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Religious sisters help thousands while in quarantine


Sister Beata Tiboldi, a Dominican Sister of Peace, delivers food for Meals on Wheels on the West Side of Columbus on April 1. Tiboldi is one of the sisters who was not quarantined for most of the past year due to COVID-19 and was able to volunteer more actively. Other sisters packed backpacks for the homeless and made masks, mittens and hats for those in need.

Rasheedah Crawley suspected that religious sisters wouldn’t turn down an opportunity to help others, but she never expected the enthusiasm that the Dominican Sisters of Peace had when it came to helping her pack and distribute nearly 1,000 bags for the homeless. 

Crawley is founder of People Helping People 614, a collective of people who get supplies to those in need, and it had plenty of items leftover following the summer’s protests after the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died in Minneapolis police custody in late May.

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That’s where the Dominican Sisters of Peace came in. 

The novel coronavirus had 72 women, with an average age of over 80, quarantined inside the North East Side motherhouse and itching to find a way to help those in need in the world outside. They, of course, pray often, but they also wanted to do something more tangible.

Most of the members of the Dominican Sisters of Peace have been quarantined in the motherhouse on the North East Side due to COVID-19. But some, such as Sister Beata Tiboldi, were able to volunteer more actively and deliver for Meals on Wheels.

Packing 991 bags for People Helping People filled with toothpaste, toothbrushes, Gatorade, socks and more isn’t all they’ve been doing while being stuck inside during the pandemic, either, said Gaye Reissland, activities director for the sisters.

“They’ve never remained stationary,” Reissland said. “They’ve done lot being confined — a lot of outreach — and touched people, maybe not physically but through really good works.”

Unlike nuns, who mostly live and pray within the enclosure of a monastery, sisters work and live in the world outside their religious community.

From left: Sister Rose Bowen, Sister Rosemary Loomis, Sister Louis Mary Passeri, Sister Anne Schmidt and Sister Catherine Malya Chen pack bags for the homeless at the Dominican Sisters of Peace motherhouse on the North East Side. Photo provided by Sister Michelle Sherliza.

Even during their year of quarantine, the sisters have made around 7,800 face masks; sewn mittens, hats and scarves to donate to the homeless and others in need; tutored adult learners through Zoom; and offered virtual counseling sessions. Those who don’t live in the motherhouse — and thus weren’t quarantined — have been volunteering for Meals on Wheels.

“We really haven’t stopped because … when one thing was easing up — like masks — there would be a need right away for something else,” said Sister Susan Olson, mission group coordinator for the sisters.



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