Jane Edward Schilling: Difference between revisions
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| caption = Sister Jane Edward Schilling, CSJ |
| caption = Sister Jane Edward Schilling, CSJ |
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| birth_name = Nancy Schilling |
| birth_name = Nancy Schilling |
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| birth_date = |
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1930|10|08}} |
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| birth_place = Minocqua, Wisconsin |
| birth_place = Minocqua, Wisconsin |
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| death_date = |
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2017|09|13|1930|10|08}} |
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| death_place = St. Louis, Missouri |
| death_place = St. Louis, Missouri |
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| nationality = American |
| nationality = American |
Revision as of 16:36, 5 January 2018
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Jane Edward Schilling | |
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Born | Nancy Schilling October 8, 1930 Minocqua, Wisconsin |
Died | September 13, 2017 St. Louis, Missouri | (aged 86)
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | Educator, social activist |
This sandbox is in the article namespace. Either move this page into your userspace, or remove the {{User sandbox}} template. ““Sister Jane Schilling, C.S.J..”” (October 8, 1930-September 13, 2017), activist, historian, and university administrator, was founding Vice President of Martin University in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Early Years
Born Nancy Mary Schilling in 1930 in the lake resort town of Minocqua, Wisconsin, Sister Jane Schilling was the eldest of five children of Lyle Franklin Schilling, a dentist, and wife, Rosalie Julia Wolk Schilling, a homemaker.[1] [2] Early on, Nancy excelled in athletics and scholarship. Finding that her high school did not offer the courses she needed to take in order to become a dentist like her father, she moved to Green Bay, Wisconsin to live with two aunts to attend St. Joseph’s Academy for junior and senior high school. During this period, she found that she had a vocation to follow in the footsteps of her teachers and become a Sister of St. Joseph of Carondolet.[1][2][3]
During her formation with the Sisters of St. Joseph, she received the name Sister Jane Edward, a combination of her younger sister’s and brother’s names. An avid scholar, she received her bachelor’s degree in European and American History at Fontbonne University in Saint Louis and her Master’s of Ancient History at Loyola University in Chicago. Following her first assignment as a teacher in St. Rita’s School in St. Louis, she was next assigned to St. Matthew’s School in the inner city. Here, she developed a passion for civil rights and social justice. She assisted with curriculum development for students at the Saint Louis hospital for black residents, Homer G. Phillips, and assisted in ministering to ex-convicts at nearby Dismas House, established by Father Charles "Dismas" Clark and Morris Shenker.[1][2]
Holy Angels Years
In 1964, Sister Jane was assigned to teach at Holy Angels Catholic School in Indianapolis, Indiana, a school that had transitioned to a majority black student population. She embraced this role with high energy, establishing a drum and bugle corps. After she was named principal, she engaged in implementing educational reforms of the time, such as open classrooms, right/left brain teaching, and psychomotor approaches for teaching reading.[4][5][6]
Shortly after her arrival at Holy Angels, Sister Jane’s life was radically changed when a new Associate Pastor at Holy Angels Parish, Father Boniface Hardin, arrived on the scene. The two shared a commitment to education and social change, a bond that created a partnership that would last for the remainder of their lives.
Working together, Sister Jane and Father Hardin became activists in church and community reform. They fought police brutality and targeting of black citizens, de facto school segregation, lack of representation of black clergy and traditions within the Catholic Church, poverty, and unfair housing practices. A key focus became the fight to prevent a major highway, Interstate 65, from bifurcating the predominately black northwest neighborhood surrounding Holy Angels Parish.[7][8]
When police pressure on the Archbishop of Indianapolis, Paul Schulte, triggered a decision to remove Father Hardin from Holy Angels Parish in 1969, parishioners rose up and staged a nationally publicized demonstration in Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral where the Archbishop was presiding at Easter services.[9][10] Although the Archbishop rescinded his order, Father Hardin left Holy Angels to found Martin Center, an educational and social justice center, at the close of 1969. Within a year, Sister Jane received permission from her religious community to work full-time at Martin Center as Education Coordinator.[5][6]
The Martin Center Years
Martin Center was named for Martin Luther King, Jr. and St. Martin de Porres, patron saint of poor and mixed race people in the Catholic Church. Its mission evolved from an initial goal of educating clergy and white people about discriminatory attitudes and practices to include celebrating black cultural heritage and engaging black community members in activism and self-identity. While Father Hardin traveled as a speaker and consultant to raise funds for the Center, Sister Jane became the day-to-day administrator.
Drawing on her background as a history scholar, Sister Jane did the research and production of designs and materials for workshops, speeches, and activities of Martin Center. Soon, the mission of the Center expanded to include the Martin Sickle Cell Center, which received major national funding to educate the community and screen for this disease, and the Afro-American Institute, which focused on African and African-American culture and achievements.[11] Sister Jane served as Director of Community Education at the Sickle Cell Center from 1970 to 1977 and received its 25 Years of Dedication to Sickle Cell and Visionary Leadership Awards.[12]
Through the Afro-American Institute, Martin Center housed a library of materials and artifacts, created and acquired by Sister Jane and Father Hardin. They also produced a regular scholarly periodical, the Afro-American Journal (1973-78);[13] two full-length TV documentaries—The Kingdom Builders and For Love of Freedom[14]--for the local NBC affiliate in Indianapolis; a weekly radio program, The Afro-American in Indiana (1971-1991) for WIAN, the local public radio station; and a weekly television show, Afro-American (1974-79), for public television. Sister Jane co-hosted these programs and was the major researcher behind the productions.
