Sweetwater Reporter

On Greece’s Santorini, 13 cloistered nuns pray for the world

-

THIRA, Greece (AP) — Cruise-ship tourists crowding souvenir shops and couples chasing the perfect Instagram sunset throng the alleyway outside the Monastery of St. Catherine, steps from Santorini’s world-famous volcanic cliffs.

Inside this convent on one of the trendiest islands in Greece, a predominan­tly Christian Orthodox country, 13 cloistered Catholic nuns devote their lives to praying for those visitors and for the world.

It’s a crucial if often misunderst­ood mission within the church, where constant prayer is deemed necessary to support more outwardly engaged ministries.

“In such a touristy island, the last thing one thinks about is praying — so we are the ones who do it,” Sister Lucía María de Fátima, the prioress, said on a recent morning.

She and other sisters spoke in the convent’s parlor, from behind a widely spaced white iron grille that demarcates the cloistered space from the outside world. Ending more than two years of pandemic seclusion, the sisters will welcome visitors back to the public part of their church starting at a Mass in early August for the convent’s 425th anniversar­y.

The rest of the convent is considered a sacred space, where the nuns live mostly in silence and contemplat­ion, leaving only for medical reasons or government requiremen­ts.

“After going beyond the grille, we miss nothing. When God gave us the vocation to being cloistered, he gave us the complete package,” said Sister María Esclava, who’s originally from Puerto Rico.

The Rev. Félix del Valle, a Spanish priest, has led periodic spiritual exercises at the convent for more than 10 years, part of the rigorous religious training for the sisters that starts with nine years of preparatio­n before entering the cloistered life.

“In a world of consumptio­n, of diversions, they give witness that God alone is enough,” he said.

Many orders of nuns are active in teaching, health care and ministry to vulnerable groups like migrants. But contemplat­ive nuns carry on a tradition of complete devotion to prayer that traces its origins to the first desert hermits, who sought closeness to God by removing all earthly distractio­ns.

“For these women, they find God in a dedicated life of prayer or contemplat­ion,” said Margaret McGuinness, professor emerita of religion at La Salle University in Philadelph­ia.

Sister María de la Iglesia spent nearly 40 years in Santorini before moving to Spain to lead the Federación Madre de Dios, or Mother of God Federation, which oversees the island’s convent and nine other Catholic Dominican convents on four continents.

“In today’s logic our life is not understood or valued, but within the church it is,” she said. “We’re the voice of the church that tirelessly praises, petitions on behalf of our entire humanity. It’s a thrilling mission.”

When not praying or practicing music and hymns, the sisters — ranging in age from 40s to 80s — do housework; tend to the garden, where they grow tomatoes, lemons and grapes; and make communion wafers for most of the Catholic parishes in Greece.

During two daily recesses, they break their silence to chat on the wide terraces, the Aegean Sea shimmering in the distance.

At dawn, a bell calls to the first of about nine hours of prayer, most sung in Latin, Spanish and Greek.

“While the sun rises, creation and the human person join in harmony of praise to God,” Sister María Guadalupe said, adding that with monasterie­s across time zones, someone is always keeping prayer active. “We’re not out of the world, but rather very involved in the world.”

Sister María Isabel said she liked beaches a lot in her native Puerto Rico. Upon entering the Dominican convent there, she could no longer see the ocean.

When she was moved to the main convent in Olmedo, deep in Spain’s heartland, she thought she would never see a wave again. Then came the mission in Santorini.

“God gives you grace that you had not expected,” she said, smiling broadly, before the bell tolled, and she rushed off to church, to keep singing God’s praise.

member FDIC

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States