When the public
                                                      high school closed in Glennonville in the 1950s, some
                                                      students went to St. Louis for a Catholic education,
                                                      while others – like Sister Mary Celine – came to
                                                      Mount Saint Joseph Academy.
  Sister Mary Celine was especially fond of her              Her parents couldn’t afford to send her to the
  late cat, Dawn.                                     Academy   until her sophomore year, but there were
                                                      seven or eight other girls from Glennonville coming
that year also. Still, leaving home at such a young age was difficult.
        She first considered religious life as a seventh-grader, because of her high regard for the sisters.
“The sisters in the lower grades would play with us during recess,” she said. “I knew they were for us to
do our best. I felt this was my way to best worship God.”
        As a senior in high school, she considered a cloistered community, but concedes her outgoing
personality wouldn’t have fit there. One day, while walking the grounds at the Mount, she stopped at a
stump that had a quote from Daniel (12:3), “They that instruct others into justice shall shine as stars for
all eternity.” Sister Angeline Mattingly told Sister Mary Celine that was the Ursuline motto. “That’s
when I started thinking seriously about the Ursulines,” she said.
         The fall after she graduated in 1962, she joined as a postulant, and entered the novitiate in 1963,
making this her 46th year as a sister. There was already a Theresa Marie in the community, so she took
the name “Celine” because she was the sister of Saint Therese of Lisieux, the “Little Flower” who was
her namesake. She and Sister Frances Miriam both have a devotion to Saint Therese – and the St. Louis
Cardinals – two more reasons they remain close.
         “She was carefree, and a very deep person,” said Sister Rose Marita O’Bryan, who was in the
novitiate with Sister Mary Celine. “There was never anything surface about her. Her thinking, her
articulation, they had a depth to them.”
         Sister Mary Celine is someone who naturally thinks outside the box, Sister Rose Marita said.
“There’s a uniqueness about everything she says.
Sister Mary Celine Weidenbenner, OSU: Joyful and creative
“She’s a marvelous teacher. She’s so caring about the individual,
that’s the face of Angela I see in Mary Celine,” Sister Rose Marita said.
“Everything she says and does comes from a sincere place.”

A life in the classroom

        Sister Mary Celine’s first ministry was from 1967-71 as a teacher at
St. Peter of Alcantara in Stanley, Ky., not far from Maple Mount. “I didn’t
think I’d like teaching, but I did really like the kids,” she said.
        She taught third and fourth grades, with 42 to 47 students at a time
over the years. “I went out and played ball with them at recess, or threw snow balls,” she said. “They
remember those things.”
        Ursuline Sister Laurita Spalding was also on her first mission at St. Peter, and the two have
                                                      remained friends ever since.

                                                               “Sister Mary Celine was a dynamic teacher as
                                                      a young sister, as she is today,” said Sister Laurita,
                                                      who teaches in Henderson, Ky.“Her enthusiasm
                                                      exudes from every pore of her being and her face
                                                      lights up when she speaks of her experiences with her
                                                      students. She is not hesitant to try the latest techniques
                                                      and she is not afraid to put herself fully into the task at
                                                      hand.”
                                                               While at St. Peter, Sister Mary Celine
                                                      excitedly announced that she was going to try finger
                                                      painting with more than 30 third-graders, Sister
                                                      Laurita recalled. “Much to her surprise, she found out
                                                      that the paint not only got on the paper provided, but
                                                      somehow found its way to the back wall,” Sister
                                                      Laurita said.“That particular room always had Sister’s
                                                      mark on it.”
  Sister Mary Celine helps a student in her                   They spent four years together in Stanley.
  fifth-grade social studies class at Mary            “Back   in those days, we didn't have a regular janitor,
  Carrico Memorial School.                            so Sister  and I would find ourselves cleaning and
                                                      waxing the floors most weekends,” Sister Laurita
said.“Stanley is on top of a sand dune, so the sand would eat the wax away pretty quickly at the
beginning of the week.”
        In their free time they were usually engaged in one of Sister Mary Celine’s passions, jigsaw
puzzles. “When you go to visit Sister these days, you can be sure to find a puzzle in progress and
coming to its completion,” Sister Laurita said.
        Sister Mary Celine’s skill as a teacher stems from her genuine concern for each child she meets,
Sister Laurita said.
        “She sees them as unique and loving children of God. In her teaching, she takes each child where
she/he is and works to bring out the best in that child,” Sister Laurita said. “The children in return
respond to Sister’s genuine goodness. When she is out in public, and her former students see her, they
will run to greet her and do not hesitate to start talking about the good experiences they had with her as
Sister Mary Celine Weidenbenner, OSU: Joyful and creative
their former teacher.”
        After St. Peter’s, Sister Mary Celine next taught fifth grade in a public school in Holy Cross, Ky.,
two difficult years in an area prone to violence and vandalism. Next she taught third grade at a public
school in Calvary, Ky.

