Oral histories of Mercy Sisters, Jesuits to go online

Oral histories of Mercy Sisters, Jesuits to go online

Sister Mary Kelly during an interview.The stories of the women and men in Detroit who followed their calling and helped build what is now University of Detroit Mercy are being told in a far-reaching and important new online archive being announced this week by the Detroit Mercy Libraries and Instructional Design Studio.

The Jesuit and Mercy History and Spirituality in Detroit project is the culmination of many years of work.

“This has been a long time coming,” said Dean of University Libraries and Instructional Technology Jennifer L. Dean. “This project started under my predecessor, Dean Emerita Margaret Auer, who thought it was important to collect the oral histories of the Sisters of Mercy and their contributions to Mercy College of Detroit and Detroit Mercy.”

Over the years, most of the Sisters of Mercy were interviewed for this project and those interviews were captured on video. They discussed their calling, their work and their lives. Later, the project was expanded to include local members of the Society of Jesus, or the Jesuits.

Jill Turner, an associate librarian who works at both the McNichols and Corktown campuses was on the committee and, Dean said, someone who never let the project fade away. Not during the search for funding, the painstaking work of transcribing all the interviews, the growing pains technological changes brought, and not even when a hard drive crash jeopardized the work that had been done.

“They trusted us to talk to us, and to me, that made it important we get it right,” Turner said. “This was a way to show how much we value our sponsoring organizations.”

One of the bonuses of the work, Turner said, was to see just how much influence the Religious Sisters of Mercy and the Jesuits had on the history of Detroit.

“This archive is also a history of Detroit,” Turner said. “When you look at the circles they traveled in, and what they did with their persistence and their calling. … I’m not Catholic, but I found their stories inspiring.”

“It is pretty amazing and pretty inspiring,” agreed Pat Higo, Archives and Special Collections librarian, who worked on the project too. “When the sisters tell their stories, we can see how their lives contributed to the mission of Sister Catherine McAuley and we can see what the religious societies have to offer the University today, all this time later.”

The work was funded in part by Faculty Research Awards from the University of Detroit Mercy Professors Union. Much of the interviewing, transcribing and editing work was aided by employees throughout the libraries and Instructional Design Studio.

A reception was held on Oct. 9.

The Jesuit and Mercy History and Spirituality in Detroit project will be available to anyone on the Archives and Special Collections pages that can be found at libraries.udmercy.edu.

– Original story by Ron Bernas. Follow Detroit Mercy on FacebookLinkedInTwitter and Instagram. Have a story idea? Let us know by submitting your idea.