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The Sister Thea Bowman Black Educational Foundation Acceptance Speech for the Thea Bowman Foundation Award by Brother Michael O'Neill McGrath, O.S.F.S. In Irish spirituality, there are times and places in which, for a fleeting
moment or two, the boundary between our world and the spiritual world grows
very thin. We have a heightened awareness of ourselves and the presence of God
within us and around us. These moments are called "thin places" and
the end result of a thin place experience is that suddenly the ordinariness
of our days is transformed into something quite extraordinary.
My first encounter with Sister Thea Bowman, whom I never met in person, never even heard of until after her death, was a thin place experience. She introduced herself to me in one of the very darkest times of my life, as I confronted the reality of death, the meaning of life, and the sad fact that I had become a thirty-five year old orphan. You know, the little things of life. Over the course of several years prior, my four brothers and sisters and I had watched as cancer invaded our parents' bodies. Together, we accompanied each of them on their journeys home. We walked with them only as far as we could and watched as they entered the heavenly gates and crossed from this world into the land of promise and freedom described so poetically in the spirituals which Sister Thea sang and loved all her life. "If you get there before I do, coming for to carry me home, tell all my friends I'm coming too, coming for to carry me home."
She came out of the deep blue like a shooting star, and flooded my imagination with the colors and shapes of hope and the promise of better, brighter days. Buddhists say, "When the student is ready the teacher appears." Well, this teacher didn't just appear, she possessed me, enough that I like to tell folks I have a little black nun inside of me. And she's a rowdy one at that. Hers was a ministry of joy when she walked and danced among us on earth, and that same ministry continues through each of us who are dedicated to spreading the Good News of Jesus in whatever way has been given us to do. "We each have a light," she'd say, "and God didn't give us that light to sit on it." The unspoken message in that line is that we can only discover this little light when we willingly enter the darkness. We walk in the light when we choose love over fear at every twist and turn in the road. The song says, "Be not afraid, I go before you always. Come, follow me, and I will give you rest." The lessons that this remarkable Franciscan woman of color taught me then, in those dark nights of the soul, those days of grief and sadness, have continued to sustain me in the dark days since.
The first major commission I received after Sister Thea rocked my world is a painting called the Windsock Visitation. I'd had Thea in me for a good year by then.
In closing I would like to say how truly honored I am to receive this award.
Through Thea Bowman I have been introduced to many wonderful people over the
past fifteen years - and among my favorites is Mary Lou Jennings who created
this amazing foundation. She is clearly in love with God's poorest and disadvantaged
children and is passionately committed to Thea's legacy.
Another is Sister Charlene Smith, friend and sister of Thea's who has always
generously shared with me her stories and memories of life with Thea. I am happy
that Charlene has become my friend as well. Charlene has pointed out to me that
today is Shakespeare's birthday, worth mentioning since Thea so loved Shakespeare. Let your lights shine. Keep on steppin'. May God be blessed.
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