Toronto Star

Chainsaw-wielding nun shows everyone how to handle hurricane fallout

- LINDSEY BEVER THE WASHINGTON POST

In the aftermath of hurricane Irma, a nun — dressed in her habit — fired up a chainsaw and went to work, clearing trees from a Florida roadway.

Sister Margaret Ann, principal of Archbishop Coleman F. Carroll High School in Miami, said the street from her convent to the campus was blocked Monday by downed trees, forcing drivers to steer onto the sidewalk, where they were sliding in mud and debris.

Although yard work is not something the sister would typically do, she said, she walked out to SW 104th St. wielding a roaring power tool — and praying for those who were affected by the storm.

“People were kind of stopping and taking pictures,” Sister Margaret Ann said Wednesday afternoon.

She said one of them was an off-duty Miami-Dade police officer, who captured the moment on video and posted it Tuesday on social media, where it has since been shared tens of thousands of times. The video shows the sister wearing gloves, slicing through tree branches on the side of the road.

Sister Margaret Ann told the Washington Post the officer said, “You know, the police will do this.”

“I said, ‘Well maybe so, but it will take a while — and they have more important things to do, really.’ ”

Sister Margaret Ann said the high school, which has about 300 students nestled up next to the Everglades, was not spared from the storm. She said it suffered significan­t damage to its cooling tower, bleachers were blown over and several acres of trees destroyed.

The Miami-Dade Police Department did not immediatel­y respond Wednesday to a request for comment. But here’s what the department had posted on Facebook: “One of our off duty officers was happy to find Sister Margaret Ann of Archbishop Coleman F. Carroll High School pitching in by cutting trees to clear the neighbourh­ood roadways. As we recover from #HurricaneI­rma, these acts of kindness remind us all that we are #OneCommuni­ty in #MiamiDadeC­ounty! Thank you Sister and all of our neighbours that are working together to get through this!”

Sister Margaret Ann, who said she spent about three hours Monday morning helping to clear the road, noted that the response to the video has been overwhelmi­ng.

“Sister you ROCK!!” one person wrote on Facebook.

“Humbleness at its best,” another said. “Prayers for her and all thru . . . the world of tragedies and love.”

 ??  ?? Police said Sister Margaret Ann was cutting trees to clear the roadways in Irma’s aftermath.
Police said Sister Margaret Ann was cutting trees to clear the roadways in Irma’s aftermath.

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