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Helen Wolf
Director of
Campus Ministry
The College of New
Rochelle
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"The College of New Rochelle has continued to uphold
the vision of Mother Irene Gill: higher education for women. But today,
CNR has
taken that vision to a higher plane in its mission to educate women and
men who
may not have otherwise had an opportunity for a college education. I
think
about the greatest minds of our time who may not have achieved their
goals if
they couldn’t get into a college because there were no scholarships or
financial aid, or because of their gender or race."
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Helen, as Director
of Campus Ministry for The College of New Rochelle
how does your office function on a campus with students from many faith
traditions?
Campus
Ministry is
committed to the faith development of the CNR family as the foundation
for
service to others and the establishment of peace through justice.
Rooted in our
Catholic intellectual traditions, liturgical celebrations, and social
justice
teachings, we branch out to embrace the richness of our culturally
diverse and
multifaith college community. Seekers and servers are welcomed by a
Campus
Ministry team consisting of the director, chaplain, campus minister,
and
student peer ministers. All students in the four schools of the College
are
encouraged to participate in our worship, spiritual development
programs,
community service outreach, and peace and justice offerings.


Recently we have been reading a great deal about how students who are
spiritual are inclined to be happier students. Being religious or
spiritual
seems to contribute to one’s sense of psychological well-being.
Students who
are involved in reading the Bible or other sacred texts, who attend
religious
services and join religious organizations on campus are saying that
their lives
are much more fulfilled. What is your experience here at CNR?
My experience here at
The College of New Rochelle
coincides with these recent studies. I’ve worked with students who are
extremely grounded. They tend to be very involved in their faith life
and are
leaders among their peers. I remember a Muslim student last year who
used our
prayer room in the Campus Ministry office for her daily prayers, and I
remember
how difficult it was for her to get through the month of Ramadan. But
she stuck
to it and prevailed in all her classes, to which I credit her religious
practices and belief. The fasting wasn’t a detriment but a means to a
fulfilled, well-rounded life.

Campus Ministry is
not only involved with the religious life of the
community, but you are also active in charitable works on campus and
off campus.
Among the many projects undertaken by Campus Ministry, what are some of
your
major activities?
We have
students and staff who, every week, are
completing volunteer hours at one agency or another, much more so than
I think
the CNR community is aware. Every Thursday students deliver meals to
the
homebound with The Lord’s Pantry. On Fridays students serve meals at
HOPE Soup
Kitchen. Once a month we send about 15 students and staff members to
deliver
food and clothing to the homeless in Manhattan on a Midnight Run. There
are so many other service organizations with which we are involved on a
regular
basis.
I’m also proud to be
part of our Plunges, where
students and staff spend either their Spring Break or a week during
Winter
intersession completing service for people in need. This year, the
Plunge
experiences will take place in January. The Urban Plunge will take
volunteers
to Hale House in Harlem. Students will take care of about a dozen
children, newborn to four
years old, and assist in the administrative work of this fine
institution. Dr.
Marya Howell-Carter of CCD&P will accompany the students daily, and
Nicole
Totans from Alumnae/i Relations will facilitate a daily reflection with
the volunteers
upon their return to campus.
The International
Plunge will once again take place
at the Ursuline border missions in Brownsville, Texas and Matamoros, Mexico. Nursing students,
facilitated by Health Services Director Marie Serina, will host a
week-long
Health Fair for the women of Brownsville, and other students will
travel to Mexico each day and help build a
new home with the family who will occupy the house.
These are major
projects that require a great deal
of fundraising, and I am awed that students, staff, and friends are so
willing
to help us in funding these service trips.


