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By Msgr. Noel C. Burtenshaw
The call came in April 1981. Sister Margaret
McAnoy answered the call and the program, sponsored by the Catholic community
of North Georgia, was underway. This was the largest outreach of its kind in
the history of the Church in North Georgia. This Religious of the Immaculate
Heart of Mary Sisters out of Monroe, Michigan, made it all happen.
In April, 1981, the city of Atlanta was enduring a
deep crisis. The nation, indeed the entire world, watched in horror as children
from the city's black community disappeared, later turning up murdered. It
seemed that the rash of killings could not be solved. Community leaders, in
desperation, reached out to rally support and help.
Archbishop Thomas A. Donnellan challenged his
Catholic parishes to be "a clear and unmistakable witness of the Church's
presence to these people, their problems and the things which cause them." The
challenge was answered. Camp Promise became the answer. The camp would be
nurtured into life by Sister Margaret.
It was by no means a solo effort. In fact, the
success of the summer-long camp for Atlanta's children lay precisely in the
organizational skills that Sister Margaret brought to the ministry. Sister
dropped her teaching at St. Pius X High School and her Cursillo apostolate and
took hold of this merciful opportunity for Atlanta's children.
At the time, her own reflection on the summer
camps was that they would be a "beginning on a small scale, rich with
opportunities." Camp Promise would prove to be not so small, but immensely
rich.
Sister Margaret organized the Camp at three
different parish locations: Sts. Peter and Paul, St. Anthony and St. Paul of
the Cross. All locations served the black community. However, Archbishop
Donnellan made it clear the proposed Camp Promise would have to "involve the
Catholic community as a whole. Specifically, our very modest program
says to our community, 'When someone's hurting, we all hurt.'"
The key, Sister Margaret knew, was a good
volunteer program. She immediately set about recruiting 400 to 500 to work
during the summer months at the three locations. "People don't need any
specific talents," she would say. "We'll help them to see talents they didn't
know they had."
The volunteers signed up. They hailed from every
parish, city and rural. Seminarians signed up; so did sisters from across the
nation. The story traveled far and wide. Almost every Catholic newspaper in
every state carried the message. Sister Margaret set up her office and phones
in the Catholic Center, which was more than full-time work. But she also hit
the streets, speaking to groups, encouraging other churches to follow suit,
making preparations at all points for a successful summer for the children of
Atlanta.
The rest is history. On Palm Sunday, a special
collection in all parishes gave her the money to run the program. The
volunteers arrived and rolled up their sleeves. The camps opened in June. A
remarkable picture, taken by The Georgia Bulletin, of Archbishop
Donnellan riding the bus with the children on their way to Camp Promise was
flashed across the wire and was displayed in newspapers all over the country.
On June 8, 1981, the camps opened. They stayed
open every weekday until August 14. It is estimated that almost 1,000 children
were served, as Sister Margaret McAnoy, quietly holding the reins, guided the
program to a complete success.
Sister Margaret McAnoy, the youngest of four
children, was born in Detroit, Michigan. Her brother, Thomas, is a priest of
Detroit and her sister, Joann, is also a religious of the Immaculate Heart of
Mary community. The other sister, Jane, is married. Sister first came to
Atlanta in 1969 to teach in St. Pius X High School. From 1973 to 1980, she was
principal of Our Lady of Lourdes School bringing new life to that little school
in the black community that was, at that time, in danger of closing. In 1980,
Sister Margaret became part-time teacher at St. Pius X and part-time
coordinator of the Cursillo Movement. She is now full-time coordinator of the
Cursillo Movement.
The motto given to the Camp Promise volunteer
project was "When we need the best, we ask for you." Camp Promise well deserved
this challenging motto. But most easily, those same words could have been
applied to this valiant woman when the decision was made to choose her as the
Camp Coordinator.
Sister Margaret McAnoy is our person of 1981.
The Georgia Bulletin, representing the parishes of our Archdiocese, is
most happy with this choice.
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