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SEPTEMBER 6, 2018 BEACON PHOTO | PATRICIA ALEX LEARNING A NEW SKILL At the Passaic Neighborhood Center for Women, learning the art of quilting is just one of the many offerings to women who live in the inner city neighborhoods of Passaic. They also learn computer skills, take ESL classes, learn how to sew and plant gardens. The Center, located in the former rectory of St. Nicholas Parish in Passaic, will mark its fifth anniversary on Sept. 24 at a special luncheon with food provided from their own culture by the women the Center assists. Pictured is one of the women who comes to the Center with the quilt she completed at the Center. By PATRICIA ALEX CONTRIBUTOR PASSAIC Since its doors first opened on Sept, 24, 2013 in a former rectory, there have been more than 10,000 visits to the Passaic Neighborhood Center by women who live in the hardscrabble neigh- borhood of mostly immigrants on the city’s east side. Now, as the center, started by women religious who serve in the Diocese of Paterson, marks its fifth anniversary, it is poised to grow, hoping to expand and add new classes and other services in the hopes of reaching out to more women in the community in which it has rooted. To mark the center’s fifth anniversary on Monday Sept. 24, “All of our women are getting together for a luncheon at the Center,” said Sister Ann Marie Paul, the center’s director from its inception, who is a member of the Mendham-based Sisters of Christian Charity. “They will provide food from their own culture to share with the group. We will have a (free) raffle for the women, with the prizes provided by our board, volunteers and other benefactors,” she said. The Center hosts thriving community gardens, diaper and food banks and more at the former rectory of St. Nicholas Parish on Washington Place, not far from City Hall. The services surely are vi- tal in one of the poorest parts of one of the poorest cities in New Jersey. But the Center has provided something beyond those tangi- bles for many women: a respite from the isolation of being a new- comer, a camaraderie and Christian fellowship. “It has helped me a lot in so many different ways,” said one wom- an, who before coming to the Center didn’t venture too far beyond her home other than taking her daughter to school. “When you don’t go outside, like before, you get depressed. Now I work in the garden, I sew. I’m not as closed off,” she said in Spanish. She came from Puebla, Mexico more than a dozen years ago and has made a life in Passaic, where her husband works in a plastics factory. That life, she said, has been enriched by the Center, where she now is an informal liaison between the many religious sisters from a variety of orders who serve in the Diocese and volunteers who staff the center and women in the neighborhood. Like the neighborhood around it, the Center draws mostly immi- grants from Central America — many who are fearful in the current national political climate around immigration. The Center offers a setting in which they can relax a bit in one another’s company. “We’re not taking away the very real struggles they have, but they are building community,” said Sister Catherine McDonnell, vice-chancellor for urban ministry and planning for the Diocese, “It’s POISED FOR GROWTH Passaic Neighborhood Center for Women marks fi fth anniversary emotional support. What I love about it is they are helping each oth- er with their challenges.” In 15-raised garden beds in the side and backyards of the impos- ing brownstone of St. Nicholas Church, the women grow food for their families — tomatoes, peppers, zucchini, the mint-like yerba bueno and papalo, an aromatic herb popular in parts of Latin America. The harvest is good and helps stretch tight family budgets, as do donated provisions. “Food insufficiency is not just a hot topic, it’s a reality here,” said Sister Ann Marie. “The Center is very collaborative, we respond to the women’s expressed needs.” She and two other sisters from the order live in the nearby St. Mary’s convent — they are present in the neighborhood. “The women saw we were here to stay…They know they are not forgotten,” she said. The idea for the Center grew from a meeting of a half-dozen women religious orders in the Diocese; similar initiatives have been undertaken elsewhere as the congregations tap into long histories of urban ministry to the poor. “The women religious are very cre-

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Page 1: Passaic Neighborhood Center for Women marks fi fth anniversary · 2019-09-18 · Passaic Neighborhood Center for Women marks fi fth anniversary emotional support. What I love about

SEPTEMBER 6, 2018

BEACON PHOTO | PATRICIA ALEXLEARNING A NEW SKILL At the Passaic Neighborhood Center for Women, learning the art of quilting is just one of the many off erings to women who live in the inner city neighborhoods of Passaic. They also learn computer skills, take ESL classes, learn how to sew and plant gardens. The Center, located in the former rectory of St. Nicholas Parish in Passaic, will mark its fi fth anniversary on Sept. 24 at a special luncheon with food provided from their own culture by the women the Center assists. Pictured is one of the women who comes to the Center with the quilt she completed at the Center.

By PATRICIA ALEXCO N T R I B U TO R

PASSAIC Since its doors fi rst opened on Sept, 24, 2013 in a former rectory, there have been more than 10,000 visits to the Passaic Neighborhood Center by women who live in the hardscrabble neigh-borhood of mostly immigrants on the city’s east side. Now, as the center, started by women religious who serve in the Diocese of Paterson, marks its fi fth anniversary, it is poised to grow, hoping to expand and add new classes and other services in the hopes of reaching out to more women in the community in which it has rooted.

To mark the center’s fi fth anniversary on Monday Sept. 24, “All of our women are getting together for a luncheon at the Center,” said Sis ter Ann Marie Paul, the center’s director from its inception, who is a member of the Mendham-based Sisters of Christian Charity. “They will provide food from their own culture to share with the group. We will have a (free) raffl e for the women, with the prizes provided by our board, volunteers and other benefactors,” she said.