         “I lived with four other sisters, we had a good
time,” she said. Three of those sisters taught in a
different nearby school. “I got into science curriculum
development and outdoor classrooms. We taught faith
formation one evening a week.”
         In 1976, she became principal for the first time
and head teacher at St. Alphonsus School, across the
highway from the Mount. “I was principal out of holy
obedience, I didn’t want to be just the principal,” she
said.
         She loved working with the students, but
credits God with giving her the skills to handle the
administrative chores.
        Helen Hermann was a teacher’s aide and
secretary at St. Alphonsus during those years, and the
two remain close friends.
        “She plays the guitar, and she told the children
if they had permission to stay after school, she would
teach them the basic chords,” Hermann said. “It was
unbelievable in a little country school to have
someone donate that much of her time for those              One of Sister Mary Celine’s favorite pieces
students.”                                                  she’s made is this crewelwork called “Best
         Sister Mary Celine’s methods in teaching           Friends.” Her friends at St. Alphonsus
religion also got the student’s attention, Hermann          School bought it and returned it to her for
said. “You could tell she meant what she said.”             Christmas one year.
         Hermann’s nickname for her is “Spring.” “She
loves spring, it’s the most beautiful, joyful time of the year.”
         After nine years at St. Alphonsus, she spent four years teaching at St. Joseph School in Mayfield,
in far western Kentucky. She’d had a difficult situation at the end of her tenure at St. Alphonsus, and
during her years in Mayfield her mother was in declining health, so the pressure on her grew. That led
her to take a sabbatical to St. Paul, Minn., where she stayed with the Derham community, run by the
Sisters of Saint Joseph of Carondelet.
         “You take programs and look at your life. It was a great experience,” Sister Mary Celine said.
“When I got there, I sensed the spirit. It’s a lovely community, with people you could share with. I
found it renewing.”
         She got back into teaching in 1991 at St. Mary Middle School in Paducah, Ky., but after 15 years
there, she decided she needed a break from the classroom. She spent a year working in Owensboro at the
Precious Blood Catholic Church day care program in 2006-07. “I loved them, but I wanted to go back to
teaching,” she said. That’s when the opportunity opened at Mary Carrico.
Sister Mary Celine Weidenbenner, OSU: Joyful and creative
Creative spirit

                                                            Sister Mary Celine cannot recall a time when
                                                    she wasn’t creative.
                                                             “On the farm, we’d watch each other put on
                                                    plays,” she said. “I’ve done embroidery since the
                                                    second grade. My mom taught me that,” she said. She
                                                    would use the picture of a Dutch girl on a salt sack as
                                                    the template to sew around.
                                                            She uses those embroidery skills today to make
                                                    the beautiful tops for the quilts that are raffled off at
                                                    Maple Mount. She works on her embroidery at home,
                                                    a small place just a stone’s throw from the school in
                                                    Knottsville. She usually takes three to four months to
                                                    finish a piece, and then she starts on the next one.
                                                             Hanging on her wall is an intricate crewelwork
                                                    piece called “Best Friends” that she made during her
                                                    days at St. Alphonsus. She turned it in to the Mount to
                                                    be sold, but Hermann and some others bought it and
                                                    gave it back to her for a Christmas present.
                                                            “We decided as hard as she worked on it, she
                                                    needed to have it for herself,” Hermann said.
  Sister Mary Celine always has an embroidery               She lives by herself, but makes it a point to
  project underway, making tops for the quilts come to the Mount once a month to spend the night,
  that are auctioned off at Maple Mount. This play cards, and enjoy the sisters. She walks in the
  piece she’s working on is called “Yorktown.” woods behind her home for fun.
                                                            Aside from jigsaw puzzles and the guitar,
Sister Mary Celine is also involved in clogging, and she once sang with the Paducah Symphony Choir.
That offered her the opportunity to sing in the Czech Republic and in Austria.
        She disputes the notion that some adults aren’t creative. “You don’t ever hear kids say they can’t
do something because they aren’t creative.”
        She hopes to teach at Mary Carrico at least another five years, but knows it’s a yearly struggle to
keep the school open.
         Looking back on her years in the Ursuline community, Sister Mary Celine knows that her
religious life proved to be her best way to serve God -- but that doesn’t mean it’s the only way.
         While most everyone brings up Sister Mary Celine’s joyfulness and creativity first, Sister Laurita
is quick to point out that she is someone who loves God and puts prayer at the top of her list of
priorities.
        “With God at her side, Mary Celine faces each day full of joy,” Sister Laurita said.“She is a just a
fun person to get to know and love.”

                                                                                           - By Dan Heckel
Sister Mary Celine Weidenbenner, OSU: Joyful and creative
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