Diane Hooley, OP, is devoted to very vulnerable
people, in a service surrounded by an almost
unimaginable situation. She is a hospice chaplain, a
spiritual companion to people who are facing their
own death in a city that is itself trying to come
back from the brink of death after Hurricane
Katrina.
Diane, and chaplain Alberta Schindler, OP, work for
Serenity Hospice Center, a small private hospice
service through which they are companions for people
in the throes of terminal illness, who are on the
ultimate life journey. Diane cares for the spiritual
and pastoral well being of people who, in some
cases, lost everything they had in the hurricane,
and then have to face the final most personal loss
of all. Their loved ones receive the support and
care of these Dominican sisters who help them make
it through the loss of someone they love.
As a
Eucharistic Missionary of St. Dominic, Diane brings
a missionary’s heart to a city that looks like a war
zone in many places. Whole neighborhoods stand
empty, decaying and dark. City services are sparse,
mail service in some sections, non- existent. FEMA
trailers stand on the front lawns of homes that look
abandoned, but hold some measure of promised
rebirth. Other parts of the city look almost normal,
if you discount the noticeable number of houses with
scaffolding or great sheets of blue tarp covering
roofs or sides of buildings. Don’t let the Superdome
or the French Quarter fool you -- New Orleans is not
back to normal, by any stretch of the imagination.
Today, there are five Eucharistic Missionary
Dominicans working in New Orleans. The affectionate
shorthand for their congregation is "EMDs". They are
five of 33 members of the congregation of Dominicans
whose lives were altered forever by the breach in
the levees in August of 2005. Other EMDs in New
Orleans include Noel Toomey, OP, who is a spiritual
director at the archdiocese of New Orleans and Kathy
Brussard, OP, who is a forensic social worker, a
person who assesses the needs of people who are
convicted of a capital crime. Suzanne Brauer, OP is
also an EMD who serves on the congregation’s
leadership team as treasurer and at St. Paul the
Apostle Parish in New Orleans East.
“How’d you
do?”
Diane
and Alberta see about 70 patients, a little more
than half of them in a nearby nursing home. The rest
of the hospice patients are in their homes. Many of
them are senior citizens who have lost their homes
and cannot talk about the loss; some cannot even
look at where the remains of their homes stand.
Still others are traumatized just to hear an
occasional heavy rainstorm on the roof. The stress
of Hurricane Katrina’s aftermath has increased the
death rate. People are hungry for what feels like
normal, are hungry to know “How’d you do?”
-- the greeting many returning residents use to
catch up with friends and get news of progress.
Social conversation is about recovery, about FEMA,
about forms and applications for services.
No
words make this easy,” Diane said. “I am learning to
have the same faith as people here.” Diane described
a heartbreaking story of a family whose
four-year-old child is terminally ill, the father is
in a wheelchair after a motorcycle accident. One
child had already died of a congenital illness.
They live in a one bedroom FEMA trailer.
The FEMA trailer family did not have money for a
funeral, and friends and neighbors pitched in. This
is the story of New Orleans now -- friends and
neighbors are helping each other with the added
encouragement of volunteers from around the country.
You get the feeling the city government
is in a semi-comatose state,
overwhelmed by red tape,
lack of personnel and mismanagement.
Other solutions are emerging slowly,
very slowly.
Dying is hard enough, but the idea of a dying child
in a one bedroom FEMA trailer escapes your
imagination. The child’s father is in a wheelchair
after a motorcycle accident. How does one maneuver
a wheelchair in a one bedroom trailer? Diane shows
up just to check in, to listen, to visit, to pray,
to let them know they are not alone. Her presence
feeds a soul like Eucharist.
Diane reflects on the faith of the people she
encounters and recognizes that many good gifts come
their way in the form of prayer, emotional support,
physical support, and volunteers who help rebuild.
They all express tremendous gratitude. Everyone
recognizes that there is always someone else they
will meet who suffered more or who lost more. And
the devastation of the city is still more than
evident there, everyday. You cannot miss it.
This
is missionary territory.
The missionary takes up the task
where the work is needed.
Thus, the Eucharistic Missionaries of St. Dominic
are alive and well in New Orleans.
Thank God the
Dominicans are still there.
Story by Anne Lythgoe, OP (Catherine de' Ricci),
formerly Elkins Park
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