Sister celebrates 100th birthday, 80 years in monastery -
chicagotribune.com
When Sister Vivian
Ivantic was a little girl, she knew she had a calling. She came home from first
grade and announced to her mother that when she grew up, she wanted to become a
priest or a nun.
And it was then,
more than 90 years ago, that she discovered women cannot become priests in the
Roman Catholic Church.
Ivantic became a
sister instead and remained optimistic that priesthood would one day be an
option for Catholic women to pursue.
On Sunday, after a
Mass at St. Scholastica Monastery in West Rogers Park marking her 80th anniversary in the religious
community, Ivantic made it clear that she hasn't given up on the idea, even as
she turns 100 on Wednesday.
With a mischievous
grin on her face and a fist in the air, she called on the Catholic Church to
allow female ordination, a yearning that likely won't be fulfilled for her but
an opportunity she hopes will at least be available to younger women.
"We need
women in church offices. It won't come in my lifetime, but it will come,"
she said.
Much has changed
in Ivantic's family, the church and American society since she joined the
Benedictine community eight decades ago. Women today have more choices than
becoming a mother, nurse or housekeeper, she said. She plays her beloved card
games on a computer now. Much of her family has scattered from northern
Illinois to Florida, Oregon and New Jersey. And she no longer wears the iconic habit of a cloistered nun or
sister.
Dressed in a pale
teal pantsuit Sunday with her silver hair swept to the side, she said she hopes
to see more shifts, like women occupying positions of power in the church.
Last year the
Vatican reprimanded a major network of nuns in the U.S. for espousing
"radical feminist themes," including female ordination, for its more
liberal ideas on the ministry of gays and for its silence, seen as a failure to
enforce the Vatican's views, on sexuality and abortion rights. The Leadership
Conference of Women Religious was chastised for stepping "out of
line" by the male leadership in a report concluding a three-year
investigation.
Though Pope
Francis has not ruled out the possibility of women in leadership, he did close
the door last month to the ordination of female priests, reviving a statement
Pope John Paul II made in 1994 that intended to end the discussion. Even
promoting female ordination can come with a price, as shown by the expulsion
last November of Roy Bourgeois, a longtime priest with the Maryknoll Fathers
and Brothers who refused to end his campaign for ordaining women.
But that doesn't
stop Ivantic. It's an injustice, she said, and she has no problem speaking up.
"I think the
American church is outstanding, but I'm waiting for women's ordination,"
she said. "We have been deprived of the celebration of the Mass because we
don't have enough ordained priests. We have done so much as teachers, nurses, social
workers, but we need to open church offices to women."
An advocacy group
called the Women's Ordination Conference supports Ivantic's hopes for female
priests, said the group's executive director, Erin Saiz Hanna.
"People,
especially in America, are used to seeing women advance in the workplace, in
politics, so people are ready to see women break through the stained-glass
ceiling," Hanna said. "The hierarchy could learn a lot from just
listening to its people."
As the daughter of
pious immigrant parents from Slovenia, Ivantic took her vows at age 20. She
worked as an elementary and high school teacher, teaching Latin for many years
in schools around the country. Later on she became a school librarian at St.
Scholastica Academy, a former all-girls Catholic high school run by the
sisters.
Ivantic eventually
became the community's archivist, and she meticulously reviews old documents
and memorabilia that record changes in the church's history, some of which she
witnessed. Each day she leaves her walker at the bottom of the stairs, climbing
two flights to the archives where between prayer sessions and Mass she works
accompanied by her cat, Thecla, named for an early saint who followed the
Apostle Paul. According to legend, the virgin Thecla was chained to a lioness and
sentenced to be eaten by wild beasts after she fought off the forceful advances
of nobleman. The female lion apparently saved Thecla by fighting off the other
beasts.
Her great-niece
Elizabeth McGhee, 32, said Ivantic gives her a different tour of the monastery
each time she visits, using her latest research topic to showcase a different
part.
While Ivantic
hasn't seen female ordination in her lifetime, McGhee said she expects to see
it happen before she reaches her great-aunt's age.
Ivantic is the
family's matriarch, McGhee said. In addition to keeping her 50 nieces and
nephews and their children tightly knit by playing Scrabble, fishing, tending to the sick and enjoying an occasional
beer — just one — she also encourages her family to ask questions about their
faith, about the church's history and their lives.
Her niece Karen
Ivantic, 56, said many in the family, herself included, often consider leaving
the church because it does not allow women to be equals.
"I could
easily walk away but I think … what holds me in is our family tradition and my
love of (Sister Vivian)," she said. "She committed her life to this,
she's not walking away. She's fighting, but she's not walking away.
"So what that
says to me is, 'Don't abandon everything but don't stop fighting for the
change.
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