My Dad Got Me to a Nunnery Page 4
survival strategy. For the mighty nuns, our obedience and servitude were crucial for the
institution’s economic survival. Recall a scene in the 1945 movie, The Bells of St. Mary’s,
which depicts two nuns, one washing a floor and another washing a stairwell. Now, that was
Hollywood really out of touch, romanticizing institutions run by people of the cloth. Never,
never in seven years did either Bob or I see a nun washing a floor or stairwell. We young yeomen could be counted on for washing the floors, stairways, toilets, dishes, or anything else
that we poor orphaned folk were directed to do. No one else toiled like this—or so we
fantasized. From the public school located diagonally across the street we could hear the
laughter and romping about their play yard. From our side of the street, the public school
surely seemed like a fun place. Surely, we must have been God’s pariahs.
of Catholicism, sins, and prayers
When we were new to St. Louis Home at five years old, Soeur St. Croix (Sister of the
Holy Cross) introduced us to the practice of the Roman Catholic faith, exclusively to saintly
readings. To me, this honorable role seemed to suit her well because she modeled what good
Catholic nuns ought to be doing every day. For example, SoeurSt.Croixtended to our daily
needs with distinction. She nurtured us along, with little if any strict discipline. She also
prepared us for the rigors of kindergarten with her charming colleague SoeurThèrese,another
excellent nun. Aside from my interminable yearning for my home and family, SoeurSt.Croix
made it possible for me to complacently acquiesce to my childhood destiny: an unknown time
interval at St. Louis Home. Besides, I was a budding bilingual kid with this lady who
bounced in and out of French and English, mostly because she had very little English, and I
had very little French. That mix would eventually change.
Most memorable to me was in reckoning how SoeurSt.Croixoversaw our having
received the most hallowed Catholic sacrament of the Holy Eucharist, also known as Holy
Communion. That was the Catholic Church’s formal way of inducting the little ones, usually
around age seven, among its ranks, toward a step higher than Baptism. It was normally
billed as the most joyous day of one’s life. Intriguing…maybe? White clothing, a solemn
Mass, and real eggs, home fries, and bacon for breakfast afterwards at our holy haven What a
astonishing departure from the day-to-day same old, same old.! Now, I knew that my “First
Holy Communion” was to become something well worth milking. Oh yes, the blessed sacrament of the Holy Eucharist proved an immensely blissful achievement for me. But
wait—there was a downside. To receive one’s First Holy Communion required many weeks
of planning for this momentously holy occasion. For starters, we rote -learned the Baltimore
Catechism to be sure we would be worthy of receiving this inscrutable sacrament. Yes, drill
and kill at will. Trust me. It was worth every sacred ejaculation we were taught to recite.
SoeurSt.Croixtaught us, even if by rote, to recite the Ten Commandments (the ones
Moses received on the mountain) in preparation for the blessed event of Holy Communion.
Receiving the Holy Eucharist (a.k.a. Holy Communion) via a very thin Necco wafer-shaped
white bread host, was the time when we would be forgiven for all our sins (even Original
Sin—the sin you really didn’t commit) from birth to the time of receiving this sacrament of
Communion. This provision of direct orders from the Pope happens only once in your life—
at Holy Communion; so exploit it for all it’s worth. Every two weeks thereafter, no matter
how discomforting, one had to come face-to-face about one’s sins with our convent chaplain,
Father Jalbert. The holy sacrament of Confession (now called Reconciliation) was designed
to confess the naughty things we committed that were punishable as venial sins. A
redemptive purgatory option awaited them, should the casual sinner die on the spot.—mortal
sinners were never alllowed this option . The escape clause, however, was there: just tell the
priest about your most lethal sins, and you will be forgiven. Not a bad deal.
We committed sins during those early years, of course, were not that serious—or so
we thought. Those were what the Catholic Church called venial sins. Another prerequisite for
having sinned was the peccadillo of lying (l les grands mensonges, les mentons, les mentréees)—like telling Dad we wanted him to treat us to a movie about Jesus or perhaps a
comedy, when our intention was to see a grizzly horror movie. Our Dad would go along with
our pretense, but he never approved of any cowboy or monster movies—a decent message in
retrospect about keeping us free of the ills of violence. We lied about things like that. Less
ethical about our behaviors was indulging in petty theft. As poor kids, we often engaged in
that jolly variety of sin. We routinely pilferred food and at times clothing from local
department stores. Dad did not steal to support us as far as we knew; yet we did filch from
others out of necessity on our own. We thought, that in order to compensate for Dad’s
shortcomings as a family provider, stealing from the wealthy was fair game. Think Victor
Hugo. Of course, to God, that excuse would carry no merit. A sin is a sin. Period.
There were, nonetheless, possibilities that more egregious sins could have been committed.
