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Images of a book titled “What Pope Leo Says about Peace, Dialogue, and Love” and portrait of a white, white-haired woman.

October 27, 2025, Detroit – Sister Janet Schaeffler, OP, a prolific author and speaker on topics such as adult faith formation, offers another booklet to inspire Catholics and other people of goodwill to reflect on God’s call to us in our divided time. What Pope Leo Says About Peace, Dialogue, and Love presents individual readers and groups with 30 days of reflections and prayers on the writings and talks of Pope Leo XIV.

In the introduction, Sister Janet writes that the words and actions of Pope Leo “are revealing a man of peace, a man who listens intently and respectfully, a man ardently in love with God and all the members of God’s family.” She encourages her readers to respond to the call to “listen with our hearts and let them transform the way we live.”

Each page of the booklet includes a quote from Pope Leo XIV, a reflection on that quote, a question to ponder, and a short prayer related to the lesson of the day.

Sister Janet has written annual Advent reflection booklets, as well as several booklets for families, catechists, and other ministers of the Church. A retreat leader and a consultant for catechists, other church leaders, and families in faith formation, she formerly served as Director of Adult Faith Formation for the Archdiocese of Detroit. 

What Pope Leo Says about Peace, Dialogue, and Love is available through Twenty-Third Publications. Call 1-800-321-0411 or order online. The booklet is also available at the Weber Center Shop on the campus of the Adrian Dominican Sisters Motherhouse, 1257 E. Siena Heights Drive, Adrian, Michigan 49221. Hours are 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Wednesday to Friday and 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Saturday, with a lunch break from noon to 12:45 p.m. Copies can also be ordered from the Weber Center Shop through email, [email protected], or by calling 517-266-4035.

 


Image of eight women in the foreground of a large group of people, holding signs.

October 27, 2025, Adrian, Michigan – Adrian Dominican Sisters, Associates, and Co-workers were among the millions of people in the United States – and throughout the world – joining in peaceful advocacy for justice, peace, and democracy through No Kings Protests. They joined in protests from Florida to Washington State, and Detroit to Las Vegas.

Sisters Marilín Llanes, OP, and Xiomara Méndez-Hernández, OP – both naturalized U.S. citizens from Cuba and the Dominican Republic respectively – were encouraged by their experience at the No Kings rally at a park in Hollywood, Florida. 

“There was a lot of solidarity,” Sister Marilín recalled. She described the rally as “a good cross-section of generations that stood there together in solidarity and in protest of how our beloved America is changing, and it’s not the America that we know we can be.”

Both Sisters recognized that few Latinos or African-Americans were in attendance, perhaps out of fear. “My motivation is that I can protest,” Sister Xiomara said. “Some people can’t. I took the courage to say I’m representing the people who are persecuted because they look like me.”

Once they arrived at the rally, they felt safe, Sister Marilín said. Still, they took the precaution of bringing their U.S. passports with them and parking in a place where they could easily leave. They arrived at the beginning of the rally and stayed for an hour. “We wanted to be there, but within a certain set of guidelines that we felt could be safe,” Sister Marilín said.

Sister Rosemary Finnegan, OP, joined about 2,400 people attending the No Kings rally in Casselberry, Florida, north of Orlando. “The people were united there in spirit and peacefully demonstrating for the decent, just, and democratic values of our country, which we all hold dear,” she said. “As we waved at cars going by that were honking their approval of our presence, we felt a ray of hope that ‘we, the people’ could speak.”

Associate Sharon Pikula joined a rally in the State of Washington. “It was exhilarating to be with part of my faith community and 5,000 people in the Olympia area,” she said. “We are dealing with so many complex issues. My poster focused on the statement, ‘Peace saves all.’ It is through nonviolence that the hungry in Gaza and in the USA will be fed and there will be enough.”

Five people stand together with signs in front of a building.

Adrian Dominican Associate Sharon Pikula, second from right, joins other participants in the No Kings Protest near Olympia, Washington.

 

About 60 miles from Olympia, nearly 90,000 people participated in the No Kings Protest in Seattle. “In a city that the current administration has cited as one of the next ones to need National Guard policing, the Seattle No Kings Protest gathered a peaceful demonstration in crowds over a mile long with the intent to defend democracy, protect human rights, demand justice in healthcare and protection educational/research funding,” Associate Kathleen Shannon Dorcy reported. She described the event as a “nonviolent but strong presence to call for a re-commitment to truth, veritas, in our American society.”

Adrian Dominican Sisters Kathleen McGrail, OP, Elisabeth Nguyen, OP, and Mary Jean Williams, OP, were present in the No Kings protest in the Las Vegas area. “I was impressed with how peaceful the event was and how friendly everyone was,” Sister Kathleen noted. “There were even people walking around handing out water. It was a very concerned, committed, and peaceful spirit – people of all ages from young children to seniors.”

Three women are grouped around another in an inflatable pink unicorn costume.  Two women stand together, holding signs.

Left: From left, Sisters Kathleen McGrail, OP, Elisabeth Nguyen, OP, and Mary Jean Williams, OP, all ministering at St. Rose Dominican Hospitals in Henderson, Nevada, stand with a co-worker dressed in a unicorn costume during the No Kings Rally in Las Vegas. Right: Associate Patricia Gillis, left, and Sister Janet Stankowski, OP, stand near the No Kings Protest at the Livonia Civic Center in Metro Detroit.

 

Sister Joan Weithman, OP, attended a rally in Chicago and was inspired “to be among folks [who] stand for peace and justice – and concern for the least. To stand for justice is key! We must be Gospel people in this country.”

Associate Patricia Gillis, who with Sister Janet Stankowski, OP, attended the No Kings gathering at the Livonia Civic Center in the Detroit Metro Area, described the event as peaceful and joyous. “We all felt relief that there are people who love our country enough to make a sign, drive to a site, and stand up for our common values on which our country was built.”

Several Adrian Dominican Sisters, Associates, and Co-workers joined the No Kings Protest that packed Comstock Park in Adrian.

Sister Anneliese Sinnott, OP, watched the rally from a parked car because of mobility challenges. “I was pleased and amazed at the number of older people,” she said. “We’re the age group that recognizes what a threat our president is to the world, to our country.” She was also pleased by the number of Adrian Dominican Sisters and Associates who attended to support the effort.

Four women stand together holding signs among other protestors.

From left, Sisters Mary Carr, OP, Beverly Stark, OP, Carol Gross, OP, and Joyce Caulfield, OP, join hundreds of participants in the No Kings Protest in Adrian, Michigan.

 

“It was so heartening to see a thousand or more of us speaking with one voice and joining with those around our country and beyond,” said Sister Janet Doyle, OP, Director of the Weber Retreat and Conference Center. She attended the rally with Katherine Dusseau, Manager of the Weber Center Shop. 

“But protesting is not enough,” Sister Janet added. “We can’t go home and wait for the next protest. We need to reach out to our neighbors and find some common ground. We need to stay involved and invite others to join us.” 

Associate Sharon Pikula also saw the need to continue the efforts beyond protesting. She was impressed by a poster that apologized to the world for what is happening in the United States. “So much healing and reconciliation is needed,” she said.

 

Feature photo at top: Sister Rosemary Finnegan, OP, center, carrying a sign that reads “People Over Profits,” joins other participants at the No Kings Protest in Casselberry, Florida, north of Orlando.

 


 

 

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