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ALBANY, Ga. (NC)
One of these days when hes back home in Plains, Jimmy Carter
may look out a window and see a van driven by a nun passing through town.
That van is a home, classroom, theater, library and office for its
driver, Franciscan Sister Ruth Marie Hensler. She drives it 25,000 miles a year
in the 10,000-square mile Albany deanery in southwest Georgia in her job as
religious education coordinator. She serves about 1,500 Catholics in the area.
Plains is on route.
The major emphasis of Sister Henslers program is teacher
training and preparation. She visits each of her more than 50 teachers each
month and also encourages their attendance at diocesan workshops.
Sister Hensler also visits lapsed Catholics and encourages return
to the sacraments, providing whatever instructions are necessary. She also
meets with groups of parents and trains them to assist in preparing their
children for the sacraments.
Sister Hensler and the six priests who serve the 10 churches or
parish centers and two stations where Sunday Mass is regularly celebrated plan
the program for each year.
My goal is to strengthen the faith of the Catholics living
in this area so they can make the Church more present in this extensive
territory where our Catholic witness is limited, said Sister Hensler, the
only nun in the area.
When I first began my mission work I tried to have each of
my instructors meet with me at a central location, said Sister Hensler.
Although this was more convenient for me, it was difficult for my
teachers so I began to visit their homes or other places where meetings could
be held on an individual basis.
Initially I traveled the territory by car, but I found it
difficult to store my classroom aids and I had no real place to meet with my
instructors, she said.
When it became apparent that Sister Hensler needed a different
means of transportation, the Savannah dioceses Department of Christian
Formation received money from the Extension Society to buy a mobile home. The
Chicago-based Extension Society is an organization dedicated to serving home
missions in the United States and its protectorates.
The van provides storage for teaching materials, a sleeping area,
kitchen facilities and a table that will seat four comfortably.
Sister Hensler has also outfitted the vehicle as a library.
My instructors and the parents of some of the students had
been requesting use of some of my texts and brochures, but I never really had a
way to fill their requests. Now I am able to carry along a good selection of
books and lend them as needed.
Sister Hensler also worked out a system for previewing
audio-visual materials with instructors. I simply pull the shades on the
windows, set up my projector in the rear of the van, pull down the screen
installed above the drivers area and my van becomes a theater.
The nun can also sleep overnight in the van when she is not able
to return to her home in Albany, giving her some break from a schedule which
can keep her on the road 12 hours a day. |