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On
Valentine’s Day, 1921, a child was born in St.
Louis, Missouri to John Aschmann and his
forty-seven-year-old wife, Anne Maher Aschmann. The
blend of German father and Irish mother would
provide felicitous personality traits for their
offspring in her future vocation as Mother Abbess.
Anne herself baptized the child, due to dire
predictions of the doctor that she would not live
beyond a fortnight, which happily proved false. She
was given the name Alberta in honor of her father’s
favorite sister. Taught by the School Sisters of
Notre Dame, she knew at the age of sixteen that she
had to be a sister, and became a candidate in their
motherhouse at Ripa after high school graduation.
She attended St. Louis University but her
time there came to an end just short of
attaining her degree. God’s call had sounded
in her heart once again, and she knew she
had to leave all that was dear to her and
become a cloistered contemplative nun.
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Despite the opposition of her family and almost
everyone she knew, Alberta left for Chicago on July
7, 1942 where she entered the Poor Clare Monastery. A year later
on June 26, she received the holy habit and her new
religious name, Sister Mary Francis of Our Lady.
Even as a novice, she was permitted by the abbess,
Mother Immaculata, to develop her gift of writing
poetry, and a first volume, Whom I Have Loved, was
published while she was still in the novitiate. This
work brought her visits by the famous poet and
president of St. Mary’s College at Notre Dame,
Sister Madaleva, as well as the well-known poet
Sister Maura, S.S.N.D., and the daughter of Hilaire
Belloc, Eleanor Belloc Jebb, who had been sent by
her father to meet this rising literary star.
A
year after Sister Francis made final Profession on
July 26, 1947, Mother Immaculata chose her to be
part of the band who would go to unknown Roswell,
New Mexico on November 7, 1948 to make a new Poor
Clare foundation. Less than a decade later, the
young Sister Francis was commissioned by her abbess
to enter a contest for a book written by an unknown
author. When Sister inquired what the book should be
about, Mother Immaculata replied, “I don’t care,
just win the prize. The roof needs to be fixed.”
Sister Francis decided to write about the only thing
she knew well, the Poor Clare life, and told the
story of the Roswell foundation in A Right to Be
Merry. The book never made it to the contest,
because the author’s aunt showed the first chapter to
her dinner guest, Frank Sheed, who said, “Get me the
rest of that book and I’ll publish it.” But the roof
did get fixed, since the book became the best seller
of 1956. Ignatius Press recently published a new
edition of this enduring classic.
Other
books followed, despite the fact that the author
lived a busy Poor Clare life as secretary, organist,
portress, librarian, Latin and music teacher, and
the sister in charge of the fruit. Many of her poems
were written on the backs of fruit labels carefully
removed from cans to save paper since the community
was very poor. Sister Francis would go out to mow
her lawn (with a push mower!), and come up to her
cell to write a few lines of the play she was
working on about Our Lady of Guadalupe, "Counted As
Mine", or some other book. She claimed that her books
just “wrote themselves”, but other Poor Clares are
still waiting for this to happen! Most demanding of
her very limited time was the intense study of
manuscripts in medieval French sent to her by
monasteries abroad to research the life of St.
Colette for the book Walled in Light, published in
1959. These years also saw the writing of several
delightful plays. plus another volume of poetry.
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On
May 19. 1964, the community chose her as its new
abbess. The next year Mother Mary Francis was
elected head of the recently formed federation of
Colettine Poor Clare monasteries in the United
States, and began making triennial visitations of
the eleven communities scattered throughout the
country. Mother served as federal abbess for sixteen
years. and as federal councilor for thirteen years.
She guided the federation through the stormy
post-conciliar years, writing a new text of
Constitutions, definitively approved in 1981, which
has been taken up by monasteries all over the world.
Through numerous articles and a vast correspondence,
she encouraged religious on every continent to stand
firm in preserving the ideals of religious life which
were threatened by too sweeping changes after the
Council. Her daughters are especially grateful for
her wisdom in retaining the traditional Poor Clare
habit which is a cherished symbol of consecration to
this day. Her book Marginals, published in 1967, is
a commentary on the Vatican II document Perfectae
Caritatis and gives valuable guidelines for genuine
renewal of religious life (a revised edition of this
work has been published by Ignatius Press in 2007,
under the title Chastity, Poverty, and Obedience –
Recovering the Vision for the Renewal of Religious
Life). Several other books were published in 1960s
and 1970s. |
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Front
of Mother Mary Francis' remembrance card.
Mother's identifying mark in religious life,
the world surmounted by the Cross, was
highlighted in this silk-screened design. |
In
1972, God’s call once again sounded in a dramatic
way, as the community in Roswell was asked to make
its first foundation in Newport News, Virginia (this
community has now moved to Barhamsville, Virginia).
The vocations which had been drawn to Roswell by the
charming little book A Right to Be Merry were sent
far and wide to spread the ideal of St. Clare.
