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1,499 Results Found
  • Sr. Mary Collins

    Educator, congregational leader

    Benedictine Sister Mary (Mary Dennis) Collins, 88, died May 2 at Mount St. Scholastica Monastery in Atchison, Kansas.

    Born in Chicago, Sister Mary entered the Benedictine Sisters of Mount St. Scholastica, Atchison, Kansas, in 1957 after graduating from Mount St. Scholastica College. She taught high school for several years before beginning her doctoral studies at the Catholic University of America. After earning a doctorate in liturgical theology, she taught religious studies at Benedictine College and the University of Kansas.

    In 1967, she became associate professor of religious studies at the Catholic University of America and in 1983 became chair of the religion department. After a short period in North Carolina, she returned in 1987 to the Catholic University of America, where she taught until she was elected prioress of Mount St. Scholastica Monastery in 1999. A significant figure in the broader world of Benedictine women, she was first councilor for the Federation of St. Scholastica for twelve years and a consultant or author for many of their documents.

    Sister Mary was a member of the International Commission on English in the Liturgy and belonged to several professional theological organizations. She wrote, collaborated on, or edited a large number of articles and books on religion and liturgy for which she was widely known.

    She is survived by her brother, John Collins.

  • Fr. Gan Minh Nguyen

    Member of mission team

    Redemptorist Father Gan Minh Nguyen, 59, died April 14 at the rectory of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Redemptorist Church in Kansas City, Missouri.

    Father Gan was born in Vietnam, one of 14 children. He was 11 years old when his family fled Vietnam and immigrated to the United States. They settled in Biloxi, Mississippi, where Father Gan became involved in the Vietnamese Eucharistic Youth Movement in grade school.

    He completed high school and earned a degree in electronic engineering technology, but decided to pursue his call to priesthood.

    He professed first his vows as a Redemptorist in 1993 and perpetual vows in 1997. During his years in formation, he served in parish and youth ministry at Blessed Sacrament Parish in Chicago, and in Baton Rouge.

    He was ordained a priest in 1998 in Baton Rouge, served there, and later served at a parish in Houston.

    Father Gan joined the Redemptorist Mission Team at Old St. Michael’s in 2008. He enjoyed traveling across the country to preach parish missions, always allowing time to visit family members and friends living throughout the United States. Two years later, he moved to the Liguori Mission House in Missouri. Although he remained attached to the community, he served five of the next six years as a military chaplain at White Sands Missile Range in Las Cruces, New Mexico.

    Father Gan then served again in Houston and in Liguori, moving to Kansas City last year.

  • Sr. Vianney Moore

    Educator

    Sister of the Living Word Vianney Moore, 89, died April 22 in Chicago.

    Born in California, she moved to Chicago with her family when she was 14 years old and she attended St. Gregory High School before joining the Sisters of Christian Charity.

    She taught elementary school in Illinois, Minnesota, Louisiana, and Arkansas. She later joined the Sisters of the Living Word, and ministered as a director of religious education in Louisiana and Mississippi.

    She spent her last years living at the Resurrection Life Center.

  • Deacon Joseph Tony Valdez

    Class of 2014

    Deacon Joseph Tony “Butch” Valdez, 68, died April 7. He was ordained in 2014 and served at St. Martha Parish, Morton Grove.

    Deacon Valdez was an accountant.

    He is survived by his siblings: Father Mario, a priest; Reuben; Daphne; and Grant.

  • Sr. Rosemary Eyler

    Educator

    Providence Sister Rosemary (Mary Luke) Eyler, 93, died March 30 at Providence Health Care in Indiana.

    Born in Indiana, she entered the Sisters of Providence in 1949 and professed final vows in 1956. She earned a bachelor’s degree from St. Mary-of-the-Woods College and two master’s degrees from Indiana State University in education and administration.

    She ministered in education for 57 years in Indiana, Illinois, New Hampshire and Massachusetts, before retiring in 2008.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Angela (1951-1956).

    Sister Rosemary is survived by a brother, Thomas Eyler, and a sister, Margaret McCafferty.

  • Sr. M. Jacqueline Ziobro

    Educator

    Sister of Sts. Cyril and Methodius M. Jacqueline Ziobro, 93, died in Danville, Pennsylvania, on March 30.

    She entered the Sisters of Sts. Cyril and Methodius in 1948 and professed vows in 1951.

    Sister Jacqueline earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in education from Marywood University in Scranton, Pennsylvania. She taught kindergarten through eighth grade, was a math and reading tutor and was a librarian. Her ministry teaching took her to Illinois, New Jersey, New York, Indiana, Pennsylvania and South Carolina.

    After she retired, Sister Jacqueline loved to tell stories of years in ministry, especially about serving in Chicago and South Carolina.

    Sister Jacqueline is survived by her sister, Gloria.

  • Sr. Cecilia Zielen

    Educator

    Sister of St. Joseph-Third Order of St. Francis Cecilia Zielen, 91, of Bartlett, died April 3.

    From St. Fidelis Parish in Chicago, she was a member of the congregation for 73 years.

    She taught biology, earth science and religious education in elementary and high schools in Illinois, helping her students participate in statewide science fairs before retiring to Clare Oaks, Bartlett.

  • Sr. Claire Marie Czerwiec

    Educator, counselor

    School Sister of Notre Dame Claire Marie (Barbara Mary) Czerwiec, 85, died Dec. 23, 2023, at Christ Hospital, Oak Lawn.

    Born in Chicago, she was a member of the School Sisters of Notre Dame for 65 years.

    She served in Wisconsin and Illinois as an elementary school teacher, formation directress, pastoral associate, pastoral minister and counselor, in provincial leadership, and as a psychotherapist and spiritual director for more than 65 years.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Margaret of Scotland School, was a pastoral psychotherapist at the Institute for Living in Winnetka and was a pastoral counselor and spiritual director at St. Alexander Parish, Palos Heights

    She is survived by her sisters Nancy Czerwiec and Carole Kuberski.

  • Sr. Clotilde de la Passion

    Nurse

    Little Sister of the Poor Clotilde de la Passion (Irene Mary Jardim), 83, died March 8 at St. Joseph’s Home for the Elderly in Palatine.

    Born in Newark, New Jersey, she moved to Oakland, California, with her family. She became familiar with the Little Sisters of the Poor during her high school years by volunteering in their Marian Aides program.

    She entered the Little Sisters of the Poor as a postulant shortly after graduating from high school, and made her first profession of vows in 1961. She made her final profession in 1965.

    During her life as a Little Sister of the Poor, she completed studies in nursing and served as a nurse in several of their homes for the elderly, often as the director of nursing.

    Sr. Clotilde is survived by her brother, George Jardim, and her sister, Judy Jardim.

  • Sr. Mary Ellen Gevelinger

    Educator, community leader

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Mary Ellen (Marie Alphonse) Gevelinger, 80, died March 13 at her home in Madison, Wisconsin.

    Born in Wisconsin, she made her first religious profession in 1963 and her perpetual profession in 1968. She earned a bachelor’s degree in Latin from Rosary College (now Dominican University), River Forest; a master’s degree in religious studies from Mundelein College; a master’s degree in educational administration from St. Xavier College (now Saint Xavier University); and a doctorate in education leadership from the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota.

    Sister Mary Ellen taught at Queen of Peace High School, Burbank; and Trinity High School, River Forest; was dean of students at St. Thomas the Apostle High School and Unity Catholic High School; and was executive assistant to the president at Rosary College (now Dominican University), River Forest. She also ministered in Minnesota and Wisconsin, and was vicaress (2000-2006) and then prioress (2011-2016) of the Sinsinawa Dominican Congregation.

  • Sr. Mary Lois Carey

    Educator

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Mary Lois (Thomaselle) Carey, 93, died March 19 in Hazel Green, Wisconsin.

    Born in Wisconsin, Sister Mary Lois made her first religious profession in 1951 and her perpetual profession of vows in 1954. She earned a bachelor’s degree in history from Rosary College (now Dominican University), River Forest; a master’s degree in education and elementary administration from Loras College, Dubuque, Iowa; and a master’s degree in applied theology from the School of Applied Theology, Berkley, California.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Thomas the Apostle and St. Sabina. She taught and was a principal at other schools in Illinois and in New York, Iowa and California.

    She also ministered in Michigan and Washington.

    She is survived by a brother, Mark Carey.

  • Fr. Terrence A. McCarthy

    Pastor emeritus

    Father Terrence A. McCarthy, 85, died Feb. 24. He was pastor emeritus of Immaculate Conception Parish in Highland Park, now Christ Our Hope Parish.

    Born in Calumet City, Father McCarthy attended Mendel Catholic High School and Loras College in Dubuque, Iowa, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration. He enlisted in the U.S. Army and served in the army’s security agency from 1965 to 1967, before entering the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary.

    He was ordained in 1974.

    Father McCarthy served as associate pastor of St. James, Highwood; and St. Marcelline, Schaumburg. He served as pastor of St. Anastasia Parish, Waukegan; and Immaculate Conception before being named pastor emeritus in 2008.

    Father John Hurley, a classmate, said Father McCarthy was the oldest of his class. “He was well loved in all the parishes he served and was respected by all priests,” Hurley said. “He was known as a man of prayer and a powerful example, a man of inspiration.”

  • Fr. Daniel R. Fallon

    Former pastor

    Father. Daniel R. Fallon, 74, died March 9. He was the former pastor of St. Cornelius Parish, now St. Elizabeth of the Trinity Parish.

    Born in Chicago, he attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary, Niles College and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary before being ordained in 1976. He also earned a master of divinity degree at DePaul University.

    Father Fallon was assistant pastor of St. Isaac Jogues, Niles, and associate pastor of St. Pascal, St. William and Our Lady, Mother of the Church, where he also served as pastor from 1996 to 2008. He was then pastor of St. Cornelius, where he served until his retirement in 2020.