As Martin Center expanded its educational offerings to the community, it collaborated with Indiana University Purdue University-Indianapolis to create courses for college credit. This venture led Sister Jane and Father Hardin to found Indianapolis’s only minority serving institution, Martin University.
Martin University Years
From the start, Sister Jane’s role in the creation and growth of Martin University was chief academic officer, strategist, and educational developer. As Founding Vice President for Academic Affairs, she was a key voice in articulating the philosophy behind the institution, drawing on the concept of “andragogy” advanced by Malcolm Knowles. The approach emphasized drawing on the strengths and past experience of adult learners, the major population of the university. Through her hiring decisions and curriculum and faculty development efforts, Sister Jane collaborated with Father Hardin to become the guiding force behind the school’s educational direction.
Sister Jane presided over Academic Affairs at Martin University from its early beginnings with a handful of students in 1977 as Martin Center College, through 1979 as Martin College became a separate entity from Martin Center, through 1990, when the addition of graduate programs enabled the change to Martin University, a school with nearly 1000 students. She was the key architect of successful accreditation and expansion proposals to the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (changed in 2014 to the Higher Learning Commission). She became known at Martin for her sense of humor and the compassion she showed students through acts such as serving soup to those who came directly from work to classes.
While Vice President of Martin University, Sister Jane participated in numerous initiatives within the Indianapolis community, including serving on the Crispus Attucks Museum Committee and acting as consultant and workshop facilitator for the Indianapolis Public Schools. She continued to guide the Martin Center, serving as its Executive Director from 1984 to 1988.
Sister Jane received a number of Martin University Awards. These included the Mary McLeod Bethune Award and the Martin University Board of Trustees Wind Under Our Wings Award. In 2005, she received the Honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Martin University. After 30 years of service, Sister Jane retired from Martin University in 2007. She died on September 13, 2017 at Nazareth Living House, Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondolet, St. Louis.
Community Awards
WIAN-FM Outstanding Service Award Leadership in Education Award, Indianapolis Education Association
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Drum Major Award, Indiana Christian Leadership Conference
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. 1995 Individual Award, Madame Walker Institute, Indianapolis
Diamond Award, United to Serve America
Service to the Black Community, King-Walker-Wilkins-Young Awards Committee
Paul Harris Fellow
Heroism Award, American Red Cross
Sagamore of the Wabash, Governor of Indiana
Role Modelship Award, Wheeler Boys and Girls Club
Mother of the Year, Nur Islamic Center, Indianapolis
Tribute to Sr. Jane Schilling. 2015 Martin University Founders Day Luncheon https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pBVrj1JPH8g
Father Kenneth Taylor, “Sister Jane Schilling: A Model of Faith,” Indianapolis Recorder, September 28, 2017.
‘Infusing African American History and Culture,” Indianapolis Recorder, June 19, 1993. (speaker at conference—quoted)
“Martin Center Program to Combat Race Friction,” Indianapolis Recorder, October 24, 1970.
‘Waste Treatment Site Defeated,” Indianapolis Recorder, August 6, 1988. (protested against)
Duane Humphrey, “Never Too Old to Learn,” Indianapolis Recorder, November 11, 1997. (older adults in college).
“Sharing Our Vision,” Indianapolis Recorder, September 25, 1998. (The Founder and Visionary Award of Sickle Cell Center).
References
- ^ a b c Tribute to Sr. Jane Schilling. 2015 Martin University Founders Day Luncheon https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pBVrj1JPH8g
- ^ a b c Fern (Snooks) Winger, telephone interview, October 31, 2014, digital tape and typescript, Father Boniface Hardin Collection, Indiana Historical Society.
- ^ Jane Jelinski, written responses to interview questions, November 9, 2014, Father Boniface Hardin Collection, Indiana Historical Society.
- ^ Ferdye Bryant, Margaret Graves, and Doris Parker, “A New Journey of Hope: Holy Angels Catholic Church, 1903-2003” (Indianapolis: Holy Angels Catholic Church, 2003), 36.
- ^ a b Sr. Pat Quinn, CSJ, telephone interview, April 29, 2015, digital tape and typescript, Father Boniface Hardin Collection, Indiana Historical Society.
- ^ a b "Sister Jane Edward Schilling," biography, Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondolet, St. Louis Province, http://www.csjsl.org/news/sister-jane-edward-schilling-1930-2017.php
- ^ “CORE Threatens Protest in Planned Highway Controversy,” Indianapolis Recorder, February 10, 1968.
- ^ “Seek Lawsuit to Halt Construction of Highway thru Negro Community,” Indianapolis Recorder, February 3, 1968.
- ^ "150 Walk Out in a Protest at Indianapolis Cathedral,” The New York Times, April 7, 1969.
- ^ "Demonstrators Protest Treatment of Priest,” Indianapolis Recorder, April 12, 1969.
- ^ "Martin Center’s success is vehicle by Father Boniface,” Indianapolis Recorder, March 11, 1972
- ^ Father Kenneth Taylor, “Sister Jane Schilling: A Model of Faith,” Indianapolis Recorder, September 28, 2017. http://www.indianapolisrecorder.com/religion/article_bb7767ce-a454-11e7-8ce7-13f0c08e208e.html
- ^ Collections of the Afro-American Journal are in the Indiana University libraries, the Indiana State Library, the Indianapolis Public Library, and the Boniface Hardin Collection, Indiana Historical Society.
- ^ Both films are available in their original Betamax format and DVD. Father Boniface Hardin Collection, Indiana Historical Society.