The College
of New Rochelle began the
“Plunge” nearly 10 years ago
to give students the opportunity to perform community service. We now
have, as
you said, an “international” component to the “Plunge” with students
going to Mexico as well as Texas, two impoverished
communities located on
the U.S.-Mexico border. Tell us a little of the history of this
community
service effort done by students.
The College
of New
Rochelle
students have a rich history in offering their vacation time during
Spring Break
to help others in need. The first Alternative Plunge experience was
organized
in 1997. The students
worked at an Ursuline service site in Wilmington,
Delaware.
In 1998, a group went to inner-city Cincinnati,
where Sister Monica McGloin hosted our students in a variety of
projects:
rebuilding houses, working in a clinic, a day care center, and a local
Catholic
school.
The
Plunge continued in 1999 as one group of CNR students traveled back to Cincinnati
and another to Big Laurel
Learning Center
in Naugatuck, West Virginia,
where they split wood, built a porch, and tutored children. The
following year,
two groups returned to the West Virginian Appalachians to Naugatuck
and another team traveled on to the Glenmary Farm. The Glenmary
Missionaries
are priests, brothers, sisters, and lay volunteers who work with the
poor in
rural America,
especially in Appalachia.
In
2001 Plungers went further west into Kentucky
where a group worked with the Glenmary Missionaries once again. The
work on
this Plunge ranged from services of presence to hard, physical labor.
Visits to
the elderly in a nursing home and spending a day with the mentally and
physically challenged were alternatives to laboring at construction
sites with
a local organization building low-cost housing. Plungers stayed local
in 2002
as they spent a week at Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice in the Bronx
tutoring students in their after-school programming.
In
2003 a return to Appalachia was called for, and
students
once again visited Big Laurel
Learning Center
in West Virginia.
Activities
ranged from working at a food pantry and tutoring children, to
repairing
mountain roads and splitting fallen logs for firewood.
As part of the
Centennial year celebration, a call for an international experience was
organized in two Ursuline missions at the Tex-Mex border in spring 2004
that
continues this year.

This January, students from CNR will participate in the first January
“Plunge” during the intersession. Tell us who is involved in this
special
“Plunge.”
Spring
Break in March is the same week as Holy Week, and Campus Ministry is
unable to
be off-campus that week due to religious obligations. Therefore, we
will mirror
the two plunges of 2004 during January intersession – an International
Plunge
to the same mission sites in Texas
and Mexico;
and
an Urban Plunge to Hale House in NYC. I will supervise the Plunges. Suzette
Walker, Campus Minister, will organize the
administrative
ends of both Plunges. Marie Serina, once again, is coordinating the
nursing
students and the health workshops in Brownsville.
Silvana Bajana of Purchasing here at the College joins the Tex-Mex team
this
year. Marya Howell-Carter from CCD&P will accompany the Hale House
troupe,
and Nicole Totans of Alumnae/i Relations will facilitate a daily
reflection
with the Urban Plungers each night upon their return to campus.

Campus Ministry is responsible for a series
of special events here at CNR during the Christmas Season. What is your
Office
planning for the College Community?
We begin
our Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA), on November 28
after the 11 am Sunday liturgy. RCIA is the process by which
individuals are
welcomed into the Catholic Church, or baptized Catholics complete their
initiation into the Church by receiving the sacraments.
On
December 2, we have our Roses in December celebration where we
remember the lives of four American women who were martyred in 1980
while
working with the poor in El Salvador.
This is a community soup and salad supper at 5:30 pm
followed by a prayer service in the Chapel.
December
7, we invite everyone to visit us in the Campus Ministry Office in
Brescia Hall for our annual Christmas cookies Open House. We bake
Christmas
cookies that day from 11 am
to 2 pm.
On December 8 our Immaculate
Conception Mass begins at 12:30 pm in the Chapel. Advent
is observed at CNR with the Creche
blessing and tree lighting outside the Castle on Chidwick Walk at 4:45 pm on December 9.
On
December 17 and 18, we join CNR Drama in its Christmas production of
Gian-Carlo Menotti's opera Amahl and the
Night Visitors that is staged in Holy Family Chapel.
On Christmas Eve and Christmas Day there are two
services. On December 24th carols begin at
9:30 pm in the Chapel, followed by mass at 10 pm. Christmas Day Mass is
celebrated
at 11 am in Holy Family Chapel.

Helen,
in what positive ways do you believe that the College today is
fulfilling the heritage of our Ursuline foundresses?
The College of New Rochelle has continued to uphold
the vision of Mother Irene Gill: higher education for women. But today,
CNR has
taken that vision to a higher plane in its mission to educate women and
men who
may not have otherwise had an opportunity for a college education. I
think
about the greatest minds of our time who may not have achieved their
goals if
they couldn’t get into a college because there were no scholarships or
financial aid, or because of their gender or race. I’ve met so many
brilliant
minds in my four years at CNR. I know they will contribute so much to
society
because they had the opportunity to expand those brilliant minds in the
classroom. I believe our Ursuline foundresses are smiling down on The
College
of New Rochelle because their vision has expanded in such a positive
way, and
one with which I wholeheartedly support.