    Father Kenneth Fleck, former pastor of St. George, Tinley Park, remembered his classmate as a beacon of devotion to his parishioners. “With a quiet but serious demeanor, he served those entrusted to his care,” Fleck said. “His sermons were heartfelt reflections on our faith and their relevance to everyday life. He saw his priesthood as a vocation, not a job. In so doing, he touched countless lives leaving behind a legacy of compassion, kindness and faith.”

  • Deacon Patrick Pierce Sheehan

    Class of 2000

    Deacon Patrick Pierce Sheehan, 82, died Feb. 26. He was ordained in 2000 and ministered at St. James Parish, Arlington Heights, where he was an active member for more than 50 years.

    Deacon Sheehan was born in Chicago and was a Chicago Public School teacher for more than 20 years, and he also worked for the Mount Prospect Park District for more than 25 years.

    He enjoyed golf and was a member of the St. James Men’s Twilight League, as well as being a member of the Knights of Columbus Holy Rosary Council.

    Deacon Sheehan is survived by his wife Margaret Sheehan; his daughters Rose Ann, Nancy and Margi Sheehan; and his grandchildren.

  • Fr. Dennis Flynn

    Missionary

    Divine Word Father Dennis Flynn, 90, died Feb. 25 in Techny. He was a missionary to the Philippines, where he was born, for 40 years.

    His father died during the 1942 Bataan Death March, in which Japanese soldiers forced Filipino and American prisoners to walk 65 miles in torturous conditions. Before his death, his American father wrote to his Filipino mother, telling her that if something happened to him that he wanted their four children to be raised in the United States.

    His mother was able to move the family to Portland, Oregon, in 1948, and then to New Jersey to be closer to their father’s family.

    Father Flynn professed vows in 1954 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1961.

    Tagalog was his first language, so his assignment to the Philippines was a natural choice. For the first 20 years of his priesthood, Father Flynn provided pastoral care for the indigenous Mangyan people in Mindoro in the Central Philippines.

    In the early 1980s, Father Flynn worked with the indigenous population of Australia before being transferred back to the United States. He returned to the Philippines for the last 20 years of his missionary ministry before retiring to Techny in 2020.

  • Sr. Grace Marie Meehan

    Nurse, educator

    Providence Sister Grace Marie Meehan, 93, died March 2 in St. Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana.

    Born in Chicago, she attended St. Andrew and St. Sebastian schools. She entered the Sisters of Providence in 1948 and professed final vows in 1955. 

    She ministered for 22 years in schools in Indiana, Illinois, Oklahoma and California. In 1972, she became a member of the Congregation Renewal Team, and in 1976, she was appointed the administrator of the congregation infirmary.

    After five years, she studied to become a registered nurse and then served in health care positions. After retiring in 2016, she served as a volunteer service in the Chicago area and in New Mexico.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she was a nurse (1986-2005) and coordinator of volunteers (2005-2016) at St. Francis Hospital, Evanston, and a volunteer at Alexian Brothers Hospital, Elk Grove Village (2017-2019).

  • Fr. Daniel A. Smilanic

    Vicar for Canonical Services

    Father Daniel A. Smilanic, 76, died Feb. 20. He was former judicial vicar and vicar for Canonical Services for the Archdiocese of Chicago.

    Born in Chicago, Father Smilanic attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary in Chicago, Xavier University in Cincinnati, Loyola University Chicago and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary in Mundelein before being ordained in 1973.

    In addition to his master’s degree in divinity, Smilanic had a licentiate and a doctorate in canon law from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.

    He served as assistant pastor of St. Gall Parish and associate pastor of Mary, Seat of Wisdom Parish, Park Ridge, and St. Wenceslaus Parish. He had served in the Metropolitan Tribunal of the Archdiocese of Chicago since 1984, first as a judge and later as vicar. Father Smilanic also served as the president of the Canon Law Society of America.

    Auxiliary Bishop Jeffrey Grob, a former colleague, described Father Smilanic as a thoughtful canonist.

    “He had a deep respect for canon law, especially when it came to the rights of individuals,” Bishop Grob said. “He was very respected throughout the United States.”

    He added that Father Smilanic worked as an advocate for priests as a canonical advisor, and was very active in church leadership.

    “He had a great laugh and a wonderful sense of humor. A good man,” Bishop Grob said.

  • Fr. Kenneth O’Malley

    Librarian, community leader

    Passionist Father Kenneth O’Malley, 87, died Jan. 23 in Louisville, Kentucky.

    Father Kenneth entered the Passionist seminary after high school and was ordained in Louisville in 1964.

    He taught and was librarian at the Passionist Preparatory Seminary in Warrenton, Missouri, before joining the library staff at Catholic Theological Union in 1969. He soon became head librarian, a post he held until 1999. During those years, he frequently assisted in nearby parishes on weekends, preached retreats as time permitted and served for 12 years as superior of the local Passionist community.

    Father Kenneth then served as local superior of the Passionist community in Houston. In 2011, he moved to Louisville to join the senior members of his community.

    Father Kenneth is survived by a brother, Dennis Anthony.

  • Sr. Michele Elfering

    Educator

    Sister of St. Joseph Michele (Marguerite) Elfering, 95, died at Ascension Living Resurrection Village Chicago on Feb. 9.

    Born in Wisconsin, Sister Michele attended Barat College in Lake Forest for one year before entering the Sisters of St. Joseph. She continued her studies at Loyola University Chicago and Cardinal Stritch University in Milwaukee,

    Sister Michele taught at Divine Infant, Westchester; St. Francis Xavier and St. Joseph Military Academy, La Grange; and St. Anthony. She was principal of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Melrose Park; St. Hugh, Lyons; and St. John Fisher. She received a Distinguished Teacher Award from the National Catholic Education Association in 1999.

    After retiring from teaching, Sister Michele served as a grade-level coordinator and moderated the Rainbows program and student liturgy teams.  She belonged to the Sisters of St. Joseph Peace and Justice Commission, Network and Eighth Day Center for Justice.

    From 1988 to 1992, Sister Michele served her congregation as vice president. Sister Michele also found time to teach religious education classes, form “Community with Seniors” at St. Mary’s Parish, Riverside; teach English as a Second Language, deliver food to the poor and volunteer one night a month at a homeless shelter.

  • Fr. Robert Fisher

    Missionary

    Divine Word Father Robert Fisher, 87, one of the first Divine Word missionaries to work in the Brong-Ahafo region of Ghana, died Feb. 9 in Techny.

    Born in Arkansas, he entered Divine Word Seminary in 1951, professed vows in 1957 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1965.

    He earned a licentiate in sacred theology from Gregorian University in Rome and a doctorate in liturgy from the Pontifical Anteneo of Saint Anselmo.

    He taught at St. Augustine Seminary in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, before being sent to the Philippines, where he also was seminary teacher. After three years there, he went to the Brong-Ahafo region of Ghana, where he and three other missionaries attended to the pastoral and administrative needs of 20 mission outstations and several schools.

    He also taught at St. Peter’s Seminary in Cape Coast, Ghana, and fulfilled pastoral roles at several parishes. He also served as a dean and attaché at the nunciature.

    In 1984, Father Fisher returned to the United States, teaching at Xavier University in New Orleans and teaching and serving as Catholic chaplain at Prairie View A&M University in Prairie View, Texas, while serving as a pastor.

    In 2005, he became director of St. Augustine’s Retreat Center in Bay St. Louis. When Hurricane Katrina flooded the property, Father Fisher was forced to swim for his life. While the building there was being restored, Father Fisher once again ministered in Texas.

    He retired to Techny in retirement in 2017.

    He is survived his siblings James L. Fisher, John Fisher, Kay King, JoAnn VanPelt and Frank Kasper.

  • Sr. Joanne Fedewa

    Educator, administrator

    Sister of the Living Word Joanne Fedewa, 93, died Feb. 13.

    Originally from Michigan, Sister Joanne taught in Catholic schools in Minnesota, Chicago, Louisiana, Michigan and Arkansas. She also served as a novice directress at parishes in New Jersey, Illinois and Michigan, and was a was pastoral coordinator at Christ the King Parish in Flint, Michigan. She was a coordinator of spiritual life at the St. Juliana Center and volunteered at St. Joseph Home for the Elderly in Palatine.

    She is survived by her brother, Father Matt Fedewa.

  • Fr. William Francis Moroney

    Missionary

    Missionaries of Africa Father William Francis Moroney, born in 1935, died Feb. 17 in Nairobi, Kenya.

    A Chicago native, Father Moroney attended Archbishop Quigley Preparatory Seminary and St. Mary of the Lake Seminary before entering the Society of Missionaries of Africa in 1958. His priestly formation then took him to New York and Carthage, Tunisia, before he was ordained in 1961.

    Post-ordination, he pursued further studies in sociology at Loyola University Chicago before serving as a teacher and pastor in Tanzania. He returned to Chicago to serve as the community superior of the Missionaries of Africa in Chicago from 1972 to 1976 before returning to Tanzania for another 17 years.

    In 1994, he was elected superior of the Missionaries of Africa in the USA and played a crucial role in the merging of the USA and Canadian provinces into the North American Province. Following service in France from 2000 to 2006, he returned to East Africa. Upon retirement in 2023, he chose to spend his remaining years in East Africa.

    He is survived by his sister, Marilyn Ginnane.

  • Sr. Mary Kent Pearson

    Educator

    Sinsinawa Domincan Sister Mary Kent Pearson, 89, died Feb. 19 in Hazel Green, Wisconsin.

    Born in Pontiac, Illinois, Sister Mary Kent made her first profession in 1954, and her perpetual profession in 1957.

    She was a teacher, administrator, religious educator and pastoral minister in Wisconsin, Illinois, Colorado, Minnesota and Iowa. In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Philip the Apostle, Northfield; St. Thomas the Apostle;  and St. Sabina.

    She is survived by a brother, Duane Pearson.

  • Fr. John J. Doyle

    Retired associate pastor

    Father John J. Doyle, 79, died Feb. 6. He was the former associate pastor of Infant Jesus of Prague Parish in Flossmoor.

