Welcome the 2014-2015 Precious Blood Volunteers

by Tim Deveney, Director of Precious Blood Volunteers
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(From L-R) Patricia Wood, Ryan Cornelissen, and Stephanie Schell

(From L-R) Patricia Wood, Ryan Cornelissen, and Stephanie Schell


Precious Blood Center in Liberty, Missouri hosted orientation for the new Precious Blood Volunteers for 2014-2015. During the week of July 20-25, we welcomed three new volunteers who will be serving this year.
Patricia Wood will be serving at St. Paul Church in Crownpoint, New Mexico. Pat comes to us with a wealth of experience during her time working as medical technician, serving at St. Joseph Indian School, and managing a farm in Kentucky and a ranch in Wyoming. She is from Owensboro, Kentucky and has three grown children. She will begin her service at the end of August.
Ryan Cornelissen is now working at Cristo Rey Kansas City High School. Ryan is a graduate of the University of New Hampshire with a degree in civil engineering and is from Londonderry, New Hampshire. He worked as a civil engineer for the New Hampshire Department of Public Transportation. At Cristo Rey, Ryan will be helping out with the stem (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) program, campus ministry, and the music program.
Stephanie Schell is serving at Truman Medical Center in Kansas City, Missouri. Stephanie matriculated from Creighton University with a degree in biology, and comes to us from Irving, Texas. Stephanie is our third volunteer to serve at Truman and will be working with the fresh foods market, the pet partners program, and assisting the nursing staff.[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

Engineer builds foundation for life as postgrad volunteer

 

Vanessa Steger with students from Cristo Rey Kansas City

When Vanessa Steger graduated from Notre Dame in December with a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering and a B.A. in History, she already had a job offer and second interviews with some of the world’s largest companies. But she wanted something more.
“Mysterious inward promptings drew me to the Missionaries of the Precious Blood and Kansas City after attending the Fall Postgraduate Service Fair,” said Steger, who is from St. Louis.
Steger’s volunteer calling took her to Cristo Rey Kansas City (CRKC) where she shares her passion for science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) with urban high school students.
“I was looking for something immediately after graduation and the Precious Blood Volunteer program had the flexibility to accommodate my schedule,” she said. Also appealing was one of Cristo Rey’s 2013 Strategic Plan goals: Develop and enhance robust curricular and co-curricular STEM programs.
Located in Midtown Kansas City, Missouri, CRKC is one of 26 Catholic, college preparatory high schools in the Cristo Rey Network. CRKC serves a culturally diverse student body with high economic needs and limited educational opportunities. “A school that works,” CRKC offers an innovative Corporate Work Study Program to offset tuition costs where students gain real-world work experience. The school also boasts a 100 percent college acceptance rate.
“These kids really want to be here,” said Steger. “97 percent of boys and girls attending Cristo Rey qualify for the federal free and reduced lunch program. Our student body is about 60 percent Hispanic and 35 percent African American, many of which are first generation immigrants.”

From L-R: Nate Balmert, Nora O’Connell and Vanessa Steger

Precious Blood Volunteers receive a small stipend while living with priests and other volunteers at Gaspar Mission House. As a group, they share morning prayers, dinners, stories, all while developing bonds that will last a lifetime. Community living is a central part of the experience of being a Precious Blood Volunteer.
“Being at the mercy of a bus schedule and listening to the daily conversations of other riders, especially those struggling to find work, puts life into perspective,” she said. “I’m also realizing I can live off very little. My true needs are easier to see when those material extras are unavailable.”
Gaspar Mission House is in a unique, yet safe, environment to grasp the true essence of Kansas City’s engaging community and rich history explained Steger. A couple of blocks in one direction will take you to a nice middle-class neighborhood, while just east is the racial dividing line of Troost Avenue.
“When I talk to my friends who pursued employment straight out of college, I don’t get the feeling that their work gives them joy. I’m blessed my volunteer experience gives me joy every day.” she continued.

Vanessa guiding the Cristo Rey Robotics Team

Most of her eight-hour day at Cristo Rey is spent “creating a safe space” for students to learn. As a STEM volunteer and coordinator, Steger coaches the Robotics Club and supervises seniors taking online science courses. She recently chaired CRKC’s first-ever Science Expo. Filling in as a substitute teacher two to three times a week, Steger also has daily lunchroom monitoring duties. Before the end of her placement in June, she is designing a plan for a city-wide STEM summer camp program for CRKC.
“This experience has given me a way to put my faith into action,” said Steger. “I have had the privilege of learning so many of these kids’ stories and to hear how they suffer in ways I can only imagine.” Through firsthand knowledge, she is discovering that education can break the cycle of poverty in our country.
“None of us have all the answers to life,” she concluded. “Money isn’t everything. Building character and defining life skills are the things that will truly carry you through life. If you don’t quite know what you are looking for, and this sounds challenging and scary at the same time, chances are the Precious Blood Volunteer program is for you. I would make the same choice a million times over!”
For more information on Cristo Rey volunteer opportunities or other Missionaries of the Precious Blood placements in Kansas City, visit www.preciousbloodvolunteers.org or contact Tim Deveney, volunteers@kcprovince.org; (816) 781-4344.[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

