In the midst of the Hurricane
Katrina aftermath, there in the flooded basement
offices of the Spirituality Center at Notre Dame
Seminary, sat a small Pueblo clay “storyteller”
figurine virtually untouched as if to proclaim that
Sr. Sr. Noel Toomey, OP, and others at the center
should continue their ministry and keep “telling the
story.”
“As Dominicans,
as preachers, we need to keep reverencing the story
but help people focus on what’s the blessing right
now,” said Sr. Noel, a Eucharistic Missionary who is
in her 25th year as the center’s director.
The
story, by now everyone knows. On Aug. 29, 2005,
Hurricane Katrina hit the city of New Orleans
causing a breach in the levees submerging 80 percent
of the city in floodwaters. What is hard to see in
the devastation still evident two years later is the
blessing, but Sr. Noel encourages everyone to seek
it:
“The
wonderful thing in all this sadness
is the feeling of what’s important …
What lasts and what drifts away –
that’s the preaching gift through the disaster."
Despite losing
25 years of her classroom notes and professional
resources as well as many personal items in the
offices, Sr. Noel doesn’t look at what was lost but
what was gained by the center in the storm’s
aftermath. “We’ve come out very well,” she said. The
center was moved from the basement of a building at
Notre Dame Seminary to the second floor of a
building next door. This is the result of a lesson
the seminary learned from the devastation … a
classroom with chairs and tables can be replaced
much easier than offices with years of notes and
personal items. What once served as a chapel now
serves as teaching and office areas for the center.
It is a “much nicer space than before,” according to
Sr. Noel.
Flood insurance
covered the actual structure of the building, but
not the contents. Sr. Noel and the staff at the
Spirituality Center were left to rely on the
generosity of others for items necessary to continue
the ministry – another blessing.
“Everything
inside had to be replaced but the generosity of
people brought us pretty close to where we were
before,” she said.

Through the
assistance of Notre Dame, Ave Maria Press donated
books to the center providing “better contemporary
spirituality resources” than they had before the
storm. Thanks to the generosity of others, the new
books are stored on nine new bookcases.
Even though the
offices themselves have changed at the Spirituality
Center, their work continues as before. But, Sr.
Noel said, the experience of Katrina didn’t change
the ministry as much as add a new dimension as
people began to rebuild their lives and homes.
People need someone to talk to not just about their
spiritual direction, but what they experienced
during the ordeal, Sr. Noel said. The center
provides that listening ear for those still dealing
with the effects of Katrina.
“I didn’t cry
over the devastation,
I cried over the experience of people,”
Sr. Noel said
as she recounted stories of those she’s spoken with
since returning to New Orleans in October 2005.
She told the
story of a former student who is now a chaplain for
the New Orleans Police Department. Haunted by
gruesome images of people he tried to rescue, their
pleading voices played ceaselessly in his head as he
struggled to sleep at night. She told him: “You’ll
never lose those images, but you also need to keep
the pictures of life and hope you made possible.”
Pictures like that of a week-old baby he found
turning blue in its screaming mother’s hand, its
tiny arms hanging limp. He knew that infant was
dying or already dead, but carefully he breathed
into its mouth and gently as he could, pressed two
fingers on its fragile chest, almost futilely urging
it to come back. Finally, he saw a little arm pop
up, and the child began breathing on its own. Sr.
Noel urged him to always remember that little arm
popping up showing signs of life.
Stories
like this one are too numerous to count, but they
must be told, Sr. Noel said. “People can’t forget
the stories of sadness because it is out of those
stories that the blessings come.”
Just like that
clay storyteller figurine, Sr. Noel and the others
at the Spirituality Center made it through the storm
so they can continue to tell their story.
In working through loss
and pain of the Katrina experience, people must tell
their story over and over. Sr. Noel encourages the
telling of the whole story - the pain of losses and
also the blessings of good people who were generous
companions through the ordeal. Sr.
Noel’s ministry of listening is shaped now by a key
lesson from the devastation: when people are “pushed
to
the edge,” they know deeply what is important.
This graced awareness
of what is most valued
"must stay in the retold story,
for this is the wisdom
that comes from tragedy.”
Know the Whole Story:
Go to
www.domlife.org to read the entire story
of
Dominicans in New Orleans after Katrina
and to view all the
photos.
Click here to view
the "Snapshot" of this story