    Born in Evergreen Park, Father Doyle attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary in Chicago, Niles College and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary before being ordained in 1970.

    He served as assistant pastor of St. Margaret Mary Parish and as associate pastor of Queen of Martyrs, Evergreen Park; St. Albert the Great, Burbank; St. George, Tinley Park; St. Alphonsus, Lemont and Infant Jesus of Prague Parish in Flossmoor. He retired in 2014.

    Father James Kehoe, pastor emeritus at St. Joan of Arc in Skokie and a classmate of Father Doyle, had been friends with Father Doyle for more than 60 years.

    “He was a wonderful priest, always caring and concerned about other people even when he had health issues,” Kehoe said.

  • Fr. George Lane

    Editor, publisher

    Jesuit Father George Lane, 89, died Nov. 12, 2023, in Clarkston, Michigan.

    Born in Evanston, he graduated from Loyola Academy and attended Loyola University Chicago for two years before entering the Chicago Province of the Society of Jesus in 1954. He was ordained a priest in 1967 and professed final vows in 1974.

    Father Lane taught English at St. Ignatius College Prep (1961-1964). After ordination, he ministered at Loyola Press for almost 50 years. He held many positions, including: editorial director and associate director of the press (1969-1989); director, president and publisher (1989-2014).

    He was also the superior of the Woodlawn Jesuit Community from 2003 to 2012.

    In 2015, Father Lane moved to the Colombiere Center in Michigan.

    In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Father Lane coordinated the efforts that saved and helped renovate Holy Family Church, one of the few buildings that survived the Great Chicago Fire of 1871.

    Father Lane is survived by his brothers Michael, Joseph, Martin and Gregory, and his sister, Laura O’Brien.

  • Sr. Mary Cecilia Maczko

    Educator

    Felician Sister Mary Cecilia (Alice) Maczko, 93, died Jan. 19 in Swedish/North Shore Hospital.

    Born in Chicago, she attended St. James School and Good Counsel High School. She entered the Felician Sisters Postulancy in 1948 and professed her final vows in 1956. She ministered for over 50 years as a principal and teacher in elementary schools in Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota. She also was a music teacher at various schools and an organist at different parishes.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she ministered at Sts. Peter and Paul (1948-1951); Holy Rosary, North Chicago (1951-1953); St. Bronislava (1953-1956); St. Helen (1956-1958, 1968-1969); and Sacred Heart (1967-1968).

  • Fr. Richard Boever

    Pastor, writer

     

     

    Redemptorist Father Richard Boever, 76, died Jan. 28 in Arizona after a struggle with cancer.

    He may be best remembered for promoting devotion to and authoring books about two renowned Redemptorists who ministered in the United States, St. John Neumann and Blessed Francis Xavier Seelos.

    Born in St. Louis, he recognized his vocation to the priesthood in elementary school. He was accepted into the Redemptorist novitiate in 1967 and professed temporary vows the following year. He professed perpetual vows in 1971 and was ordained a priest in 1973.

    He ministered briefly at St. Michael Parish before being assigned to a parish in Missouri and then working as an editor at Liguori Publications.

    He served in Missouri until 1992, when he became pastor of Blessed Sacrament Parish, a post he kept until 1996.

    He then did retreat and mission ministry, chaplaincy, college teaching, pottery and weaving, and writing in Kansas, Wisconsin, Missouri and Louisiana, before retiring to a Redemptorist community in Arizona.

  • Sr. Ann Willits

    Preacher, community leader

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Ann (Caitlin) Willits, 89, died Jan. 26 in Hazel Green, Wisconsin.

    Born in Iowa, Sister Ann made her first religious profession in 1958 and her perpetual profession in 1961.

    She taught in Minnesota and South Dakota, and served on the Leadership Council of the Sinsinawa Dominican Congregation from 1973 to 1982. Sister Ann led retreats and parish missions all over the United States and abroad.

    She was codirector of the Parable Conference for Dominican Life and Mission for 21 years and an itinerant preacher for 20 years while she developed programs, retreats and parish missions to address the needs of the contemporary church and world.

  • Sr. Marilyn Grabarczyk

    Educator, chaplain

    Resurrection Sister Marilyn (Agatha) Grabar-czyk, 84, died Jan. 16 at Ascension Resurrection Life Center.

    Born in Chicago, she was baptized at St. Casimir Parish, where she also attended grade school and high school.

    She entered the Sisters of the Resurrection in 1958.

    Sister Marilyn taught grades four through eight at St. Thecla, St. Mary of the Angels and St. Casimir schools, and was principal of St. Mary of the Angels. She taught preschool at Resurrection Day Care and high school at Resurrection High School. She also taught in Nebraska and Indiana.

    After taking part in a clinical chaplain training program and completing a residency, she served as a chaplain at Resurrection Medical Center. 

    She is survived by her sisters Teresa, Bonita and Joanne.

  • Sr. Mark O’Loughlin

    Educator, social worker

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Mark O’Loughlin, 96, died Feb. 4.

    Born in Kankakee, Sister Mark made her first religious profession in 1954 and her perpetual profession in 1957. Her ministry has been dedicated to teaching, counseling and social work. In Illinois, Sister Mark taught at Trinity High School, River Forest; and Visitation High School, where she also served as counselor. She also served as counselor at Visitation Grade School; Sts. Faith, Hope and Charity, Winnetka; St. Viator, Arlington Heights; and Weber High School.

    She also ministered in Wisconsin, Wyoming and the District of Columbia.

  • Deacon John Navolio

    Class of 1998

    Deacon John Navolio, 81, died Dec. 30. He was ordained in 1998 and served at St. Mary of the Lake Parish.

    He served in the U.S. Army, graduated from Harrington College of Design and worked for the City of Chicago.

    While at St. Mary of the Lake, he visited the sick at the hospital and nursing homes and led Bible study at the parish. Deacon Navolio suffered ill health and retired from ministry in 2005.

    He is survived by his brother, Stephen Navolio, and sister, Mary Podmokly.

  • Sr. Magdalen Marie Buehler

    Educator

    School Sister of Notre Dame Magdalen Marie Buehler, 78, died Dec. 16 at Resurrection Medical Center.

    Born in Chicago, she was a member of the School Sisters of Notre Dame for 58 years.

    She served in Illinois and Rome as an elementary school teacher, program director, special education resource person, tutor, volunteer and staff member in the SSND Generalate in Rome. She offered prayer and presence at Marian Village in Homer Glen and at Resurrection Life Center.

    She is survived by her brothers Bill Buehler, Martin Buehler and Thomas Buehler.

  • Fr. Alan Syslo

    Educator, social worker

    Viatorian Father Alan Syslo, 84, died Jan. 7 at Addolorato Villa in Wheeling.

    Born in Chicago, Father Syslo graduated from St. Philip High School. He earned a bachelor’s degree in accounting from Loyola University Chicago, a bachelor’s degree in sacred theology from the  Catholic University of America, a master of management from Illinois State University and a master of social work from Rutgers University in New Jersey.

    He made his first vows in 1958 and was ordained a priest in 1966.

    Father Syslo taught at St. Viator High School, Arlington Heights, and at Spalding Institute in Peoria, before serving as a parish priest, campus minister, chaplain and social worker in Louisiana, Nevada and California. He retired to the Viatorians Province Center in Arlington Heights in 2019.

  • Fr. Thomas Griffith

    Administrator, retreat leader

    Divine Word Father Thomas Griffith, 80, a champion of Worldwide Marriage Encounter for three decades, died Jan. 10 in Techny.

    Born in Chicago, he attended St. Rita of Cascia School and entered high school at Divine Word Seminary in East Troy, Wisconsin, in 1957. He professed his first vows in 1965 and was ordained to the priesthood at Techny in 1969.

    He studied business as an undergraduate at DePaul University and earned an MBA from George Washington University in 1974.

    He served in the leadership of the Society of the Divine Word’s Eastern Province and taught at the Divine Word Seminary in New Jersey before serving as business manager for Divine Word International at Techny from 1983 to 1993. He also served as provincial treasurer for the Chicago Province and the rector of the Divine Word community at Techny.

    During his career in administration, he remained active in pastoral care and assisted at St. Norbert, Northbrook.

    He became active in Worldwide Marriage Encounter while on the staff of Miramar Retreat Center in Duxbury, Massachusetts, which he joined in 2002.

    Due to health reasons, Father Griffith moved back to Techny in 2019.

  • Sr. Theresa Peck

    Health care administrator

    Daughter of Charity Theresa (Theresa Marian) Peck, 89, died Jan. 12 in Evansville, Indiana.

    Born in Milwaukee, she entered the Daughters of Charity in St. Louis in 1956.

    After initial formation and earning a bachelor’s degree in nursing from Marillac College, Sister Theresa served at hospitals in California and Texas. She then earned an MBA from George Washington University in Washington, D. C., before serving as assistant administrator at St. Joseph Health Center and Hospital in Chicago. She then was administrator of hospitals and health care agencies in Kentucky, Illinois and Indiana, before serving as president and vice president of Daughters of Charity National Health System in St. Louis, and then president and CEO of St. Joseph Health Centers and Hospital and Catholic Health Partners in Chicago.

    Sister Theresa then served as a provincial councilor, provincial assistant and provincial treasurer and as administrator of the Mater Dei Campus in Evansville.

    She is survived by her sister, Virginia Adamski.

  • Sr. Frances Mary Fitzpatrick

    Education leader

    Adrian Dominican Sister Frances Mary (John Denise) Fitzpatrick, 88, died Jan. 16 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Chicago, she was in the 68th year of her religious life.

    Sister Frances Mary ministered in education in Michigan, Florida and Illinois.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she was a school consultant (1988-2002), assistant superintendent (2002-2009) and resource consultant (2009-2012).

    She retired to the Dominican Life Center in Adrian in 2021.

    Sister Frances Mary is survived by her brothers, John Fitzpatrick and Thomas Fitzpatrick Jr.