The Center hosts thriving community gardens, diaper and food banks and more at the former rectory of St. Nicholas Parish on Wash ington Place, not far from City Hall. The services surely are vi-tal in one of the poorest parts of one of the poorest cities in New Jersey. But the Center has provided something beyond those tangi-bles for many women: a respite from the isolation of being a new-comer, a camaraderie and Christian fellowship.

“It has helped me a lot in so many different ways,” said one wom-an, who before coming to the Cen ter didn’t venture too far beyond her home other than taking her daughter to school. “When you don’t go outside, like before, you get depressed. Now I work in the garden, I sew. I’m not as closed off,” she said in Spanish.

She came from Puebla, Mexico more than a dozen years ago and has made a life in Passaic, where her husband works in a plastics factory. That life, she said, has been enriched by the Center, where she now is an informal liaison between the many religious sisters from a variety of orders who serve in the Diocese and volunteers who staff the center and women in the neighborhood.

Like the neighborhood around it, the Center draws mostly immi-grants from Central America — many who are fearful in the current national political climate around immigration. The Center offers a setting in which they can relax a bit in one another’s company.

“We’re not taking away the very real struggles they have, but they are building community,” said Sister Catherine McDonnell, vice-chancellor for urban ministry and planning for the Diocese, “It’s

POISED FOR GROWTHPassaic Neighborhood Center for Women marks fi fth anniversary

emotional support. What I love about it is they are helping each oth-er with their challenges.”

In 15-raised garden beds in the side and backyards of the impos-ing brownstone of St. Nicholas Church, the women grow food for their families — tomatoes, peppers, zucchini, the mint-like yerba bueno and papalo, an aromatic herb popular in parts of Latin America. The harvest is good and helps stretch tight family budgets, as do donated provisions.

“Food insuffi ciency is not just a hot topic, it’s a reality here,” said Sister Ann Marie. “The Center is very collaborative, we respond to the women’s expressed needs.” She and two other sisters from the order live in the nearby St. Mary’s convent — they are present in the neighborhood. “The women saw we were here to stay…They know they are not forgotten,” she said.

The idea for the Center grew from a meeting of a half-dozen women religious orders in the Diocese; similar initiatives have been undertaken elsewhere as the congregations tap into long histories of urban ministry to the poor. “The women religious are very cre-

Page 2: Passaic Neighborhood Center for Women marks fi fth anniversary · 2019-09-18 · Passaic Neighborhood Center for Women marks fi fth anniversary emotional support. What I love about

ative…they saw the needs of the poor and rolled up their sleeves,” said Sister Mary Edward Spohrer, provincial superior of the Sisters of Christian Charity and former chancellor/delegate for religious for the Diocese.

“Our congregations are aging but it feels like God is asking more of us,” said Sister Catherine, who is a Dominican Sister of Hope. Startup money came from the “Part ners in Faith” diocesan capital campaign and was augmented by donations and grants.

With the mission of strengthening families through educating and empowering women, the center hosts face-to-face English class-es four days a week and a grant from the Sisters of Charity allowed for desktop computers loaded with Rosetta Stone language pro-grams. But Sister Ann Marie stressed: “We don’t want to be a com-puter center. We want to be a center of relationships. Our goal really isn’t to teach English or quilting or crocheting. Our goal is to build relationships so when women have a need they come to you.”

The Center also has hosted “know your rights” seminars on immi-gration law. The sisters and volunteers have helped the women navi-gate the bureaucracies and paperwork that can be particularly daunting for newcomers.

Donations helped to purchase sewing machines used in the quilt-ing classes and Sister Ann Marie said it is hoped that entrepreneur-ship and leadership classes will soon be added with the goal of as-

sisting the women in setting up small businesses to sell their hand-crafted items.

The space at St. Nicholas has a homey feel; the Victorian building with a large porch was rehabbed before the center opened in September 2013. “It’s welcoming, warm and familial,” said Sister Mary Edward, who was a major force in the coordination of the col-laborative effort of the religious orders to make the center a reality. On a recent morning a volunteer watched some of the women’s children — engaged in games and puzzles — while a dozen moms quilted around a large dining table in another room.

The Diocese will continue to underwrite a portion of its annual budget of $140,000, but Sister Ann Marie said the Center will ramp up fundraising and grant writing as part of the plan for the next five years. A video about the center is in production.

There are hopes to reach beyond the Spanish-speaking communi-ty in more broadly serving multi-ethnic Passaic and expanding with-out diluting its core strength. “It’s a beautiful and blessed place…With women working together there are many gifts to be given and shared,” said Sister Mary Edward. “In a world with so much compe-tition, it really is a counter-cultural ministry.”

[Information: ncwpassaic.org; womenscenterpassaic.blogspot.com, or (973) 470-0844.]

EMPOWERING WOMEN Clockwise from top left: Women who live in the hardscrabble Eastside of Passaic stand by one of the 15 gardens they planted and attend to at the Passaic Neighbor hood Center for Women. Women learn how to sew to mend clothes and make clothes for their family. A woman and Sister Patricia Reynolds, quilting instructor, show the finished product. Sister of Charity of St. Eliza beth Mary Culhane, who teaches English, stands with three of her students at the Center. A woman shows some of the tomatoes harvested at the gardens planted at the Center.