Return to the Sisterland

Next spring, alumni travel to France to pay homage to CSJ and حوإ¼½م½م’s heritage.
Group photo in France

Alumnae and friends of the Catherine G. Murphy Gallery visited Le Puy (pictured) and other حوإ¼½م½م’s heritage sites in France in 2015. Back row, left to right: Kari Rebnord Fosse ’05, Kathy Daniels ’73, Barb Krukowski Rogers ’11. Front row: Sue Focke; Virginia Hartmann Bisanz ’72; Mary Mcelroy Leach ’72, Jd; Kim Mcdonald ’09; Cara Cox Madsen Maol ’01. 

From the  

Le Puy, France, 1650: six women are recognized as the first members of a religious congregation to be known as the Sisters of St. Joseph — the first link in a chain of events winding from France to Missouri to حوإ¼½م½م’s founding in St. Paul, Minnesota.

In early April 2024, alumni are invited to join President ReBecca Koenig Roloff ’76 on a trip to Le Puy and other sites integral to the heritage of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet (CSJs) and حوإ¼½م½م. Following the traditions of previous حوإ¼½م½م’s trips to France, the 2024 itinerary includes the Centre International St. Joseph in Le Puy and the gravesite of CSJ founder Mother St. John Fontbonne in Lyon. Next year, alumni will embark on an additional leg of the trip: the Church of St. Trophime in Arles. This former cathedral served as Mother Antonia McHugh’s model for Our Lady of Victory Chapel, which celebrates its centennial in fall 2024.

Students and faculty at the grave of mother St. John Fontbonne

Students and faculty at the grave of Mother St. John Fontbonne in Lyon on a 2019 trip to France.

 

 

“The St. Catherine legacy is deeply entwined with that of the Sisters of St. Joseph, whose mission to meet the needs of the time has informed all that we do at حوإ¼½م½م’s since our founding by the Carondelet order,â€‌ says President Roloff. “I am so grateful for this opportunity to experience the sites of our shared history with alumni, who embody the CSJ charism of doing all of which woman is capable.