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September 9, 2022, Adrian, Michigan – As the season begins to change from summer to autumn, Adrian Dominican Sisters and Associates heard an update on the summer’s successes and challenges in the Permaculture Garden and in Motherhouse campus sustainability efforts – as well as a look ahead to the September 1-October 4, 2022, liturgical Season of Creation.

Permaculture (permanent + agriculture) is a design system that cooperates with and learns from natural systems rather than dominating them. 

Jared AslaksonJared Aslakson, Permaculture Specialist, began the August 31, 2022, in-person and live streamed presentation on a personal note, reflecting on how much he had learned in his past 3½ years of working with the Adrian Dominican Sisters. 

“In my own mind and experience, I’ve learned a lot since being here, and I can say that I have become closer to the person that I wish to become,” Jared said. “It wouldn’t have been possible without being here.”

Jared spoke of the successes of the past summer, including greater yields from fruit trees; flourishing vegetable gardens; the continued development of Hügelkultur mounds, in which gardens are built on mounds made up of decaying wood and plants; the successful experiment of using controlled burns to lessen the problem of insect pests; and tours of the Permaculture Garden by Siena Heights University students, as well as the planned return of honors Siena Heights students to learn about and work on the Permaculture site. 

But Jared also noted some challenges this summer, including difficulty finding and retaining a seasonal assistant; dry weather that affected the crops; a “noticeable increase in pest pressure” on the crops from wildlife such as raccoons, possums, and deer; and delays in erecting a 10-foot fence to keep the deer out. 

“This was probably one of the more challenging growing seasons … but hopefully it will end on a note that says that even though it was challenging, it was worth going through and I felt like I learned a lot,” Jared said, adding that “in the long run, [challenging times] can be the times when you learn the most.”

Joel HenricksJoel Henricks, Director of Facilities and Grounds, gave an update on campus sustainability projects. He reported that some of the material needed to begin production of the solar array in the field behind Weber Center and the solar panels on the carport of the parking lot of the Regina building has finally arrived after a year-long wait, but more is still needed. Some work is also still needed on the six electric vehicle charging stations set up in the parking lot for future use, he said. 

Joel also reported on another sustainability project, restoration of a pond, which has attracted a great deal of wildlife: frogs, deer, geese, ducks, dragonflies, and native plantings. Hopes are ultimately to stock the pond with fish, he said. 

Another sustainability effort is to continue planting trees to replace those that were removed for the solar array field and others that had died. “The good news is that I’m never in a shortage of people wanting trees planted,” Joel said. “There are constantly donors who would like to buy a tree in memory of someone, so we’re working with [the Development Office] to replace trees as we’re having to have them removed.”

Sister Corinne Sanders, OPSister Corinne Sanders, OP, Director of the Office of Sustainability, focused on the campus celebration of the Season of Creation, a global, ecumenical celebration of creation and a reminder of the need to take care of Earth and its inhabitants. 

Sister Corinne noted the beauty of creation, but also its struggles. “We are in a time of great urgency as we can see where destruction has happened,” she said. “We hear the cry of the Earth and we’re asked to hear the cry of those who are poor. … I think we can see that every action we’re taking on this campus … is really one way to address that cry of the Earth.” 

But she also noted that the Congregation and the world still have a long way to go in addressing global climate change and other threats to our environment. “The Season of Creation was intended to help us look at that which is beautiful and to look at that which needs our response – our immediate response at this point,” she said.

Sister Corinne will formally take office on October 8, 2022, as a member of the Congregation’s General Council. She and the other members of the General Council will lead the Congregation in living out the five 2022 General Chapter Enactments, including the Sustainability Enactment that calls on the Congregation to participate in Pope Francis’ Laudato Si’ Action Platform. The Adrian Dominican Congregation will be among Catholic organizations worldwide who work together to meet specified sustainability goals to bring healing to Earth.

Watch the entire video below. 

 


August 30, 2022, Adrian, Michigan – “To listen to creation is to recognize that, besides all human beings, other-than human life, all the species, biomes and ecosystems have agency, purpose, and a distinct voice. Creation speaks a language of love, of justice and peace, of living within limits, and of respect for the interdependence of all living things, throughout all time.”

Father James Hug, SJ

The above quote is from the preface of the Catholic liturgical materials prepared for the 2022 Season of Creation by Father James Hug, SJ, sacramental minister for the Adrian Dominican Sisters. This year’s theme is “Listen to the Voice of Creation.” 

Season of Creation 2022 is observed from Thursday, September 1, 2022, World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation, through Tuesday, October 4, 2022, the Feast of St. Francis of Assisi.

The Season of Creation was established by the World Council of Churches in 2007 as a way for Christians worldwide to reflect on and celebrate God as Creator, on the gifts of creation, and on our responsibility as human beings to care for creation. The Season of Creation Steering Committee publishes an annual liturgy guide for Christians throughout the world.

Pope Francis encouraged Catholics to participate with their Protestant sisters and brothers in the Season of Creation in 2016 – the year after he had written the encyclical, Laudato Si’, on care for Earth, our common home. 

Father Jim realized years ago that, even with the pope’s approval of the Season of Creation, Catholics had no specific liturgical guide. For three years, Father Jim wrote a guide for his own use in celebrating Liturgy at St. Catherine Chapel at the Adrian Dominican Sisters Motherhouse. 

Feeling that Catholic pastors might not feel free to use the ecumenical text, he began publishing the guide in 2020 “to help Catholic communities read and pray with the scriptures of the Catholic lectionary for the Sundays in Ordinary Time during this period through the lens of the Season of Creation,” he wrote in the introduction to the 2022 materials. 

For each Sunday – and for the Feast of St. Francis of Assisi – the liturgical guide includes introductory comments, prayers for the opening sign of the cross, an opening prayer, points for reflection on that Sunday’s scriptures, general intercessions, prayer over the gifts, prayer after Communion, and the final blessing. 

Denise Mathias

In addition, Denise Mathias, Music Minister for the Adrian Dominican Sisters, suggests hymns and responsorial psalms to accompany each Sunday’s theme. The guide also includes artwork by iconographer Angela Manno. “I felt the need to expand the canon of images in traditional iconography to include an icon of the Earth – the living host of all that we know,” she wrote.

Also partnering with Father Jim on the Catholic liturgical guide are the Vatican Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development; Laudato Si’ International Scholars Tertiary Education Network (LISTEN); the Missionary Society of St. Columban; and the Laudato Si’ Movement.

The Catholic liturgical guide is available on the website of the Dominican Center: Spirituality for Mission. The Spanish translation is available here.

The Season of Creation aligns fully with the Adrian Dominican Sisters’ 2016 General Chapter Enactment on Sustainability. Through the past six years, the Congregation has worked toward making the Motherhouse campus more sustainable and has encouraged Sisters and Associates to live out the Enactment in their own lives. 

The commitment to sustainability was reaffirmed in June at the 2022 General Chapter, when delegates approved an Enactment for the Congregation to participate in the Laudato Si’ Action Platform. Through the Action Platform, Catholic organizations worldwide commit to a seven-year program to work together toward sustainability goals.


 

 

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