The distinction between venial sins and mortal sins were always a bit blurred to me because
we were taught that intent, not the actalone, was everything. If you sincerely thought you
committed a venial sin, then venial sin, it is. Ditto for mortal sins. Remember: only God
really knows, but you know when you’re trying to fake it. Should any of us Catholics visit a
Baptist church or a Jewish synagogue? Venial or mortal. Don’t risk it; we were told. More
complications yet in making the distinction surfaced as we learned about the “near occasion of
sin”—a really gray area, like thinking about committing a sin or setting ourselves up for a sin.
Each of these opportunities may have presented a sinful act to be determined between us and
God. This was indeed a tough judgment call for a kid.
Venial sins were the kinds of malfeasances that were easily forgiven; no time in hell is threatened. Such transgressions were what you might expect: disobeying adults, telling lies,
having nasty thoughts, or stealing small things (but returningthem was required for
forgiveness), or seeing things even by accident that would be forbidden by the Church,
including movies that were not suitable for honorable Catholic kids (this pre-dates the movie
rating system that we have today). It was not only a venial sin to lean your fanny against the
bench will kneeling in the convent chapel, doing so would also fetch you a thrashing back in
our convent quarters downstairs.
Stealing small change would be an example of a venial sin. Mind you, dying without
confessing to having stolen small change means that you will experience Purgatory, a lurid
place whose fires are the same as would be found in hell. The only difference, then, between
Purgatory and hell is that the latter is permanent; the former is temporary. We expected that
we suffer the pains of hell in Purgatory once we die until Judgment Day when the Purgatorial
venial sinners get to eventually ascend into the pearly gates of Heaven. Whe
n I was seven or
eight years old, I thought about that. I ruminated about my yielding to the devil’s temptation
that I take one, and only one coin from among the few I saw atop a stack of the Lewiston,
Maine DailyJournalnewspapers blocking the entrance to Bruno’s Variety Store on Main
Street. I swear that all I took was five cents, nothing more. That sleight of hand bought me a
fresh Hostess cake from a neighboring store. Yes, I had committed a venial sin. As a most
devout Catholic prone to frequent donning of the black and white garments of an altar server, I
dutifully confessed this evil deed. The priest, on pardoning the contrite sinner that I was,
reminded me that in order for me to gain forgiveness for my teeny weensy sin to come full circle, I would need to return the five cents to the good people at Bruno’s. I knew that he
would insist I do that. Return five cents? How could I do that? I was but a street kid of ten
years old, Hey, I already had eaten the Hostess cake it bought me. There was no way I would
have a nickel to spare—unless I stole another nickel from somewhere else. Not an option.
So, the matter remained in my heart and soul in limbo for the next ten years. A person of both
conscience and hardship, I eventually set out to make good on my sacred prayer of contrition.
I would look for Mr. Bruno himself as I had been more than eleven years old by this time,
nickel in hand. I was jubilant at the very thought that I could relay the news to a priest in a
confessional a couple of years later. Yet, I knew nothing of the inflation a few years could
have on a nickel. Too late. No more Bruno’s. They had gone out of business. Oh, my God.
Purgatory! I must have caused Bruno to go bankrupt. I had no idea of what I had caused.
There could be no forgiveness, for I waited too long. To this day, I think about that five cents
debt, plus interest of course. If only I could plant perhaps a hundred yellow roses on. Bruno’s
grave somewhere. Don’t ever think venial sins don’t matter much. My misconduct cost me
profound guilt.
Mortal sins, (les grands mensonges) the momentously reprehensible ones, would
come, for big-time sinners, later in life comparable to murder and adultery. Yes, that
ghastly! Some of us innocent folk during our formative years were prone to committing a
transgression such as missing a Catholic Mass on Sunday or eating meat on Fridays (prior to
1965). Other mortal sins committed against Catholic doctrine might include touching the host
with anything but one’s tongue (no chewing it and no using your rosary bead’s cross to unleash it from sticking to the roof of your mouth). Perish the thought of dropping the host on
the chapel floor. Woah!? Oh My God!? Imagine committing a mortal sin just as you leave
the Communion rail—it was possible! To make good on the honor and distinction of
continuing to receive the Holy Eucharist, mortal sins would need to have the blessing of
forgiveness by the good chaplain through confession. Whether a mortal sin or a venial sin
was confessed, there was always a requirement that one recites an “act of contrition” to earn
God’s forgiveness as demonstrated by the priest’s granting of absolution—a pardon for those
sins. Mortal sins became sort of public in two ways: either because you were seen tending to
a lengthy penance of prayer after confession or—if you failed to confess the mortal sin—you
did not receive Holy Communion. So, everyone knew your unholy business. If you took
Holy Communion while you had a mortal sin in your soul, that would become another mortal
sin. Don’t risk it!