  • Sr. Martha Mary Rohde

    Educator

    Sinsinawa  Dominican Sister Martha Mary (Alfonsa) Rohde, 77, died Jan. 23 in Stuart, Florida.

    Born in Chicago, Sister Martha Mary professed first vows in 1966.

    She taught and was a principal in Illinois, Wisconsin and Florida. She also served as prioress of the motherhouse and assisted living prioress at the Sinsinawa Mound in Wisconsin.

    In Chicago, she taught at St. Thomas More and Immaculate Conception.

    She was principal of Hope Rural School, Indiantown, Florida, when she died.

    She is survived by a brother, Edward Davis.

  • Fr. William J. Flaherty

    Pastor emeritus

    Father William J. Flaherty, 97, died Jan. 4. He was pastor emeritus of Infant Jesus of Prague Parish in Flossmoor, now St. Veronica Parish.

    Born in Chicago, Father Flaherty attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary, the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary and the University of Notre Dame in Indiana. He also studied Shakespeare in England.

    He was ordained in 1952 and served as assistant pastor at St. Lawrence O’Toole, Matteson. He was on the faculty at Quigley Preparatory Seminary, Niles College and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary, and served as associate pastor at St. Basil, Sacred Heart (May Street) and St. Nicholas, Evanston. He was pastor of St. Nicholas for 12 years, and then was appointed pastor of former Infant Jesus of Prague. He retired in 1996, and resided for 20 years at Sts. Faith, Hope and Charity Parish in Winnetka.

    Father Martin O’Donovan, pastor of Saints Faith, Hope and Charity, remembered Father Flaherty as a great man of faith.

    “He continued to read well into his 90s and was very curious about life,” O’Donovan said, noting that Flaherty was committed to social justice. “While he was a professor at Niles College, he was noted for saying ‘walk the talk’ very often.”

  • Deacon Jesus Zeferino Ochoa

    Class of 1972

    Deacon Jesus Zeferino Ochoa died Jan. 1, his 88th birthday. He was ordained in 1972 and ministered at St. Francis of Assisi Parish (Roosevelt Road).

    Born in Ocotlán, Jalisco, Mexico, he established a career in radio broadcasting before coming to Chicago in the late 1950s.

    He worked in several jobs in the in the 1960s and became involved at St. Francis of Assisi Parish, where he met his wife of 56 years, Georgina Alvarez.

    In the 1970s, he began working with the Archdiocese of Chicago and Catholic Charities, serving immigrants, refugees and the Hispanic community, and hosting the radio program “Pueblo En Marcha” for 30 years. He was one of the first permanent deacons in the Archdiocese of Chicago, and he participated in Pope John Paul II’s Mass in Grant Park on Oct. 5, 1979. He also served as an elected member of the Archdiocese’s Presbyteral Senate representing the Hispanic deacons.

    He retired from ministry in 2017.

    As a civil rights activist, he facilitated meetings for Cesar Chavez in Chicago and advocated for the Latino community.

    He is survived by his wife; his children Cesar, Marisa, Jessica and Evangelina; and four grandchildren.

  • Deacon Francis Gildea

    Class of 1993

    Deacon Francis Gildea, 92, died Jan. 2. He was ordained in 1993 and served at St. Theresa, Palatine (1993-1997), and St. Elizabeth Seton, Orland Hills (1998-2019).

    Deacon Gildea served as a corporal in the U.S. Marine Corps during the Korean War and received a Purple Heart.

    He was predeceased by his wives Sally Gildea and Betty June Howland-Gildea. He is survived by his children: Frank Gildea, Kathy Gascho, Jenny Hinrichs, Joe Gildea and Greg Gildea; stepchildren Edward Howland, June Gradman, Marianne McGlennon, Eileen Hurley, Michael Howland and Thomas Howland; 28 grandchildren; 20 great-grandchildren; and his sister, Peggy Gildea.

  • Sr. Lucille Nolan

    Educator, musician

    Providence Sister Lucille Nolan, 94, died Dec. 25, 2023, in Terre Haute Indiana.

    She taught music for 33 years in schools in Illinois, Indiana, Texas, Oklahoma and North Carolina. In 1983, she moved from school music to church music, serving as director of music and liturgy at two parishes in the Chicago area for the next 23 years.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she ministered in church and school music at St. Isaac Jogues, Niles (1983-1985); as director of music and liturgy at St. Dismas, Waukegan (1985-1994); and as director of music and liturgy (1994-2004) and in religious education and children’s music (2004-2008) at St. James, Sauk Village.

    After officially retiring, she remained in the Chicago area, ministering to the homebound and persons in hospice.

    Beginning in 2022, she dedicated herself totally to the ministry of prayer.

    Sister Lucille is survived by a brother, John Nolan, and a sister, Providence Sister Carol Nolan.

  • Sr. Carolyn Glynn

    Educator, parish minister

    Providence Sister Carolyn (John Michael) Glynn, 88, died Dec. 28 in St. Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana.

    Born in Massachusetts, Sister Carolyn entered the Sisters of Providence in 1953 and professed final vows in 1961. She ministered as a primary teacher for 22 years in Indiana, Massachusetts, California and Illinois. After completing a doctorate in ministry, she served in parish ministry for 12 years in the Archdiocese of Chicago before moving to Florida.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Mel (1956-1958); St. Genevieve (1969-1971); St. Athanasius, Evanston (1971-1974); and St. Gregory (1974-1977); was director of religious education at St. Mary, Riverside (1980-1987); and was a consultant on religious education and spirituality (1987-1992).

    Sister Carolyn is survived by three sisters: Elizabeth Hannon, Rosemary Baglio and Florence Ryan; and two brothers: Timothy Glynn and Allen Glynn.

  • Fr. Ramon Dompke

    Parish priest, community leader

    Redemptorist Father Ramon “Ray” Dompke, 85, died Jan. 7 in the rectory of St. Michael Parish in Old Town.

    Born in Chicago, he was baptized at St. Michael and attended elementary school there before going to St. Joseph’s Preparatory Seminary in Kirkwood, Missouri, and entering the Redemptorist novitiate at Mount St. Clement in DeSoto, Missouri. He professed temporary vows in 1959, perpetual vows in 1962 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1964.

    Father Dompke served as associate pastor of parishes in Iowa, Nebraska and Michigan, as well as St. Michael (1982-1993) and St. Alphonsus (Wellington Avenue, 1993, 1995) before being named pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes Parish on the West Side (1995-2005).

    Father Dompke was named bursar of the Villa Redeemer/North American Novitiate community in Glenview in 2005. He served as rector of the community from 2011 until 2015, when the property was sold.

    He returned to the staff at St. Michael’s, where he felt blessed to be near his family, especially his elderly mother, whom he visited every week until she died at the age of 105 in 2019.

    In addition to serving the parish community, he volunteered to preach foreign mission appeals throughout the Midwest until his health began to decline.

  • Sr. Mary Florence Schultz

    Nurse, administrator

    Resurrection Sister Mary Florence Schultz, 92, died Nov. 17, 2023.

    Born in Minnesota, she entered the Sisters of the Resurrection in 1950.

    She began her ministry as a second grade teacher at St. Mary of the Angels. Four years later, she began training as a nurse, and went on to receive bachelor’s and master’s degrees in nursing. She had additional training in caring for alcoholic patients and patients with infectious diseases, which led to her ministries in the alcoholic rehabilitation and infectious disease programs at Resurrection Hospital.

    Sister M. Florence also served as director of nursing at Resurrection Nursing Pavilion, became a licensed nursing home administrator and served as the administrator of Resurrection Life Center at its opening. She went on to serve as regional performance improvement director for 11 nursing homes that were part of Resurrection Health Care.

    Sister M. Florence’s final ministry was to care for the senior members of the congregation.

  • Sr. Mary Alodia Stozek

    Educator, community leader, archivist

    Felician Sister Mary Alodia (Mary Barbara) Stozek, 100, died Nov. 26, 2023, at Mother of Good Counsel Convent.

    Born in Chicago, she attended St. John of God and St. Joseph schools, then joined the Felician Sisters aspirancy, where she attended Good Counsel High School. She entered the Felician Sisters postulancy in 1942 and professed her final vows in 1949. 

    She ministered in Illinois elementary schools as a teacher and served as a psychologist at Good Counsel High School. Later, she worked as a college instructor and director of the Psychoeducational Center at Felician College. She held a leadership position with the Felician community and was the provincial archivist from 1998 to 2015.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she ministered at Holy Innocents (1941-1942, 1960); St. Mary Magdalen (1943-1945); St. Hedwig, Niles (1945-1953); St. Stanislaus, Posen (1953-1954); Sts. Peter and Paul (1954-1957); St. James (1957-1960); Felician College (1965-1982); and Good Counsel High School (1988-1992).

  • Sr. Jeri Cashman

    Social worker

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Jeri (Mary de Paul) Cashman, 76, died Dec. 9, 2023, in Muskego, Wisconsin.

    Born in Minneapolis, Sister Jeri professed vows in 1967.

    Sister Jeri served as a justice and peace campus minister, a social worker, a teacher and a pastoral minister in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois. Sister Jeri served as a justice and peace campus minister at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She served as pastoral minister in the Diocese of Chilpancingo, Mexico, with a ministry team on behalf of the Archdiocese of Chicago, ministering with 23 communities in the parish of Santiago Apostol in Quechultenango. She also ministered in Bolivia.

    She is survived by her brother, Thomas Cashman, and her sister, Carol Rosendahl.

  • Sr. M. June Hoffman

    Educator, community leader

    Servants of the Holy Heart of Mary Sister M. June (Alphonse Marie) Hoffman, 98, died Dec. 13, 2023, in Rockford.

    A former member of St. Gall Parish, Chicago, Sister June entered the congregation in 1942 and made final vows in 1945.

    She taught at St. Gall School, as well as in schools in the Joliet diocese.  She served her religious congregation as formation director and provincial superior, and was the founding administrator of St. Anne Center in Rockford, where she lived and ministered in various capacities from 1993 to her death.

