Was it your common interest in Christian
living, or Catholic Action as it is also called, which brought you
together ?
Katie: Yes, it certainly was a shared interest when we were
both attending St. Michael's College in the University of Toronto. We
had some classes in common as we both followed general courses
including English and Theology. We lived the typical life of
undergraduates, meeting in groups in pubs and at dances and also
being part of the very active Christian life which identifies St.
Mike's to this day. In fact John served as Convener of Religious
Affairs for a period.
John: In University each of us recognised that the other was a
person of faith. Our preparations for our marriage were mainly
spiritual ones. Thanks to the input and participation of our two
families and our friends from University, the ceremony was faith
filled. A joyful Eucharist ceremony encompassed our exchange of vows.
We began our life together in Ottawa where I continued my law
studies. Here we became actively involved with the soup kitchen of
the Shepherds of Good Hope.
Katie: I began my teaching career in Immaculata High School
where I was deeply involved in teaching dramatic arts and producing
plays and musicals including Godspell and Les Miserables. The skills
I learned in this position turned out to be central in my later
years. The love of poetry I acquired while teaching High School has
resulted in my deepest, sincerest thoughts and emotions being
expressed through poetry to this day.
Suddenly I was struck down with a very severe case of spinal myelitis
from which it took me months to recover. In hospital I enjoyed an
epiphany which only intensified my desire to serve overseas as a
missionary. In this intense spiritual experience I was given the
grace to put total trust in God. I no longer felt a need to be
influenced by merely human reasons or feelings. I had absolutely no
fear. I was in total peace. I knew that I was called to a life of
service to the needy and oppressed.
When did you act upon this call?
Katie: When I recovered from my illness and John had completed
all his legal studies we volunteered for overseas service with
V.I.C.S. My brother had served in The Gambia as a VICS volunteer and
we were delighted when a suitable posting was found in St. Lucia in
the Caribbean. Our parents and friends urged delay. I was still weak
after my illness and Annie, our daughter, was still a baby. But we
knew the time was right.
John: I ran a free legal clinic for the Archdiocese. This
clinic served those who were too poor to afford legal fees of any
sort. Katie worked in a school for the deaf, where she learned the
art of teaching children who could not hear from Sr. Grace Martin
C.N.D., herself a volunteer. She gave Katie the task of working with
the small group of children, profoundly deaf and dumb, who had never
been to school before.
Katie: Two of them in particular, Robert and Anika, will
forever be in my heart and prayers. Both were abandoned children
living on their wits begging for food and shelter. Neither had ever
been in school. Neither had been socialized with other children. With
them I had to start at the very beginning and earn their trust and
affection despite the scars left by years of neglect and by their
inability to hear and speak. It gives me great satisfaction to know
that Robert, who can now sign and lip read, is employed as a banana
picker and is able to support himself. Anika learned sign language
and is nearly finished her studies to become a teacher for the deaf.
After nearly a year and a half in St. Lucia, disaster struck.
Annie contracted Dengue Fever. As the fever took deeper and deeper
hold Annie became weaker and weaker. She wasted away before our eyes.
The medication was having no effect. The doctor said that she was too
weak to transfer to Canada. Our new-found friends, especially Ivy,
Hilary and Charlie, rallied around us in constant support. John and I
bonded with this group of St. Lucians as we had never bonded with
friends before, as they kept vigil with us by day and by night. When
we began to realise that we might lose our firstborn, our little
angel, Annie's fever broke. The prayers of the poor, the deaf and two
frantic Canadians had been heard in Heaven. Life could never be the
same again.
Each of you have jobs, you John as a public
prosecutor, you Katie as an elementary teacher. You are bringing up
three children. Where does your vocation as Lay Spiritan enter your lives?
John: It inspires us and guides us in every aspect of our
lives. As a family of five we try to live counter-cultural lives. We
live in modest accommodation and have Tina our Ugandan refugee friend
living with us. Our home is TV free and the children have no video
games etc. We live as a household of faith, filtering out where
possible elements of the life outside the home which are contrary to
the model Jesus lived and taught. We stress prayer, meals,
communication. We treat each other and the children with dignity and
respect. We teach them the responsibility which comes with their many
talents. We hold family discussions. Having a refugee living with us
is a challenging and rewarding experience.
Sunday liturgies are important for us as a family especially when we
gather with the other local Lay-Spiritans and their families for our
monthly Mass. The children of the group have formed a natural
community and they love to participate in the liturgical action.
Not that everything is plain sailing. Katie and I suffer the agonies
and enjoy the ecstasies which parenting brings. And as our children
reach adolescence we know that there will be some difficult times ahead.
For instance Locky, now five years old, has been invited this weekend
to a "laser gun" birthday party; a glorified war game. We
refused to allow him to participate. It will take a lot of prayer and
communication to explain decisions like this to Locky when he is fifteen.
Katie: I job share with Angela Carroll as Grade 2 teacher in
St. John's elementary school in Toronto. As well as dealing with the
secular curriculum, we prepare our students for the reception of
their First Communion. It is delightful to speak of the love of God
to children who are so innocent. "Trailing clouds of glory, have
they come from God, who is their home". And yet it is at this
tender age that we broach the topic of bullying which often begins to
manifest itself in six and seven - years - olds.
I also spend a lot of time working in the Hannon-Shields Centre for
Leadership and Peace. Since my background is drama, I am very
involved in the Centre's Peace Theatre and its summer peace camp
where theatre, poetry, dance and song teach and express a philosophy
of conciliation, communication and non-violence.
John: As a prosecutor in the courts involving domestic abuse,
I try to ensure that all involved, victims and aggressors, are
treated with justice and compassion. I work towards reconciliation
and forgiveness rather than conviction and punishment, although these
will often be necessary. I stress that violence is always
destructive, that the only road to happiness and growth is a culture
of peace. The court system is designed to be fair, just and
respectful of the accused. And I believe that even one person can
make a difference.
Katie: So do I. In a culture of aggression, conflict and war,
all my effort, in the home, school and the Peace Centre, is to
provide an example of compassionate leadership. Working towards
establishing and living a culture of peace is at the centre of my
spiritual life, my family life, my life of service to others. In its
deepest form it finds expression in my poetry. And for John and me,
much of our prayer takes the form of wiping noses, hugging,
listening, respecting those whom Jesus served and called "the
poor". The children, the handicapped, the oppressed, the
victims, these are our vineyard.
And in this, the spirit of des Places and Libermann, the Spiritan
charism, lives on.