One would reasonably suppose that nuns committed sins, too, although at the time I
doubted they ever did while I was in their company. Years later, I reckoned that Soeur Boulé
to be introduced later on, must have sinned the most as you’ll deduce from her profile I have
featured in a subsequent chapter. Most nuns did beat us up a bit—psychological and mental
abuse to be sure. Such abuse must have assuredly been sinful. Yet, if one is contrite about
one’s sins in seeking forgiveness, especially for those who trespassed against us, a few fair
questions may be posed, “Did the nuns confess their nasty peccadilloes? If so, why did most
of these nuns continue those wicked acts over and over again ? Were they granted the priest’s
absolution no matter when or what?” I think the nuns used cuss words a lot, too, but those words were uttered sort of in the
“near occasion of sin” category. That is to say, they uttered sacred words in vain deliberately
using French malapropisms as in calènewhen they really wanted to say calice( chalice—the
gold-plated goblet containing the sacred wine/blood of Christ). That would not fare well with
the holiest of holies They would say t abernoucheinstead of the most holy tabernacle
( tabernacle, the brass box on the alter containing the sacred host and wine). I learned from
an English subtitle in a Québec film that the exclamation, “ ÉTabernacle” translates to “Oh!
Fuck.” Maybe there was more to those nuns than I credit them for! They would exclaim
Calvainse! in anger rather than to utter Calvaire, (Calvary, the hill outside of Jerusalem
where Christ was crucified. Their liberal use of mon Dieu(my God) was applied to just about
any exclamation of surprise. Though the latter example may be God’s call about whether that
was sinful, it seems to me that the other examples come close to what were indeed the very
near occasion of sin.
Above all else, the Catholic Church was severe about sin, especially mortal sin. I
accepted the tenets of the Church and the teachings from my Baltimore catechism without
question well into my adulthood. SoeurSt.Croix(the out-of-classroom caregiver) and Soeur
Cantin (the first grade teacher) were the genesis for my blind commitment—which
brings us back to Saint Marguerited’Youville, founder of lesSoeursGrisesand patron saint
to those in opposition to church authority. No grey nun ever told us about their founder, St.
d’Youville’s angle on blind commitment to the Church. Some irony! The practice of Roman
Catholicism in the 1950’s prior to the papacy of Pope John XXIII was clearly defined. In the
fifties, one was required to attend the Catholic Mass, which was celebrated entirely in Latin, at least each Sunday (no Saturday afternoon credit). We all said grace before every meal,
confessed sins every other Saturday, performed Easter duty, abstained from meat every
Friday, and we prayed at every opportunity or inspiration. Yes, perfectly righteous.
There were other Catholic rituals from time to time. One was the fifteen-minute
benediction service. This service always took place in the convent chapel on Friday and
Sunday afternoons. It wasn’t much: a blessing, a couple of prayers, shaking holy water
among the faithful, and circulating the air with malodorous incense. Sometimes we recited
the rosary at benediction—that was a half-hour by itself. I would sometimes pose the
question to others more knowledgeable than me about whether afternoon benedictions still
exist. Don’t know.
Yet, I wonder. There were rites of Catholicism that we did not participate in. For
example, “Holy Orders,” which would be the rite for the ordination of priests, “extreme
unction” (a deathbed blessing) weddings, and funerals never took place at our chapel. I
presume that’s beca
use no one entered the priesthood, got married, or died at the convent.
Actually, I did get to attend my first-ever funeral back in 1958. It was the funeral mass for my
Mom; some initiation!
For orphanage kids, practices of the Catholic faith were significantly enhanced—
sometimes to extremes. The nuns, not the priest, taught us our prayers and religious
celebrations. Perhaps that was part of their required pedagogy of love and rapture of the opus
Dei In fact, the nuns also taught us every detail about the rites and histrionics of serving the
priest at Holy Mass services. They were there to supervise the quality of us altar servers each Tuesday and Thursday, besides the Sunday masses each week at 6:00 a.m. As an altar boy, I
served those masses nearly every week; that’s three masses and two benedictions plus a few
laps around the black plastic-beaded rosary each week. Reciting the rosary meant
regurgitating one “Our Father,” fifty “Hail Mary’s,” and five “Glory Be’s,” which would
collectively consume thirty minutes or more of prayer all by themselves. As an altar boy, I
managed my mission of staging prayers with the priest conducted entirely in Latin. It was a
sort of recital, a performance. Heck, I can still recite the opening Latin prayer for the Catholic
mass, Ad Deumquilaetificatieuventemmeam[close to God who delights and protects us].
Impressed? The Catholic Church refers to this sacrament as the Sacrifice of the Mass. A
sacrifice it was! For the masses and all the extras, I received twenty-five cents from Father
Jalbert every other week that I served. I was deferentially appreciative.
We youngsters entered the chapel from the sacristy—the priest’s chambers behind the
altar. Priests, like us parishioners, nowadays ceremoniously enter from the rear of the
Church. The local vernacular was not to become the medium of prayer at Mass until Pope
John XXIII’s Vatican-II, a decade after I left St. Louis Home. Today, altar servers don’t
recite prayers—in English or otherwise. Nor do they prepare the priest’s water, wine, or
Communion in the grandiose detail we altar boys did back then. For the faithful to receive
Communion, they proceeded in an orderly line down the center aisle to the chapel-wide