Walking on Holy Ground

 by Kara McNamara, Precious Blood Volunteer
When I left the orientation for the Precious Blood Volunteer program with my fellow volunteer, the wonderful Leah Yeo, I never could have imagined what would come next for me. Since that day in June, I can say that I’ve done some things that I never had done before and never expected that I would. I painted a good portion of the interior of a house, learned a smattering of Navajo, have gone off-roading, lived with nuns, cooked a cake in a pit in the ground, watched 500 hot air balloons take off, seen centuries-old Anasazi ruins, eaten homemade tortillas fresh off the fire, battled the altitude, and have begun to believe that the hour-long drive to Gallup isn’t so long after all.kara in desert web
I live in Crownpoint, New Mexico, in the Eastern Agency of the Navajo Nation. I am a Precious Blood Volunteer here, which can mean something different every day, depending on the needs of the community. Most days, I’m helping out as a teacher’s aide in the second and third grades at St. Bonaventure Mission School, which serves to provide a Catholic education to Navajo families. Other times, being a volunteer here means helping out around the parish: co-leading the high school religious education class, helping to run the clothes shop the church holds twice a month, doing maintenance for the parish hall, putting together the Sunday bulletin for Mass, and for a while, playing with and feeding the ten adorable puppies that were born on our property. In very rare instances, being a volunteer here has meant that you might find me delivering dinner to firefighters with Father Al Ebach during the “storm of the century,” moving a very heavy piano into the church with several burly men, or even pulling weeds (some things do grow in the desert).
Since Father Al exploded onto the scene last month, he’s had some great ideas that I’ve gotten to be a part of. The one that is closest to my heart is the “Backpack” program, which will distribute food to students in need at St. Bonaventure that will carry them through the weekend. In my role as a teacher’s aide with the little ones, I have witnessed too many signs that kids are doing without on the weekends. This program will discreetly send home a bag of food each Friday, enough to get the kids through until Monday. The food will all be things that a child would be able to prepare on his or her own, as some of these kids may not have a parent to depend on to make a meal. St. Bonaventure, affectionately called “St. Bon’s” in the community, is a really special place, a haven of sorts. The staff is incredible and the children are little miracles, each and every one (even the kids who won’t stay quiet in line when I tell them to). This program is an opportunity for me and the other community volunteers who will be involved to show our love and care for the children of this community. This project epitomizes the kind of work that I’d hoped I’d be doing out here—building relationships and meeting a practical need in the community with great love.
It can be hard to be here; it can be hard to be so isolated, to see such poverty, to witness so many broken dreams. It can be difficult to know how to comfort someone who’s experiencing something that I never have, to not be able to answer the tough questions. I have more questions than answers.
kara web
And yet I see God’s promise here too. The beauty of the land, the generous hearts of the people here, and the incredible quiet that it offers is really something. I wish everyone had the opportunity to see this place, because we all can learn something from the experience. Sister Maureen and Sister Michelle can teach us all to be flexible and to greet with open arms whatever life throws at us. Deacon Sherman and his wife Alice can teach us all how to be welcoming and generous with our hearts. Ella, who is the boss lady at our clothes shop, can teach us how to laugh at the little things. Rodel and Romina, a husband and wife duo that teaches religious education, can teach us about being humble and friendly. Some of the kids at St. Bonaventure could teach angels to be kind (other kids…could not). I have gotten to learn a little bit from everyone who has crossed my path here. Every person who comes to this community has gifts to share and lessons both to teach and learn. It’s a beautiful example of community in practice; for all that Crownpoint has some incredible challenges as well.
There is a quote that I’ve long kept in my heart because it applies to every place I’ve ever walked: “The first task in approaching another people, another culture, another religion, is to take off our shoes, for the place we are approaching is holy. Else we may find ourselves treading on people’s dreams. More serious still, we may forget that God was there before our arrival” (Kenneth Cragg). This idea of going about my placement here on the reservation with the dignity and sacredness of the Crownpoint community in mind is central to my sense of mission in this volunteer experience. This is surely a holy place.
Figuratively, I do my best every day to take off my shoes. From there, I let God take me on the adventure.
Precious Blood Volunteer Kara McNamara is a graduate of the University of Dayton.
kara in desert web