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Three Adrian Dominican Sisters Participate in Anti-Death Penalty Rally in Florida

Three women and a man stand together on a brick-lined outdoor terrace.

March 24, 2026, Winter Park, Florida – “There are many deaths that happen with the death penalty – not only the prisoner but certainly the death of hope for the prisoner’s family and the death of another piece of our human soul because we deny the dignity of that person [who was executed].”

That was the reflection of Sister Rosemary Finnegan, OP, who attended a recent anti-death penalty rally, along with Adrian Dominican Sisters Marie Skebe, OP, and Janet Stankowski, OP. Sisters Rosemary and Marie both live in Florida, the site of many of the executions in the United States, and Sister Janet was visiting from Detroit.

The rally – attended by about 40 people – was held at St. Margaret Mary Church in Winter Park, where Sister Rosemary has ministered. It began with a candlelight prayer vigil led by parishioners and a talk by Abraham Bonowitz, Co-founder and Director of Death Penalty Action. Participants were invited to ring the Delaware Bell, originally used in Delaware at the time of state executions. Delaware has since abolished the death penalty and has given the bell to Abraham for his use in advocacy across the country.

The event continued with a talk by SueZann Bosler, whose father was brutally attacked and killed, and who herself was attacked at the same time and almost died. She spoke against the death penalty for the man who killed her father and attacked her.

Sisters Marie and Rosemary have been long-time advocates against the death penalty since a hearing more about the issue at the Sisters’ Florida Mission Chapter in 2017. “Dale, an attorney and chaplain on death row in Florida, gave a presentation to our assembly which was overwhelmingly powerful,” Sister Marie said. “By the end of the Assembly, the Florida Chapter came up with an initiative” to advocate against the death penalty. 

The initiative, Standing Together in Solidarity Against the Death Penalty, is intended to reinvigorate a movement among Adrian Dominican Sisters, Associates, Co-workers, and seekers centering on the Congregation’s April 2002 corporate stance against the death penalty.

Part of Sister Marie’s ministry as chair of the committee is to send email notices to Sisters and Associates when someone is to be executed in the United States – and to ask for their advocacy on behalf of that person. Since she began sending out those notices in September 2024, Sister Marie said, at least 60 executions have been scheduled across the United States. The State of Florida alone executed 19 people in 2025. 

Sister Marie noted the cruel methods used to execute inmates. “We’ve seen [the form of execution] go from lethal injection – which sounds clean but is horrible – and we’ve come up with another horrible [technique] of gas suffocation,” she explained. South Carolina has added the option of a firing squad. All of these techniques, she said, can easily fail at first, adding to the suffering of the person being executed.  

In spite of their long-time advocacy against the death penalty, Sisters Rosemary and Marie gained new perspectives during the recent rally. Rosemary said she was especially touched to hear the story of SueZann Bosler. She noted that justice authorities were empathetic to what she suffered as a victim and the daughter of a victim – but not to her stance against the death penalty. 

Victims who speak out against the death penalty “receive absolutely no support from the prosecution team,” Sister Marie added. SueZann “could not get the point across …. The judge threatened to put her in jail if she made one more statement against the death penalty. It made no sense.” 

Recent events demonstrate that the lack of respect for human life, as the death penalty shows up in other areas of our society. “Our humanity is destroyed,” Sister Marie said. “In destroying our own humanity, look what happens with the wars. We can wipe out 150 girls in a school [in Iran]. If we can’t reverence one life, how can we reverence many lives?”

Still, Sisters Rosemary and Marie point to many people in the United States – particularly in Florida – who are working toward the end of the death penalty. Sister Marie spoke of parishioners of Our Lady of Lourdes Parish in Daytona Beach who travel by bus to the execution site when one is scheduled. They watch for a signal that the execution has taken place – such as witnesses leaving the prison – and begin a vigil service for the person who was executed. 

Sister Rosemary said her parish, St. Margaret Mary, is also involved in efforts against the death penalty. “We used to have a vigil the night before a scheduled execution,” she said. “But they have become so common now that we have the vigil once a month and name the names [of those to be executed] for that month.” During Mondays in Lent, she said, the parish zeroes in on a particular social justice issue. The parish recently showed a movie about an executioner who became involved with men on Death Row and eventually opposed the death penalty.

Reporters from the Florida Catholic attended the rally and posted videos. They can be viewed here and here.

Caption for above feature photo: From left, Adrian Dominican Sisters Marie Skebe, OP, Janet Stankowski, OP, and Rosemary Finnegan, OP, with Abraham Bonowitz, Director and Co-founder of Death Penalty Action, during a recent action against the death penalty.


Presentation to Focus on Detroit’s Black Bottom District, the ‘Black Wall Street’

stylized Sankofa bird with outline of street boundaries of Black Bottom District

March 24, 2026, Adrian, Michigan – All are invited to learn about Detroit’s historic Black Bottom neighborhood and Paradise Valley business district during a special presentation at 6:00 p.m. Thursday, April 9, 2026, in the Weber Center Auditorium.

Marcia Black, Co-director of Archives and Education for the Black Bottom Archives, shares the story of the people who lived, worked, and built their lives in this district east of downtown Detroit in the 1920s and 1930s. At its high point in 1942, the district was home to more than 300 businesses owned by Blacks, including bars and restaurants, pharmacies, hotels, and doctor’s offices. Black Bottom and Paradise Valley were razed in the 1950s and early 1960s and replaced by high-rise apartment buildings for middle-class, predominantly white families.

“I hope people will learn new things about Detroit,” said Mykayla Giles, Director of Justice, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion for the Adrian Dominican Sisters. Her office is sponsoring the event. “I appreciate some of the rich history that the Black Bottom District brought to what is now Detroit,” Mykayla said. “They thrived there. They kept the Black dollar within their community.”

Black Bottom Archives was founded in 2015 to research the history of Black Bottom and Paradise Valley and the lives of the people who resided and worked there. The organization offers pop-up displays of Black Bottom and has partnered with museums such as the Michigan Historical Center and the Charles Wright Museum of African American History.

The presentation is open to all, and registration is not required. Weber Center is on the campus of the Adrian Dominican Sisters Motherhouse, Adrian, Michigan. On East Siena Heights Drive, turn into the driveway between Adrian Rea Literacy Center and the solar panel-covered carport. Follow the signs to Weber Center. For information, contact Mykayla at 517-266-3542.

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