  • Sr. Therese Fields

    Educator, community leader

    Sister of Christian Charity Therese (Nelwyn) Fields, 98, died Dec. 14, 2023, at Sacred Heart Convent, Wilmette.

    Born in Louisiana, she entered the congregation in 1938, made first vows in 1943 and made perpetual vows in 1949.

    She taught at St. Aloysius School and at St. Martha, Morton Grove, in the 1940s and 1950s, before being sent to New Orleans.

    She returned in 1967 to St. Theresa School, Palatine.

    In the 1970s, she ministered at the House of Prayer in Steger, then in Calumet City, and as retreat director at St. Margaret Mary Convent.

    In the 1990s, Sister Therese served as the local superior of the motherhouse in Wilmette, directress of junior sisters and novice directress. Then she moved to the St. Joseph Convent and served at the St. Joseph Parish Prayer Center. She also did prayer ministry at St. Mary of Celle Convent in Berwyn before moving to Sacred Heart Convent in Wilmette as a patient in 2015.

  • Sr. Maria Hill

    Educator, community leader

    Sister of St. Joseph Maria Hill, 85, died Dec. 16, 2023.

    Sister Maria earned master’s degrees in educational administration and religious education, as well as a certificate in spiritual direction.

    Sister Maria taught and was principal of schools in Minnesota before going into religious education.  As a member of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Medaille, she served on various congregational leadership teams for 20 years. 

    She also worked as a facilitator and consultant to other religious communities.  At the Congregation of St. Joseph in La Grange, Sister Maria continued to work as a facilitator and spiritual director, as well as a member of the leadership team.

    She is survived by her sister, Helen Hill.

  • Fr. Bernard J. Pietrzak

    Pastor

    Father Bernard J. Pietrzak, 68, died Nov. 29, He was pastor of St. Anne Parish, Barrington.

    Born in Hammond, Indiana, Father Pietrzak attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary, Niles College of Loyola University, and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary before being ordained in 1981.

    He served as associate pastor of St. Victor, Calumet City; Holy Cross, Deerfield; and Church of the Holy Spirit, Schaumburg. He was pastor of St. Raymond de Penafort, Mount Prospect, from 1996 to 2009 before being named pastor of St. Anne Parish in 2009.

    Father Jerome Jacob got to know Father Pietrzak when he served as his associate pastor at St. Raymond de Penafort.

    “Bernie was a good mentor and friend. He always saw the best in people. He would encourage young priests and welcome them,” Jacob said. “The Sunday assembly was very important to him. …  He was very dedicated to adult formation, marriage preparation, etc., to help people grow in their spirituality.”

    Father Joji Thanugundla and Father Rodolfo Ramirez, associate pastors of St. Anne, wrote a tribute to Pietrzak on the parish’s Instagram account and said: “Father Bernie served our St. Anne community with unwavering dedication, compassion, and a profound commitment to his faith. He touched the lives of many with his inspiring homilies, guidance, and selfless service.”

  • Deacon N. Arthur Metallo

    Class of 1974

    Deacon N. Arthur Metallo, 86, died Dec. 3. He was ordained in 1974 and served at St. Martha Parish, Morton Grove.

    Deacon Metallo worked as a Jewel Foods grocery store manager before becoming pastoral care director at St. Francis Hospital, Evanston, and Resurrection Hospital. He was honored as National Chaplains Association Chaplain of the Year when he retired.

    He is survived by his wife, Nancy, and his children Cheryl Bischoff, Susan Metallo and Lou Metallo; eight grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and siblings of Carole Metallo, Fran Falcone and Bobby Metallo.

  • Br. John DeBold

    Missionary

    Divine Word Brother John DeBold, 89, a missionary who helped people with disabilities overcome isolation, died on Oct. 13.

    Born in Pittsburgh, he began to develop bilateral profound deafness as a teenager but continued to learn with the help of hearing aids and sign language.

    A Divine Word confrere once asked about his journey to missionary life, and Brother John responded, “I had the urge to become a priest or missionary since age 17 or so. I knew I was handicapped and knew what it meant and felt like. I had the call to help those in the world who were similar to [me].”

    After graduating from high school, Brother John worked in Nabisco’s baking and mixing departments for 17 years. In his mid-30s, he yearned for more, and he entered the Society of the Divine Word in 1973.

    He graduated from Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., in 1984 and the following year he was assigned to work for the deaf ministry of the Archdiocese of New Orleans. He later was transferred to Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, and continued working in deaf ministry in the Diocese of Biloxi.

    After returning to Pittsburgh to care for his mother, Brother John volunteered at the Pittsburgh Deaf Center, which focuses on deaf clients with developmental disabilities, and worked in Goodwill Industries’ wood shop training program, where he assisted deaf and developmentally disabled clients.

    Brother John retired to Techny in February.
  • Sr. Mary Catherine Gagliano

    Educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Mary Catherine (Ann Virginia) Gagliano, 85, died Nov. 27 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Rockford, she was in the 66th year of her religious life.

    Sister Mary Catherine ministered in education, pastoral care and campus ministry, and as a volunteer in Michigan and Illinois.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Rita School (1963-1967); Our Lady of Knock, Calumet City (1967-1969); St. Philip Neri (1969-1971); St. Celestine, Elmwood Park (1971-1974); Trinity High School, River Forest (1980-1981); and Mother Guerin High School, River Grove (1991-1992); did vocation outreach for the Adrian Dominican congregation (2008-2010); volunteered in the food pantry at St. Germaine Parish, Oak Lawn (2010-2015) and tutored in the Sister of St. Joseph School on Wheels (2010-2017).

    She is survived by a brother, Frank Gagliano, and a sister, Virginia La Marca.

  • Deacon George Brooks

    Class of 1991

    Deacon George Brooks, 83, of Tinley Park, died Nov. 15. He was ordained in 1991 and served at Infant Jesus of Prague in Flossmoor and as a chaplain at Cook County Jail.

    Deacon Brooks is survived by his wife, Patricia; his children Karen Hyma, Donna Lanigan and Patrick Brooks; eight grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. He was predeceased by one child, Georgie Brooks.

  • Deacon John Debnar

    Class of 1987

    Deacon John J. Debnar, 93, formerly of Brookfield and Countryside, died Nov. 22. He served for 40 years at St. Barbara Parish, Brookfield.

    Deacon Debnar was an Air Force veteran and worked as a barber.

    His wife, Mary Ann, predeceased him. He is survived by his children Steven Debnar, Jack Debnar, Mary Ann Debnar, Tim Debnar and Chris Debnar; 12 grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; and siblings Mike Debnar and Helen Benway.

  • Sr. Mary J. Beaubien

    Educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Mary J. (Clare Olivia) Beaubien, 95, died Oct. 25 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Adrian, she was in the 78th year of her religious life.

    Sister Beaubien ministered in all levels of education years in Illinois, Michigan, Florida and Ohio, and in community development and teacher training in Mogwase and Kroonstad, South Africa.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Celestine, Elmwood Park.

    She is survived by her sister, Margaret Simonis.

  • Sr. Marlene Kuhnlein

    Educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Marlene (Anthony Irene) Kuhnlein, 89, died Oct. 28 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Chicago, she was in her 72nd year of religious life.

    Sister Marlene was a teacher; residential home staff member, case worker and social worker; pastoral counselor and bereavement companion; and secretary in Michigan, Illinois, Florida, New Mexico and Arizona.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Albert the Great, Oak Lawn (1962-1966); Queen of Apostles, Riverdale (1966-1967); St. Laurence (1967-1969); St. James, Maywood (1969-1972); and Regina Dominican High School, Wilmette (1972-1974).

  • Sr. Dorothy Victor

    Educator

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Dorothy (Rita Cascia) Victor, 93, died Oct. 28 in Milwaukee.

    Born in Rockford, she made her first religious profession in 1950, and her perpetual profession in 1953. She was a teacher and principal, and spent seven years as a missionary in Cochabamba, Bolivia. In the U.S., she ministered in Illinois, Wisconsin, the District of Columbia and Florida.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, Sister Dorothy taught at St. Philip Benizi (1950-1956), St. Jarlath (1963-1966) and St. Basil (1978-1980).

  • Sr. Marillac Grabinski

    Educator, outreach minister

    Daughter of Charity Sister Marillac (Mildred Elizabeth) Grabinski, 94, died Oct. 30 in Evansville, Indiana.

    Born in Chicago, she graduated from Good Counsel High School in 1947 and entered the Daughters of Charity in St. Louis in 1951.

    After initial formation, Sister Marillac taught at elementary schools in Missouri, Alabama, Utah and Illinois. She also served as a docent at the Seton Shrine in Emmitsburg, Maryland; worked in social services and as a parish visitor and as an outreach minister.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Francis de Sales School in Lake Zurich (1980) and worked at Marillac Social Center (1980, 1986-1989) and St. Joseph Hospital (1989-1994).

  • Sr. Loretta Picucci

    Educator

    Providence Sister Loretta Picucci, 82, died Nov. 9 in Providence Health Care in St. Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana.

    Sister Loretta was born in Chicago and attended Our Lady of Sorrows School and Providence High School. She entered the Sisters of Providence in 1964 and professed final vows in 1976.

    In her 59 years as a Sister of Providence, she ministered as a primary teacher, assistant director of a day nursery, outreach minister, family care professional and teacher of English as a second language.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Mel (1972-1977); was assistant director of St. Columbkille Day Nursery (1981-1983); and was an aide with Family Care Services (1994-1999).

    Sister Loretta is survived by a sister, Josephine Mooney.

  • Fr. Thomas A. Moran

    Pastor emeritus

    Father Thomas A. Moran, 78, died Nov. 8. He was pastor emeritus of Our Lady of the Brook Parish in Northbrook, now known as St. Norbert-Our Lady of the Brook Parish.

    Born in Chicago, Father Moran attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary, Niles College and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary before being ordained in 1971.

    He served as assistant pastor of St. Joseph the Worker, Wheeling, and St. Bonaventure, then as associate pastor of St. Ita; St. Thecla; St. Tarcissus; St. John Brebeuf, Niles; and St. Marcelline, Schaumburg.

