In Memory of Her: Rev. Dr. Michele
Birch-Conery
(Aug 3, 1939-Oct 11, 2020)
Rev. Dr. Michele Birch-Conery’s
earthly life spun round charisms connected to language, storytelling, prayer,
and to serving others as a nurse, nun, teacher, priest and bishop.
She was born in Vancouver, British
Columbia, Canada in 1939, on August 3rd, the feast day of St. Lydia,
who made her living dyeing, spinning and selling rare and expensive royal
purple cloth. The process like life was challenging. According to the New York
Times:
“To make Syrian purple,
marine snails were collected by the thousands. They were then boiled for days
in giant lead vats, producing a terrible odor. The snails, though, aren’t
purple to begin with. The craftsmen were harvesting chemical precursors from
the snails that, through heat and light, were transformed into the valuable
purple dye.”
Lydia met the apostle, Paul
and, through her conversion, she drew many Europeans to Christianity.
Many of us have witnessed how
Michele possessed the rare gift of waiting on the soul and of transforming its wisdom
into words, into the royal purple cloth of a radical hospitality for difference,
and compassionate action for change in systems of oppression and injustice. Some
of her favorite sayings were “Patience in the Spirit” and “Holy Spirit back-up
plans.” Michele’s faith was well-honed and she had the flare of a true artist. Here
is the opening stanza of Michele’s last poem, When Grief Opens the Doors to the Sacred published by Suny Press in Unruly Catholic Nuns: Sisters’ Stories in
2017.
When grief opens the doors to
the Sacred,
we come to the thinning
seasons, summer to Autumn, and then
to
winter
when eternity enters our awareness
keenly. We diminish
somewhat,
within the great spaces
of our universe, while parts
of our planet enter a resting and
dying
time a fallow time to
prepare, without apology, the
renewals of Spring.
Our dying, at any time of
year, is like this. It is as if we
see
through to and reach into
eternity, even as our bodies
surrender
to their necessities and then
weaken toward the moment
of their last breathing. We
are held and embraced by
spaciousness
Beyond ourselves. It is time
we are slowly coming to know
Michele’s birth mother was
Rose Conery, a single mom. She was fostered by a loving family and adopted at
four years old. Sadly, her adoptive parents were abusive of Michele; however,
this experience influenced her to become a tenacious diplomat and lover of fun.
Michele attended two convent
boarding schools and became an accomplished pianist. After high school
graduation and work as a nurse’s aide for three years, Michele registered for a
three-year (‘59-‘62) registered nurses program at Holy Cross Hospital in
Calgary, Alberta.
Michele writes that she was
“privileged to be class president those three years and delighted in
experiencing the tremendous loyalty nurses have for each other, their
open-mindedness and excellence in nursing.”
After graduation, she worked in
general duty nursing at St. Martin’s Hospital in Oliver, BC for a year. “It was
a 40-bed hospital and I loved it,” she said, “because I got to do everything. I
was generally the ‘in charge’ nurse on whatever shift I worked and I organized
staff to attend to a variety of tasks. It was an excellent experience.”
At the end of the school year
in August 1963, Michele entered the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy
Names of Jesus and Mary (SNJM). Four years later, she completed a BA with an
emphasis in Education and taught Grade 7 in Everett, WA for one year, and then
grade 10 at Holy Names Academy in Seattle.
“By that time,” she writes,
“it had become apparent that I was more suited to teaching at post-secondary
levels.”
Because of her writing
skills, in 1970, Michele was invited by the Creative Writing Department at the
University of Montana to pursue a Master of Fine Arts Degree in the genres of
poetry, fiction and drama. She majored in poetry and completed the degree in
1973.
The following year Michele
left the SNJM and Montana for the University of Iowa in Iowa City. For the next
10 years, as she worked on her Ph.D. in English Literature, she supported
herself working as a nurse, including several years with the ‘Flying Nurses,’
an organization that provided temporary working assignments to under-staffed
hospitals in the U.S.A.
