Ann Fox
Sister Ann Fox (born Jeralee Ann Fox in 1933) is a Roman Catholic nun, social activist and expert in educational enrichment. She is co-founder and previous executive director of the Paraclete Foundation. She teamed with Barry T. Hynes to create the Paraclete Foundation to provide educational enrichment for at-risk children in South Boston.[1] The Paraclete Foundation, along with South Boston mothers known as the Stella Maris Group created the Paraclete Academy in 1997. The academy is housed in the former St. Augustine’s convent. The Paraclete Academy focuses on elementary and early middle school aged, at-risk children. The Paraclete Academy provides after school enrichment programs in the South Boston community that aims to erase the education disparity between inner city children and their more affluent peers. By Sister Ann’s retirement as executive director in 2012, nearly 1,000 local children had participated in the Paraclete Academy’s programs and over 70 young college graduates had volunteered as full-time teachers in residence.
Early life
Sister Ann was born in Jackson, Michigan in 1933 and grew up in rural Scio Township outside of Ann Arbor where she attended public schools. After graduation from the University of Michigan, where she had converted to Catholicism, she moved to New York City in 1953 which at the time was a center of Catholic intellectual life and social activism.[2] Her interest in social activism sprouted early. She studied Social Work at Fordham University.
In 1961 she entered Sisters of Charity. The order focused on serving the poor, offering Sister Ann the perfect opportunity to combine her two great passions: Catholicism and social activism. Sister Ann's time as a Sister of Charity ended in 1970. At the time she was in Boston heading a social work clinic in the now closed Nazareth Home for Children which was a mission of the Daughters of Charity. Sister Ann was supportive of the Second Vatican Council’s call for renewal of religious life and saw it as a “freeing opportunity for the sisters to live and work more closely with the communities they served. Sister Ann decided to take advantage of an ancient rite of the early Church for consecration of virgins that was restored by Vatican II, and in 1974 was consecrated by Humberto Cardinal Mediros of Boston and sent for with his blessings to become a sister living in the world, supporting herself, and ministering in the community.
Her first community was the Bromley- Heath housing development where she lived in one of the apartments. At the development, she began at the request of the women there, one of the first training and education programs for welfare mothers. In 1988 she was asked to become Executive Director of the South Boston Neighborhood House It was here that she established a reputation for her dedication and commitment to the South Boston community. During her eight-year tenure there, working with the Chair of the Board of Directors, Frank McCourt, she oversaw the construction of its present building, which included an old-fashioned barn raising bringing many unions in for the day to put up the two-story building.
Rwanda
While attending the first gathering of Women Waging Peace, Sister Ann met Aloisea Inyumba, who was then governor of one of the poorest areas in Rwanda, Kigali-Ngali province, whose Tutsi population was decimated in the 1994 Rwandan genocide.[3] As a poor refugee growing up in Uganda who had the opportunity to attend an excellent girls’ school, Governor Inyumba knew the impact that the education of girls can make on the development of a nation. She asked Sr. Ann’s help to build a leadership school in Rwanda that poor girls could attend.
In 2002 Sister Ann met Hon. Inyumba in Rwanda to plan their strategy for launching the school. Governor Inyumba secured land in Nyamata while Sister Ann secured architects. They were able to secure the Benebikira Sisters of Rwanda as a partner to help set up and administer the school. Fundraising efforts were linked to taking groups of Americans interested in international development to Rwanda. In 2006 the Maranyundo Initiative was created by a group of Boston women who made such a trip; they took on responsibility to finish fundraising for the school’s construction and now continue to support the school.[4] Ownership was turned over to the Benebikira sisters in 2010.
The Maranyundo School opened in February 2008 with an initial class of 60 girls. In just three years it established a reputation for excellence. The first graduating class ranked #1 in girls schools and third overall in the national “O” level exams. Its second graduating class ranked 2nd, and its 3rd graduating class (2012) ranked #1 in the country. Through her work in Rwanda, Sister Ann is closely associated with the Benebikira Sisters, a native Rwandan congregation that focuses on the poor, especially women and children in Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda and Kenya.[5] She has helped them developed partnerships with Babson College and Lesley University for education exchange.
References
- ^ "Sister Ann's bio on Paraclete website". Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- ^ Sidell, Louisa (25 April 2004). "Sister Ann Builds Her Dream School". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
- ^ "Maranyundo - Our Story". Retrieved 11 April 2013.
- ^ "ibid". Retrieved 11 April 2013.
- ^ "Benebikira Sisters of Rwanda website". Retrieved 11 April 2013.