    He was pastor of St. Hugh, Lyons, from 1995 to 2005, and Our Lady of the Brook from 2005 to 2014, when he became pastor emeritus.

    Deacon Peery Duderstadt from St. Norbert-Our Lady of the Brook Parish had been friends with Moran for 60 years.

     “Father Tom was always interested in archaeology, particularly Egyptology. Every year he would go to the Biblical Archaeology Society Convention and in 2006 he and I started going together,” Duderstadt said. Father Moran loved biblical archaeology so much that his sermons were always laced with references to it, Duderstadt said.

  • Deacon Daniel Troy

    Class of 1984

    Deacon Daniel Troy, 91, died Oct. 27. He was ordained in 1984 and served at Holy Ghost Parish in South Holland.

    Deacon Troy, formerly of South Holland, was a professor of mathematics at Purdue University Calumet, a chaplain at Owasippe Scout Reservation and a PADS volunteer.

    He is survived by his wife of 68 years, Mary Anne; his children Leonard Troy, Kathleen Smyser, Joseph Troy, Stephen Troy, Patrick Troy and Jean Swenson; 14 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

  • Deacon Joseph Krakora

    Class of 1978

    Deacon Joseph G. Krakora, 97, died Nov. 3. He was ordained in 1978 and served at St. Mary Parish, Lake Forest. 

    Born in Chicago, he was raised in Berwyn. He attended Michigan State University, where he played basketball, and married his wife, Marie, in 1949.

    He worked as an auditor for Shell Oil, working in several states, and then joined Payco American, and he and Marie and their six children settled in Lake Forest.

    He discerned his vocation to the diaconate after the death of his fourth child, Eileen, in 1975.

    He and Marie worked with young couples preparing for marriage and he presided over numerous marriage ceremonies and baptized hundreds of babies, including his grandchildren and some of his great-grandchildren. He also served as associate director of the Office of the Diaconate.

    In addition to Eileen, Deacon Krakora was preceded in death by Marie in 2012 and his son Brian four years later. He is survived by his children Janice Krakora-Looby, Susan Krakora, Joseph Krakora and Kevin Krakora; 15 grandchildren; and 22 great-grandchildren.

  • Deacon Thomas Carvlin

    Class of 1977

    Deacon Thomas R. Carvlin, 97, died Oct. 21.

    He was ordained in 1977 and served at the former Ascension-St. Susanna Parish, now part of Lord of Mercy Parish, in Harvey.

    Deacon Carvlin served in France and Germany during and after World War II, including showing Holocaust footage to German citizens.

    He met his wife of 71 years, “Tommy,” after moving to Chicago. At the Chicago Tribune, he was national news editor during the Nixon administration and the 1968 Democratic Convention.

    He is survived by his wife, Maureen Evanne (nee Thomas); sister Joyce Murphy; children Mary Carvlin, Peter Carvlin, Anne Bridges, Martha Carvlin, Monica Regan and Elizabeth Carvlin Fuesel; 14 grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren.

  • Br. Al Kuntemeier

    Educator

    Marianist Brother Al Kuntemeier, 92, died Oct. 13 in San Antonio, Texas.

    Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Brother Al was in religious life for 75 years.

    He taught at Marianist high schools in Missouri and Indiana and served as vocation director for his province before teaching, coaching and serving as a counselor at St. Michael High School in Chicago (1972-1976).

    He then taught and coached at high schools in Oklahoma and Texas, retiring from teaching in 2014 at 83 to serve the Marianist Residence Community in San Antonio and as chaplain to the St. Mary’s University tennis team.

  • Sr. Patricia Crowley

    Administrator, activist

    Benedictine Sister Patricia (Patrick) Crowley, 84, died Oct. 14 at St. Scholastica Monastery.

    She was born and raised in Wilmette and attended St. Joseph School. She entered the Benedictine Sisters of Chicago in September 1958 and made her final vows in 1965.

    She taught at St. Lambert, Skokie; Queen of All Saints; and St. Scholastica Academy. She also served as executive director of the Howard Area Community Center, Deborah’s Place and Chicago Continuum of Care; prioress of the Benedictine Sisters of Chicago; and board president of Bethany House of Hospitality. She was a spiritual director and ministered to homeless women through the Ignatian Spirituality Project.

  • Sr. M. Diane Marie Collins

    Educator, community leader

    Franciscan Sister of Chicago M. Diane Marie Collins, 73, died Aug. 4.

    Sister Diane Marie entered the congregation in 1968, made her first vows in 1971 and professed perpetual vows in 1977.

    She served at Madonna High School from 1973 to 1991, teaching from 1973 to 1986, then serving as the school social worker after earning a master’s degree in social work from Loyola University Chicago. She also served as local superior (1990-1991).

    After moving to the Lemont motherhouse, she served as formation director (1991-1994) and formation team member (1995-1999); general vicar (1993-1998); chair of Franciscan Village/Mother Theresa Home Board of Directors (1993-1998); St. Anthony Medical Center board of directors (1993-1999); chairman of Madonna High School board of directors (1994-2001).

    She was general councilor and general secretary (1998-2003) while serving as principal of Bishop Noll Institute in Hammond, Indiana. She served in a variety of positions in community leadership, including general minister (2003-2013), chair of Region 3 of the Franciscan Federation (2004-2006); second vice president (2006-2007) vice president (2007-2008) and president (2008-2009).

    She also was a campus minister in Chicago (2013-2019) and evangelization director at St. John Berchmans Parish (2019-2023).

  • Sr. Joan Marconi

    Educator

    Sister Joan (Joseph Elaine) Marconi, 89, died Sept. 14 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Boston, she was in the 73rd year of her religious life.

    Sister Joan ministered in elementary and secondary education, occupational therapy and administration  in Michigan, Illinois and Florida.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at Aquinas High School (1961-1967).

  • Sr. Emeric Bauch

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Emeric Bauch, 96, died Sept. 21 in Footville, Wisconsin.

    Born in Minnesota, Sister Emeric made her first religious profession in 1950 and her perpetual profession in 1953. She served as a culinary artist and as a nurse’s aide and licensed practical nurse in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Wyoming, Illinois, Nebraska, Iowa, South Carolina and Georgia.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, Sister Emeric served as culinary artist at St. Vincent Ferrer Convent, River Forest (1957-1959), and Visitation Convent (1967-1968).

  • Fr. Albert R. Adamich

    Pastor emeritus

    Father Albert R. Adamich, 101, died Sept. 21. He was pastor emeritus of Queen of Peace Parish in North Chicago, now part of Most Blessed Trinity Parish in Waukegan, and the oldest priest of the Archdiocese of Chicago when he died.

    Father Al, as he was known, was born in Joliet and attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary in Mundelein before being ordained in 1948. He celebrated 75 years of priestly service in May 2023.

    After ordination, Father Adamich was assistant pastor of Mother of God, Waukegan; St. Hubert, Hoffman Estates; and St. Symphorosa. He also served as moderator of the Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Women in 1979. Later, he was associate pastor of Most Holy Redeemer, Evergreen Park, and pastor of Mother of God for 20 years. He was named pastor emeritus in 1992.

    Father Adamich resided at Most Holy Redeemer after his retirement was a beloved figure in the parish.

    Father James Hyland, pastor of Most Holy Redeemer, remembered Father Adamich’s great love of the Mass and the Eucharist.

    “He really loved what he did as a priest,” Hyland said, “and even in retirement he continued to minister to the people in the parish.”

    “He’s such an inspiration,” Deacon Mark Phelan told Chicago Catholic in 2022, for an article featuring Father Al’s 100th birthday celebration at the parish. He’s a man of God. He prays for everyone. He prays constantly,” Phelan said. “He’s just the most wonderful man I ever met. He really is.”

    Longtime parishioner Winnie Ligda said in 2022 that Father Al didn’t want any kind of celebration for his centenary, but parishioners overruled him.

    “We all looked at him and said, ‘Too bad for you,’” Ligda joked. “He’s a good man,” she said.

    When Ligda’s husband was ill, Father Al visited him in the hospital, in the nursing home and at her own home.

    “He came repeatedly, and he was just wonderful. He was that way with all the parishioners. He’s a very kind, loving and compassionate man,” she said.

    On the same occasion, Father Adamich said the secret to his long life was intercessory prayer.

    “If you have to pay people to pray for you, do so,” he quipped. “Never pass up the chance to ask people to pray for you.”

  • Fr. Steven W. Patte

    Former pastor

    Father Steven W. Patte, 79, died Sept. 20. He was a retired priest of the Archdiocese of Chicago and former pastor of St. Ita Parish.

    Born in Chicago, Father Patte attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary before being ordained in 1969.

    After ordination, Father Patte was assistant pastor of Holy Name Cathedral, St. Joseph, Wilmette; and Church of the Holy Spirit, Schaumburg.

    He also served as associate pastor of St. Zachary, Des Plaines; St. Joseph, Round Lake; St. Mary of Vernon, Indian Creek; and St. Emily, Mount Prospect. He was pastor of St. Helena of the Cross and St. Ita Parish. In addition, he was a professor at St. Mary of the Lake University for two years.

    He retired from ministry in 2015.

    Father Leon J. Rezula, pastor emeritus of St. Julian Eymard in Elk Grove Village, was a classmate of Father Patte. “He was a very hard-working, zealous priest with a variety of experience,” Rezula said.

  • Deacon John L. Malone

    Class of 1987

    Deacon John “Jack” L. Malone, 89, died Sept. 4. He was ordained in 1987 and served at St. Germaine Parish, Oak Lawn.

    He also served as a chaplain at Cook County Jail and Little Company of Mary Hospital for many years.

    He is survived by his wife of 68 years, Mary; his children Jack Malone, Kathy Walsh, Ruth Turner, Michael Malone, Sheila Brew and Dan Malone; 17 grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.

