Monday, October 6, 2014

Keeping the Spirit of Mother Maria in Marquette Park!

Keeping the spirit of Mother Maria in Marquette Park

By Joyce Duriga
Editor

Arianna Black, Jagla Hobbs and Journey Freeman make pita pizzas as cooking instructor Suzy Etsch watches on May 14 at the Maria Kaupas Center, 2740 68th St. Along with activities, the students who attend the center have prayer time in the chapel. (Karen Callaway / Catholic New World)
When the Sisters of St. Casimir decided a few years ago to close Maria High School in the city’s Marquette Park neighborhood they knew that somehow they wanted to keep a Catholic presence on the site.
They established that presence through the Maria Kaupas Center, a youth community space housed in the former convent on school grounds and named for Venerable Mother Maria Kaupas, founder of the Sisters of St. Casimir. The center works with students from Catalyst Maria, the charter school located in the old Maria High School.
The Catalyst network was founded by the Christian Brothers as a way to provide quality, values- based education to children in two impoverished areas of Chicago. Catalyst schools are not religious, but do teach children values such as respect and compassion.
Sister of St. Casimir Margaret Zalot, councilor and general secretary of the community, said the sisters knew there would be a lot of children in the charter school who would still need opportunities for spiritual growth and good values.
“We’re really involved in this community here and we can see that there are needs here,” Zalot said.
When searching for someone to direct the program, the sisters reached out to Amy Eckhouse, a former teacher at Maria.
“I knew the clientele and the kids. And I had an idea of what they were saying,” she told the Catholic New World.
The convent, which is attached to the high school, provided ready-made space for the center with a large chapel, multipurpose space, a kitchen and dining area and even living quarters for overnight retreats.
In fall 2013, the first group of students from Catalyst joined the center. About 50 kids came daily after school from 4 to 6 p.m.
Starting up took a lot of work.
“The first day I came in here the walls were all white. I was sitting in a chair with no desk and I thought, ‘Oh my, God. Inspire me,’” Eckhouse said.
Today the walls are decorated with brightly colored inspirational messages and artwork created by the students. The sisters’ dining area has been converted into a lively teen space. Even some of the chairs are hand-painted by the students, each one with a different design and the bearing handprints of the painter.
The students also help lead groups in the center.
During the first year they had music sessions, drum circles and sewing and cooking classes. Grants from PNC Foundation and McLaughlin Foundation helped to cover expenses.
This past summer the center held a vacation Bible school from 9 a.m. until noon and then held a dropin from noon to 6 p.m.
Since the students are at school from 7:45 a.m. to 4 p.m., when they get to the center “they are just out of it,” Eckhouse said. To help them refocus, she starts with prayer.
“The very first thing that we do when they come is that we have reflection in the chapel. That’s our center,” she said.
Students appreciate the sacred space of the chapel, with one student telling Eckhouse that God hears their stories in the space of the chapel.
“This was our dream,” said Sister M. Immacula Wendt, assistant general superior and general treasurer of the congregation in the United States.
“These kids come into that chapel and just sit,” Sister Immacula said. “One of the questions that Amy asked them was if you met God today what would you ask him?”
The kids responded with questions such as: Why is my dad in jail? Why was my brother shot? Where is my mother?
Sister M. Immacula said it is important to keep Catholicity in schools that are no longer Catholic. The sisters believe this will be a model for other congregations as they are forced to close schools.
The kids feel safe coming to the center with many telling Eckhouse it is a “home away from home.”
The Maria Kaupas Center is in need of volunteers and donations of snacks and other supplies. For more information, visitwww.mariakaupascenter.com.

Monday, September 29, 2014

DID YOU KNOW.....


. . . that the Maria Kaupas Center welcomed friends, supporters, and dignitaries to its
first open house on September 25, 2014?

MKC ENTRANCE.jpg


Past, present, and (hopefully) future supporters came to see the MKC mission come alive.

MKC_Logo_Signature1.jpg

WE ARE MKC

Keynote speakers Chicago City Clerk Susanna Mendoza and Illinois Appellate Court Justice Jesse Reyes were joined by
Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke, Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez, Representative Dan Burke, and
Chicago Police Captain Dennis Walsh, Executive Officer of the 8th District.

Their presence at our event showed their solidarity with our mission as they pledged to support our efforts.

ANITA ALVAREZ & ASSOC IN CHAPEL .jpg   ANNE BURKE & SMZ.jpg    SUSANNA MENDOZA SPEAKING.jpg  CARMEN & JUSTICE REYES.jpg  DAN BURKE & SIMONE MCNEIL (AIDE TO GOV. QUINN).jpg CAPT. D. WALSH, CPD.jpg

In City Clerk Mendoza’s own words:

“Institutions like Maria Kaupas [Center] provide a safety net,
a home away from home, a hope. . . “


MKC_Logo_Signature1.jpg

WE ARE MKC


A proclamation from the Governor’s Office recognized September 25th as
Maria Kaupas Center Day in the State of Illinois.
Maria High School alumna and longtime aide to Governor Pat Quinn Simone McNeil honored the MKC on his behalf.