Foundations followed in Alexandria, Virginia (1977),
Los Altos Hills, California (1981), Belleville,
Illinois (1986), The Netherlands (1990), and
Chicago, Illinois (2000). The story of the
first five foundations is told in Mother’s own inimitable style
in Forth and Abroad, published by Ignatius Press in
1997. During these years two more volumes of poetry
were published, plus several more books. Mother also
made a new translation from the Latin of the Rule of
St. Clare and her four extant letters, as well as a
translation from the French of the Testament of St.
Colette.
In
2002, Mother was honored with the Pro Fidelitate et
Virtute Award by the Institute on Religious Life for
her contributions to consecrated life through her
books, poetry, and her life of contemplative prayer.
In 2004 she celebrated her fortieth anniversary as
abbess of the Roswell community, and the sixtieth
anniversary of her religious Profession. In our
October 2005 elections, Mother Mary Francis handed
on the service of abbess to her successor, Mother
Mary Angela, and received the honorary title of
“Mother Emerita” from our bishop, in recognition of
her outstanding dedication to God and to the service
of her sisters, to whom she would always remain
“Mother.”
Shortly after she began this new role in the
community, our dear Mother, as she became
affectionately known, suffered a serious fall from
which she never recovered. Following is the letter
written to the community’s friends by Mother Angela,
telling them of our dear Mother’s death:
Peace
and blessings
February 16, 2006
Our
very dear Friends,
On
Saturday, February 11, the feast of Our Lady of
Lourdes, our beloved Mother Mary Francis of Our Lady
went forth to meet her Bridegroom, Jesus Christ, at
2:35 in the afternoon, surrounded by her spiritual
daughters. For one who nurtured a deep and tender
devotion to the holy Mother of God all her life, and
had written both a play and an operetta in her
honor, it was the perfect day for Our Lady to come
and call her home.
Many
of you already know that on December 14, 2005, our
dear Mother Francis suffered a severe fall which
fractured several ribs and further injured her
already fragile back. Because of her extreme
frailty, we did not attempt to take her to the
hospital, but cared for her in our own monastery
infirmary, with the help of kind doctors and
wonderful home-care nurses. The next two months
would be a time of great grace for us. as we were
privileged to care for our dear Mother, the sisters
taking turns being with her at all times.
The
first week she was in critical condition, and we
feared that she would not be with us for Christmas,
as she battled an infection with the help of
antibiotics. But on Christmas Day she seemed to
rally, and we hoped she would recover, although it
was almost certain she would not be able to walk
again. The infirmary became a center of love in our
monastery, as we gathered to sing Christmas carols
with her, and even presented her play, “Christmas at
Greccio,” on a very “mini” stage for her enjoyment
and delight.
Throughout these weeks, Mother was deeply
appreciative of our efforts to care for her. She
would greet each sister who came to visit with
warmth and very personal love, and brought merriment
to our times together with her quick-as-a-flash wit.
When she was in pain and restless, she would grow
calm as we sang “Ave Maria” or “Jesus, the Very
Thought of Thee,” and would join in the singing with
her sweet voice.
Toward the end of January her condition again
worsened, and she began to find it almost impossible
to eat or sleep. We would daily lift her from her
hospital bed into a comfortable chair, which eased
her back pain and gave her some relief. On the
afternoon of February 11, feast of Our Lady of
Lourdes, as the sisters lifted her back into bed,
she suddenly looked up, with her eyes wide open,
seeming to look at a distant point, and simply
stopped breathing. The community assembled
immediately, and we began the prayers for the dying.
When we finished the last prayer, asking the Son of
God to escort her into the lovely places of paradise
that are forever green, she had gone to meet that
glorious escort.
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Our
Bishop Ricardo Ramirez, C.S.B., presided at her
funeral Mass on what would have been Mother’s
eighty-fifth birthday, February 14, 2006. Many friars
and priests stood with him around the altar that was
banked with the flowers she loved. The pealing of our
tower bells and a magnificent organ postlude
accompanied the procession of clergy, sisters and
pallbearers out to our burial vault where her
precious body was laid to rest, awaiting the coming
of our Lord in glory. Valentine’s Day has always
been an especially happy day of community
celebration for the gift of our dear Mother’s life;
this February 14 held a deep and poignant beauty for
us as we thanked our heavenly Father for having
created so loving and generous a heart, a heart that
gloried in giving and in nurturing life. Her life
was so full of accomplishments, her personality so
rich, and her spirituality so simple and so
profound, like the Gospel she professed. It will
take time even to begin to plumb the love and
gratitude in our hearts for the gift she was, and
for the legacy of faithful, wholehearted Poor Clare
living she has entrusted to us. Her sisters in
cloisters all over the world rise up and call her
blessed, giving thanks for the inspiration they have
received through her life of outpoured love for
Christ, her Lord and Spouse. |
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Back of Mother Mary Francis' remembrance
card. |
Let
me conclude this letter with an excerpt from a poem
she wrote to honor Our Lady on February 11, 1946,
exactly sixty years before the dawning of her
eternal tomorrow:
Ubiquitous grace
On the spread and numbered moments,
Shall I with surprise
Find your face,
A strange shining
On the floor of my sorrow?
Or with startled cry see in your hands
The final tomorrow, Having long known
No title becomes you as,
Mother?
Gratefully and devotedly, in Our Lady of Guadalupe,