In 1985, Michele completed
her Ph.D. in English Literature with emphases in Modern British and American
Literature, Feminist Literary Criticism and Poetry. It included work on the
History of Literature, specifically philosophical and literary criticism of
current prevailing artistic practices.
In 1985, Michele returned to
British Columbia “to make it my home,” she said. Two years later she became a
professor of English Literature and Women’s Studies at North Island College in
Port Alberni on Vancouver Island (where she lived for twenty years after a
reunion with her birth mother). She was involved in outreach by television to
the surrounding areas, which included special services to First Nations
communities.
Michele writes: “I was
engaged in TV teaching to the entire province by way of a college network run
from the University of British Columbia campus. Of special note is my
participation in the province-wide Status of Women Committee for the College
system. After several years of intensive meetings and labor, we introduced a sexual
harassment policy that was accepted by the college union. As a result, the
number of harassment cases dropped to nearly zero.”
She retired from North Island
College in August 2007.
Michele recounts, “It is
evident from my numerous nursing assignments that I spread my wings and flew
far and wide. Twenty years in the professorate gave me similar experience
intellectually, creatively and procedurally. Of special importance was the
outreach to remote areas of the province by way of small learning centers and
television teaching. “
In 2004, Michele was ordained
a deacon in a ceremony on the Danube River in an initiative known as Roman
Catholic Women Priests (RCWP). In July 2005, she was the first woman ordained a
priest in Canada in a ceremony on the St. Lawrence River. A lot of publicity
from the Canadian press followed. Despite the challenges of chronic illness,
Michele established three faith communities on Vancouver Island with members of
RCWP. She companioned many of the first women and one man in the program of
preparation for priesthood. Michele joined the Association of Roman Catholic
Women Priests (ARCWP) in 2013.
In 2014, Michele moved to
Windsor, Ontario where she ministered with ARCWP priest Barbara Billey with the Heart of Compassion International Faith
Community, and in 2015, after ten years as a priest, she was ordained a bishop
within the same association. Michele's role as a bishop was one of the
highlights of her life.
In Fall 2019, after the
recurrence of an extreme illness with a syndrome from her youth, Michele wrote,
“And so I approach the closing of my life with a heart full of gratitude for my
life and for the lives of all of you. I send you my heartfelt prayers for lives
of peace, hope and justice.”
In her last weeks of life,
Michele was tended by members of her Windsor faith community and wonderful, local
health providers in their Church house in Rhea Lalonde’s apartment alongside
the Detroit River. She died peacefully and was received into the fullness of
Divine Mystery in Hospice at Hotel Dieu Grace Hospital (the same room in which
Barbara’s mother had died two years prior) on the Canadian Thanksgiving weekend
in the early evening of October 11. Rhea and Barbara along with Brittany, a
Hospice nurse bathed, anointed and shrouded Michele. After Barbara read Luke
23:44; 24:1-10 (Jesus' burial), a smile appeared on Michele’s face. She already seemed to be enjoying her new life
with our Holy One held in the Cloud of Witnesses and in the Communion of Saints.
Special thanks to the women
of Heart of Compassion who were intimately involved in the care of Michele for
many years and at the end of her life: Rhea Lalonde, Sharon Beneteau, Jennifer
Harvey, Marg McCaffery-Piche, Kathy Worotny, Suzanne M, and Barbara Billey. Gratitude,
too, for Jeni Marcus, Karen Kerrigan and Sydney Condray, priests with arcwp who
kept the prayers flowing in liturgy and outside, as well as the prayers,
support and love rendered by members of our international women priest
movement.
Michele’s Mass of
Resurrection will be on Sunday, Nov 1, 2020 at 2 pm by Zoom.
Written by Janice Sevre-Duszynska and Barbara Billey,
priests ARCWP from information dictated by Michele last year to Marg
McCaffery-Piche.
Michele’s memoir, Bird Woman: Memoir of a Migrant
Mystic, will be published posthumously in 2021.
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