BOARD, STAFF, SIMONE MARIA KAUPAS CENTER DAY.jpg


Other highlights included a moving video about the
MKC’s commitment to the Marquette Park community,
heartfelt presentations and testimonials by MKC Program Director Amy Eckhouse and
Teen Leaders Temara Hamilton, Ahvay Jackson, and Vincent Varnado and
the unveiling of the Kaupas Kickstart Bicycle Restoration Room and the Kaupas Kloset.

TEEN LEADERS.jpg
  MATT AND SWOP GUYS IN BIKE ROOM.jpg
 VOLUNTEER ROSEMARY SEIFERT.jpg


MKC_Logo_Signature1.jpg

WE ARE MKC


Several members of the Sisters of St. Casimir and the Midwest Christian Brothers, as well as representatives from Catalyst Schools,
shared the good news of the MKC with guests
as they enjoyed music and refreshments and built community.

JASON SCHULTZ & GORDON HANNON.jpg
  001.jpg  002.jpg
  ED TALKING WITH LEADERS.jpg



FR TONY, SR REGINA, RITA GALLAGHER.jpg
    MRS STARLING, DOMINQUE AND DANIELLE.jpg
  GUESTS WITH SSCs.jpg


MKC_Logo_Signature1.jpg

WE ARE MKC

Thursday, September 18, 2014

MKC's Creative Writers!

Rewriting Rowling!
The MKC’s creative writers took a stab at transforming passages from the works of JK Rowling from narrative into poetry! These budding writers discussed what was important to include – and what could be taken out – in order to create an image, a mood, or an emotion. Take a look at what a few of them did:

Original passage:
   After lunch, they went to the reptile house. It was cool and dark in there, with lit windows all along the walls. Behind the glass, all sorts of lizards and snakes were crawling and slithering over bits of wood and stone. Dudley and Piers wanted to see huge, poisonous cobras and thick, man-crushing pythons. Dudley quickly found the largest snake in the place. It could have wrapped its body twice around Uncle Vernon’s car and crushed it into a trash can.

Rewrite #1:

The reptile house.
Cool and dark. Behind the glass
Lizards and snakes crawling, slithering.
Quickly, the man-crushing python wrapped its body twice around Uncle Vernon’s car
Crushed it into a trash can.
--by J.S.

Rewrite #2:

The reptile house
Cool and dark along the walls.
Lizards and snakes
Crawling, slithering on wood and stone.
Dudley and piers wanted to see huge cobras and man-crushing pythons.
--by Aryel

Rewrite #3:

Reptile house.
Cool and dark
Lizards and snakes
Crawling and slithering.
Dudley found the largest snake.
Wrapped its body twice, crushed a car into a trash can.

--by Nancy F.

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

DID YOU KNOW....


. . . that fall programming at the Maria Kaupas Center has gotten off with a

BANG!!

Over 80 Catalyst scholars have signed up for afterschool courses at the MKC.
Monday’s programs included
 
     
           cooking,         beginning sewing,                                          beginning guitar,

 and dance movement therapy.

Meeting on other days throughout the week are classes in
creative writingadvanced sewingartdance, and a music program provided byHarmony, Hope, and Healing.

We are also welcoming members of the community into the MKC during the day to take
ELL classesbeginning adult sewing, and diabetes education classes.

Coming soon are two Kaupas Kickstart programs,
bike repair shop and a community garden!

We also plan to begin hosting monthly community dinners.

Woo Hoo!

This fall we have increased our program offerings by over 100% -
and we expect to add several more programs in the spring.

WE ARE SO EXCITED!!!!









Thursday, September 4, 2014

DID YOU KNOW...

. . . that the Maria Kaupas Center has been making new friends and welcoming back old ones?

MKC_Logo_Signature1.jpg

The MKC staff was delighted to give a tour to IHM Sisters Therese O’Rourke and Mary Jo Gallagher.

The IHM Sisters are generous supporters of the MKC.

Sr. Terri and Sr. Mary Jo had traveled from Scranton, Pennsylvania to visit their good friends, the Sisters of St. Casimir,
and the SSC Leadership Team brought them by for the visit.
We thank them for their support and ask that they continue to remember us in their prayers.

DSC04145.jpg

The Center staff is extremely excited about the beginning of the new school year,

a year full of promise and potential

for both Catalyst-Maria School and the Maria Kaupas Center.

We welcomed back the Teen Leadership Team and initiated a new Leader who received his MKC polo with enthusiasm.

We opened our doors to Catalyst high school students on the first day of school and continued our tradition of

gathering around the altar for Daily Reflection

where we thanked God for the many gifts He has given us and asked His blessings on this new year.

Stacy gets his MKC shirt.jpg  005.jpg 006.jpg

011.jpg    015.jpg

The MKC also wants to give a BIG SHOUT-OUT to the COSTCO Store on Cicero for donating over
200 boxes of Rice Krispie-Treats

to be used as snacks during after school programming. 
                        
COSTCO, YOU ROCK!

COSTCO AUGUST 2014.jpg

And finally, we want to share with you some of the things MKC teens are doing to
“radiate respect”
to family, friends, and even strangers.

We are so proud of these kids and the amazing adults they are in the process of becoming . . .

019.jpg024.jpg
025.jpg026.jpg




WE ARE MKC

WE ARE MKC

WE ARE MKC

029.jpg