  • Sr. Mary Odelle Siskoski

    Educator, caregiver for the elderly

    Felician Sister Mary Odelle (Veronica) Siskoski, 92, died Aug 17, at Swedish/North Shore Hospital.

    Born in Michigan, she attended elementary school there. When her family moved to Chicago, she attended Parker School and St. Joseph High School. She entered the Felician Sisters in 1950 and professed her final vows in 1958. She ministered in elementary schools as a teacher and principal in Illinois, Wisconsin and Brazil for over 30 years. Later, she also ministered in supportive services at Felician Senior Living Community in Manitowoc, Wisconsin, for 22 years.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she ministered at St. Helen (1952-1953, 1990-1994); St. Turibius (1955-1957); Sts. Peter and Paul (1957-1959, 1986-1987); St. Hedwig, Niles (1959-1960); St. Isidore, Blue Island (1960-1961); Holy Innocents (1962-1964); St. John of God (1964-1965); and St. Linus, Oak Lawn (1972-1973).

    Sr. Larina Williams

  • Sr. Larina Williams

    Educator

    School Sister of St. Francis Larina Williams, 87, died Aug. 17 at West Allis Memorial Hospital in Wisconsin.

    Born in Chicago, Sister Larina was received into the School Sisters of St. Francis in 1956, made her first profession of vows in 1958 and her final vows in 1964. 

    Beginning in 1958, Sister Larina ministered in the Archdiocese of Chicago for more than half a century. She taught at Holy Angels School in her home parish (1958-1960, 1964-1972 and 1985-2000) and was assistant principal there (2000-2006). She also taught at St. Martin (1960-1962) and St. Clara (1962-1964), taught and was assistant principal at St. Kilian (1972-1984) and taught at Ascension/St. Susanna School in Harvey (1984-1985).

    In her retirement, Sister Larina resided in a local convent in Homer Glen (2007-2013) and in Milwaukee.

    Sister Larina is survived by her brothers Herbert and Michael and sisters Latoski McCarty and Monica Waters.

  • Fr. Richard Pighini

    Educator, pastor

    Viatorian Father Richard J. Pighini, 79, died Aug. 21 at Addolorata Villa in Wheeling.

    A Viatorian for 43 years, Father Richard made his first vows in 1980 and was ordained a priest in 1985.

    He attended Maine East High School in Park Ridge before earning a bachelor’s degree in communication design from University of Illinois and a Master of Divinity from Catholic Theological Union. He served in the Peace Corps in Hawaii (1967-1969), taught at Illinois high schools before being ordained and ministered in parishes in Kankakee and Bourbonnais after ordination.

    He moved to the retirement community at the Viatorian Province Center in Arlington Heights in 2022. He was always known for his care for the liturgy, as well as the beauty of the gardens and landscapes of the parish grounds.

    Father Richard is survived by his sisters, Carlotta Polenzani and Claudette Schmied of Naperville.

  • Fr. Michael G. Scherschel

    Pastor

    Father Michael G. Scherschel, 59, died Aug. 10. He was pastor of the recently united Sts. Matthew and Hubert Parish in Hoffman Estates.

    Born in Chicago, Father Scherschel attended Cary-Grove Community High School in Cary; the University of Dayton in Dayton, Ohio; and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary.

    Father Scherschel was ordained to the priesthood at the age of 43 in 2007. After ordination, Father Scherschel was associate pastor of St. William Parish (2007-2011). He then served as the associate vocation director for Vicariate IV of the Archdiocese of Chicago. He also served on the formation faculty at St. Joseph College Seminary (2011-2017).

    Father Scherschel became pastor of St. Hubert Parish in 2017 and most recently led the formation of Sts. Matthew and Hubert Parish, unifying the two community parishes as one.

    Father Robert Rizzo met Father Scherschel when he succeeded him as pastor at St. Hubert Parish. “I was totally delighted when he was named pastor because he is truly a kind, gentle and super authentic person,” Rizzo said. “He truly lived his faith day in and day out.”

  • Deacon Thomas M. Paluch

    Class of 1997

    Deacon Thomas M. Paluch, 77, died Aug. 17. He was ordained in 1997 and served at St. John Brebeuf Parish, Niles, in the Archdiocese of Chicago and Holy Family Parish, Shorewood, in the Diocese of Joliet.

    His wife, Julianne Paluch, predeceased him.

    He is survived by his children, Maggie Malinowski and Becky Paluch, and three grandchildren, as well as eight siblings.

  • Sr. Joan Murphy

    Educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Joan (Margaret Patrick) Murphy, 97, died July 28 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Michigan, she was in the 77th year of her religious life.

    Sister Joan ministered in elementary and secondary education, pastoral ministry and religious education and volunteered in health care in Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, Georgia, Colorado, California, Alabama and Kentucky, and volunteered in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Nicholas of Tolentine (1946-1950); St. Rita of Cascia (1950-1951); Santa Maria Del Popolo, Mundelein (1959-1962); Infant Jesus of Prague, Flossmoor (1962-1963); and St. Philip Neri (1963-1964).

  • Sr. Mary Kathryn Cliatt

    Educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Mary Kathryn (Helen Maureen) Cliatt, 88, died July 30, in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Miami, she was in the 66th year of her religious life.

    Sister Mary Kathryn ministered in elementary and secondary education, pastoral ministry, social work and retreat ministry in Illinois, Florida and Georgia, and ministered as a mentor and spiritual advisor to orphans in Kenya.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at Queen of Angels School.

    She is survived by a sister, Martha Lim.

  • Sr. Marilyn Uline

    Educator, business representative

    Adrian Dominican Sister Marilyn (Marilyn Loretto) Uline, 86, died July 31 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Ohio, she was in the 67th year of her religious life.

    Sister Marilyn ministered in elementary and secondary education, campus ministry, pastoral ministry, adult education, advocacy, clerical work and business.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she was a social justice advocate at the Eighth Day Center (1975-1980); worked with the Divine Word Theologate as a secretary and in research (1981-1983); taught at St. Mary of Perpetual Help High School (1983-1984) and was a registered representative of First Investors Corp. (1985-1999).

    Sister Marilyn is survived by sisters Lois Nugent, Margaret Boyce, Joanne Schutz and Carol Uline and a brother, Franciscan Father Cyprian Uline.

  • Msgr. Robert F. Trisco

    Educator

    Msgr. Robert F. Trisco, 93, died July 29. He was a professor emeritus of church history at the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C.

    Born in Chicago, Msgr. Trisco attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary, the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary and the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, where he earned a licentiate of sacred theology degree in 1955 and a doctoral degree in ecclesiastical history in 1962.

    He was ordained a priest in Rome in 1954.

    After ordination, Trisco began his service at the  Catholic University of America in 1959. He was a professor of church history and served as the Kelly-Quinn Distinguished Professor of Church History from 1999 until 2000, when he was granted emeritus status.

     In recognition of his many contributions to the church and in academia, Trisco was named an honorary prelate with the title of monsignor in 1992 and a protonotary apostolic supernumerary in 2005. He was named a decorated knight of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem in 1993 and promoted to the rank of knight commander in 1998. He was awarded an honorary doctor of humane letters degree from Belmont Abbey College in 1992 and was given the Centennial Award by the American Catholic Historical Association in 2019.

  • Deacon Gerald Fox

    Class of 1993

    Deacon Gerald A. Fox, 94, of La Grange Park, died Aug. 1. Deacon Fox was ordained in 1993 and served at St. Barbara, Brookfield, and Divine Providence, Westchester.

    Deacon Fox was general manager of a Buick dealership before being ordained a deacon.

    He is survived by his wife, Mary; his children Patricia Fitch, Kathryn Fox and Fred Fox; and one granddaughter.

  • Deacon James Janicek

    Class of 2005

    Deacon James Janicek, 79, died Aug. 9. He was ordained in 2005 and served at St. Michael Parish in Orland Park.

    Deacon Janicek started his career repairing typewriters for IBM before moving into management, said St. Michael pastor Father Frank Kurucz. As a deacon, he enjoyed preaching and celebrating baptisms, and he was involved in parish life ministries, making all the pierogis and sauerkraut when the parish hosted a Polish night.

    “He thought everyone was family,” Kurucz said.

    He is survived by his wife of 57 years, Sharon; his children, Jeffrey Janicek, Cheryl Doyle and Kimberly Janicek; and three grandchildren.

  • Sr. Eileen Myers

    Educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Eileen (Margaret Aloysius) Meyers, 92, died June 1 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Michigan, she was in the 75th year of her religious life.

    She ministered in education in Michigan, Illinois, Florida and Ohio, worked in the motherhouse offices and volunteered in New Orleans for six months following Hurricane Katrina.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught kindergarten at Queen of Angels (1948-1950) and elementary school at St. Kilian (1953-1960).

    She is survived by her sisters Loretta Fraley and Dorothy Burgess.

  • Sr. Catherine Ahern

    Educator, counselor

    Adrian Dominican Sister Catherine (Jane Patrice) Ahern, 93, died June 2 in La Grange.

    Born in Chicago, Sister Catherine graduated from Mercy High School before entering the Adrian Dominican community. She was in her 71st year of religious life.

    She ministered in education and as a counselor in Illinois, Michigan and California.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Joseph, Homewood (1955-19600, and Regina Dominican High School, Wilmette (1968-1973), and was a teacher and counselor at the Cook County Juvenile Detention Center (1974-2003).

    She is survived by a brother, Eugene Ahern, and a sister, Jane Cantieri.

  • Sr. Marie Geraldine Brownell

    Educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Marie Geraldine (Barbara Jane) Brownell, 93, died June 25 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Detroit, she was in the 74th year of her religious life.

    Sister Marie Geraldine ministered in education in Michigan, Florida and Illinois.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Kilian (1950-1960).

    She is survived by a brother, Phillip Brownell.

  • Sr. Janet Persyk

    Chaplain, educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Janet (Mary Paulette) Persyk, 93, died July 20 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Detroit, she was in the 75th year of her religious profession.

