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Theresa Favors, longtime Catholic educator and a former director of the Office of Black Catholic Ministries for the Archdiocese of Baltimore, carries a portrait of Servant of God Franciscan Sister of Perpetual Adoration Thea Bowman during the opening procession of the Nov. 1, 2021 All Souls Day Mass at St. Ann Catholic Church in Baltimore. Sister Bowman, who died in 1990 at age 52 from cancer, is one of six African-Americans being asked for expedient canonization to sainthood by letter campaign to Pope Francis at the Vatican. (Kevin J. Parks/CR Staff)

My Advent pilgrimage to the gravesite of Sister Thea Bowman

December 9, 2021
By Shannen Dee Williams
Catholic News Service
Filed Under: Commentary, Guest Commentary, Racial Justice

On Tuesday, Nov. 30, 2021, the third day of Advent and the last day of Black Catholic History Month, I visited the historic Elmwood Cemetery in my hometown of Memphis, Tennessee, and gazed upon the gravesite of “Servant of God” Sister Thea Bowman, one of six African Americans currently under consideration for sainthood.

Although I grew up Black and Catholic, I did not learn about the existence of African American nuns until 2007, while enrolled in graduate school.

Two years later, a conversation in Memphis with then-Bishop J. Terry Steib directed me to the principal’s office of the diocese’s Holy Names of Mary and Jesus School for an interview with Sister Donna Banfield.

During our meeting, Sister Donna, who led Holy Names from 2006 to 2010, informed me of Sister Thea’s final resting place in the city.

I also learned that Sister Donna, a former president of the National Black Sisters’ Conference, led her students on an annual trip to Sister Thea’s gravesite to pay their respects and bear to witness to the lived reality of Black Catholic saints in our midst.

Inspired by Sister Donna’s leadership, I decided to make my own pilgrimage to Sister Thea’s gravesite but not until I completed my planned book on the largely hidden history of the nation’s Black sisters. I wanted the visit to be special, and it truly was.

Reflecting on Sister Thea’s short but powerful epitaph, “She tried,” etched onto her family’s headstone, I thanked her for championing the intellectual, spiritual and cultural gifts of the African American community in the face of discrimination and resistance in our church. I also thanked Sister Thea for being a model of excellence and compassion for all humankind.

“Be woman. Be man. Be priest,” Sister Thea liked to say. “Be single, be married. … Be Irish American, be Italian American, be Native American, be African American, but be one in Christ.”

In these trying times, one can only wonder what Sister Thea, an unapologetic champion of Black life, mothers, families and social equality, might say about the current state of our bitterly divided nation and church.

From the various attempts to stop the teaching of Black history and the nation’s original sins of racism and colonialism to the global climate crisis to the current attempts to roll back the civil rights victories of the middle decades of the 20th century — especially voting rights — I also wonder what advice Sister Thea, a member of the pioneering generation of Black Catholic women and girls who desegregated the nation’s white sisterhoods, would give those fearful of the uncertain future ahead.

In her final years, Sister Thea, a Mississippi native who was also the granddaughter of enslaved people, made it clear where she stood on all forms of injustice. “I will never reconcile myself with … racism … sexism … classism … anything destructive,” she stated.

Too often those who champion Sister Thea and her canonization cause erase her clear understanding of the interconnected dimensions of oppression.

In so doing, they do a terrible disservice to her and other freedom fighters, who always understood that any demand for racial and educational justice not connected to the larger fight for human rights and justice was insincere and illegitimate.

As this nation seems poised with a return to a society that Sister Thea, and so many Black sisters like her fought to bury, I pray for the strength and grace to meet the stark challenges ahead.

During this Advent season, I also pray for the wisdom to remember Sister Thea’s great sacrifice for her beliefs and the courage to seek new ways of living that no longer require martyrdom to convince opponents of human equality to uphold the church’s most basic social teaching of affirming the lives and dignity of all people.


Also see

Oblate Sisters celebrate 10th anniversary of transfer of Mother Lange’s remains

Head of bishops’ anti-racism committee praises investigations into racist histories

Thousands flock to Missouri for ‘electrifying’ visit to former Baltimore nun’s apparently incorrupt body

Nun’s incorruptible remains highlight rich heritage of Black Catholics in U.S., say experts

A time for reckoning: Archdiocese of Baltimore forms commission to investigate church connection to slavery

Despite new EPA rule to reduce toxic pollution, Catholic activist says fight to protect communities far from over

Copyright © 2021 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

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Shannen Dee Williams

Shannen Dee Williams is the Albert Lepage assistant professor of history at Villanova University. She is completing her first book, "Subversive Habits: Black Catholic Nuns in the Long African American Freedom Struggle," under contract with Duke University Press.

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