    Sister Janet ministered in education and as a hospital chaplain in Michigan, Florida; and Illinois

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she was a chaplain at Resurrection Medica Center (1988-1992) and St. Elizabeth Hospital (1992-1997) and offered pastoral care to the elderly at Marillac House Social Center (1998-2000).

  • Sr. Jeanne Marie Suerth

    Educator, maintenance worker

    Sister of Notre Dame de Namur Jeanne Marie (Jeanne Patricia) Suerth, 89, died July 24.

    Born in Chicago, she entered the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur in Cincinnati in 1953. She taught in elementary schools and programs for adults in Ohio and Illinois, and she oversaw the maintenance services for some of her community´s largest institutions, including the Province Center and Infirmary in Reading, Ohio. 

    In 1988, Jeanne Marie started a new ministry: “Jeanne on the Scene,” a home maintenance service for seniors that provided a variety of services.

  • Fr. William J. Finnegan

    Former pastor

    Father William J. Finnegan, 92, died July 13. He was the former pastor of Our Lady of the Woods Parish, Orland Park.

    Born in Chicago, Father Finnegan attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary before being ordained in 1957.

    He served as assistant pastor of St. Joachim, St. Margaret of Scotland and Sacred Heart Parish in Palos Hills. He was a Knights of Columbus chaplain.

  • Sr. Barbara Carroll

    Educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Barbara J. (James Denise) Carroll, 91, died April 7 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Detroit, she was in the 74th year of her religious profession.

    Sister Barbara ministered in education, as a religious education director and as a pastoral minister in Indiana, Iowa, Illinois and Michigan.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Kilian (1951-1959) and Santa Maria del Popolo, Mundelein (1965-1967).

    She is survived by a brother, John Carroll.

  • Sr. Margaret Heese

    Educator

    Providence Sister Margaret (Margaret Bernard) Heese, 91, died July 21 in St. Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana.

    Born in Texas, she entered the Sisters of Providence in 1947 and professed final vows in 1955.

    In her 76 years as a Sister of Providence, she ministered in teaching and parish work in Indiana, Illinois, Oklahoma, Texas and California. In 2001 she returned to the motherhouse and served her sisters with her expertise as a seamstress. 

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Sylvester (1950-1954) and St. Andrew (1955-1958).

    Sister Margaret is survived by two sisters, Mary Rose Skrobarczyk and Carolyn Heman, and a brother, James Heese.

  • Fr. Thomas Provenzano

    Pastor

    Salesian Father Thomas M. Provenzano, 56, died unexpectedly on July 21 in Port Chester, New York.

    Father Provenzano had served twice for a total of 11 years at St. John Bosco Parish. Born in Bronxville, New York, he had been a Salesian for 29 years and a priest for 21 years.

    He ministered as a priest in New Jersey before coming to St. John Bosco in Chicago as parochial vicar. In 2007, he returned to New York and served there and in New Jersey until 2013, when he returned to St. John Bosco as pastor, a post he held until 2019.

    Father Provenzano is survived by his brothers Joseph, Anthony and Salvatore.

  • Br. Lawrence Camilleri

    Aviator, missionary

    Divine Word Brother Lawrence (Aaron) Camilleri, 83, a skilled aviator and missionary in Papua New Guinea, died July 22 in Techny.

    Born in Michigan, Brother Larry entered the Society of the Divine Word at the age of 14 in 1954. He professed vows in 1961.

    He completed mechanical aviation training in Cahokia, Illinois, as well as aircraft mechanic and private and commercial pilot licenses. He served as a pilot and aircraft mechanic for the Society of the Divine Word-owned and operated Divine Word Airways (DWA) in Madang, Papua New Guinea.

    Being able to maintain a plane was a matter of survival for bush pilots who often traveled to remote territories inaccessible by roads.

    While in Papua New Guinea, he flew single-engine planes, twin-engine planes and helicopters to deliver critically ill patients to hospitals, missionaries to their destinations and goods to the missions. An instrument-rated commercial pilot, Brother Larry eventually became DWA’s managing director and chief pilot.

    According to the late Divine Word Father Patrick Fincutter, a fellow pilot in Papua New Guinea, by the time Brother Larry left Papua New Guinea in 1990, he had registered 14,000 flight hours, the third highest ranking among SVD pilots worldwide.

    When Divine Word Airways closed, Brother Larry returned to the United States and used his skills for the Missouri-based Wings of Hope, a charitable organization that provided aircraft and pilots to assist medical, humanitarian and missionary programs in isolated parts of the world. His travels took him to the Galapagos Islands, Guatemala, Honduras, Liberia, Monrovia and Tanzania and for a time, he served as Wings of Hope field director in Belize.

    He also volunteered for Earth Angel Aviators, another Missouri-based non-profit organization, transporting medical patients throughout the Midwestern United States.

  • Fr. Michael D. Michelini

    Former pastor

    Father Michael S. Michelini, 78, died July 5. He was a retired priest of the Archdiocese of Chicago and former pastor of St. Adalbert Parish.

    Father Michelini was born in Chicago and attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary before being ordained in 1971.

    He served as assistant pastor of St. Aloysius and St. Agnes of Bohemia parishes. From 1981 to 2012, he served as pastor of St. Aloysius, St. Fidelis and then St. Adalbert. He retired in 2015.

    Father Michael Furlan, a good friend of Father Michelini, said Father Michelini was a very charismatic and special person. Furlan recalled his charming presence and how “he really lived life and he would walk into a room and the place would just light up.”

    “He was willing to go just about any place to help people, or minister to people,” said Father Mark Canavan, one of Father Michelini’s classmates.

  • Sr. Jeanette Jabour

    Educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Jeanette (Anesa Mari) Jabour, 91, died May 24 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Detroit, she was in her 73rd year of religious life.

    Sister Jeanette ministered in education and as an administrator of a home for the elderly, social worker and director of community relations in Illinois, Arizona, Ohio and Michigan.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Rita School (1951-1955).

  • Sr. Mary Kathleen La Plume

    Educator, pastoral minister

    Felician Sister Mary Kathleen (Claudette) La Plume, 84, died June 12 in Mother of Good Counsel Convent.

    Born in Chicago, she attended St. Margaret Mary School and Mother of Good Counsel High School. She entered the Felician Sisters in 1956 and professed her final vows in 1964. She ministered in elementary schools as a teacher and librarian in Illinois. She also served as a pastoral minister and liturgist at St. John the Evangelist Parish, Streamwood, and in parishes in the Diocese of Joliet.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she ministered at St. Turibius (1959-1960); Our Lady of Ransom, Niles (1964-1968); St. Stanislaus, Posen (1968-1973); St. Linus, Oak Lawn (1974-1976); and St. Hubert, Hoffman Estates (1976-1985).

  • Sr. Mary Schlehuber

    Educator

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Mary (Mary Ania) Schlehuber, 95, died June 22 in Footville, Wisconsin.

    Born in Peoria, Sister Mary made her first religious profession in 1948 and her perpetual profession in 1951. She was a teacher and chaplain who served in Illinois, Wisconsin and California.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, Sister Mary taught at St. Jarlath (1952-1953); St. Vincent Ferrer, River Forest (1953-1957); St. Sabina, Chicago (1960-1967); and St. Louis de Montfort, Oak Lawn (1969-1973).

    She is survived by a sister, Claire Reilly.

  • Fr. Joseph William Bayne Jr.

    Formation minister

    Conventual Franciscan Father Joseph William Bayne, Jr., 66, died June 23 in Chicago.

    Father Joe, as he was known, was born in Baltimore and attended Archbishop Curley High School there before joining the Franciscan community in 1975. He professed simple vows in 1976 and solemn vows in 1981 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1985.

    He served in parishes in Pennsylvania before beginning a 29-year ministry in Buffalo, New York, at the Franciscan Center, a transitional housing program for runaway and homeless young men from western New York. While there, he served for 13 years as Chaplain of Erie County Emergency Services and the Buffalo Fire Department.

    In 2018, Father Joseph was assigned briefly to a parish in Massachusetts before becoming the associate director of formation at the Conventual Franciscans’ postulancy house in Chicago.

    He is survived by his mother, Jean Bayne, and his brother, George Bayne.

  • Sr. Mary Roger Madden

    Educator

    Providence Sister Mary Roger (Mary Francis) Madden, 102, died June 24 in St. Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana.

    Born in Decatur, she entered the Sisters of Providence in 1940 and professed final vows in 1949. In her 83 years as a Sister of Providence, she ministered as a teacher for 40 years in schools in Indiana, Illinois, California and Washington, D.C. Beginning in 1986, she served as congregation historian, and then as pilgrimage coordinator at Providence Center and coordinator of the Blessed Sacrament Chapel. Beginning in 2017, she committed herself totally to the ministry of prayer.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at Our Lady of Mercy (1943-1945); St. Agnes (1950-1952); St. Leo (1958-1961); and Marywood, Evanston (1965-1968).

  • Fr. William Halvey

    Missionary

    Divine Word Father William (Gordian) Halvey, 95, died July 4 in Techny. He had served in Papua New Guinea as a brother and as a priest, and took on duties there and in the United States from being a postmaster and office worker to teacher, pastor and retreat center director.

    Born in Chicago, he attended St. Mel High School before entering the U.S. Army, serving for a year in Japan with U.S. occupation troops. He then attended Loras College in Dubuque, Iowa, for two years begore entering the Divine Word Brothers Candidate School. He professed first vows in 1954 and perpetual vows in 1960.

    After an assignment as postmaster in Techny, he was sent to Papua New Guinea. He went to seminary in Australia and was ordained to the priesthood in Techny in 1976, before returning to Papua New Guinea.

    In 1985, he returned to the United States and taught high school in Spokane, Washington, before serving as director of the St. Augustine Retreat Center in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, for 11 years. In 2003, he became chaplain to the cloistered Benedictine Sisters at San Beneto Monastery in Dayton, Wyoming, assisting at the local parish on weekends, before moving to the Divine Word community in Bordentown, N.J., In 2007, he moved to Techny to retire full time.

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