WASHINGTON (CNS) — A latest documentary on Sister Thea Bowman shines a light-weight on her life and work as an advocate for racial justice and intercultural understanding.
The concept for the documentary got here to Franciscan Sister Judith Ann Zielinski, who wrote and produced the film, after the 2020 death of George Floyd while in police custody in Minneapolis.
“I believed, I actually have to do something, what can I do?” and “Thea Bowman popped into my head. She was a Franciscan sister, a lady who had been fighting systemic racism in her own time and in her own way.”
The documentary is a comprehensive take a look at Sister Thea, the primary African American member of the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration and one in all six Black Catholics often called a “Servant of God.”
“She was a Franciscan sister, a lady who had been fighting systemic racism in her own time and in her own way.”
It also makes a case for her sainthood and for contemporary spirituality, Sister Zielinski said.
“Going Home Like a Shooting Star: Thea Bowman’s Journey to Sainthood,” comes from NewGroup Media and the Diocese of Jackson, Mississippi. Together with archival media of Sister Thea, the documentary features interviews together with her colleagues, friends, fellow Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration, former students and African American scholars, priests and bishops.
The one-hour film, a component of the Interfaith Broadcasting Commission’s fall documentary season, will begin airing on ABC stations nationwide Oct. 2.
Redemptorist Father Maurice Nutt, associate producer and biographer of Sister Thea, called her an “apostle for racial reconciliation in our church today.”
Noting that she died in 1990, Father Nutt said the film would make her known to a latest generation. He also said her life resonates with much of what younger Catholics are searching for within the church — someone who speaks truth to power.
“Her call for justice, justice for the roles of ladies, justice for many who experience regardless of what ethnicity, oppression or hatred” speaks to “us as a church being the body of Christ,” he said.
He also said her call for people to return together and share their gifts is pivotal message to place a stop to “a number of the racial hatred that we see in our society even today,” Father Nutt told Catholic News Service.
Redemptorist Father Maurice Nutt, associate producer and biographer of Sister Thea, called her an “apostle for racial reconciliation in our church today.”
Bishop Joseph R. Kopacz of Jackson, Mississippi, petitioner for Sister’s Thea’s cause and executive producer of the documentary, said the film “speaks the necessity for the church to never surrender that desire to be more united and more universal.”
He said Sister Thea had a “timeless message” that included a desire for greater harmony, unity, racial understanding and reconciliation and “being the body of Christ in a more faithful way.”
The bishop also remarked on the depth of her call, describing her as gifted, charismatic, prophetic and a “dynamo of energy.”
Sister Thea was born Bertha Bowman in 1937 in Yazoo City, Mississippi, to Dr. Theon Bowman, a physician and Mary Esther Bowman, a teacher. Her family moved to Canton where she encountered the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration at Holy Child Jesus School.
“Her spirituality, her witness, her prophetic spirit resonates with us today. It’s hard to even speak of Thea previously tense.”
At age 9, Bertha became Catholic and at age 15, she left home for La Crosse, Wisconsin, to attend the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration’s highschool, later joining the community and taking the name Sister Mary Thea.
Sister Thea went on to receive her doctorate from The Catholic University of America and returned to La Crosse to show English and linguistics at Viterbo University.
Her parents’ deteriorating health called her back to Canton, where she led the Diocese of Jackson’s first Office for Intercultural Affairs. Her gifts for preaching, singing and teaching led her to countless speaking engagements across the USA.
In 1984, she was diagnosed with breast cancer. She died March 30, 1990, at age 52.
She was declared a “Servant of God” in May 2018 and the U.S. bishops voiced their consent to her canonization cause at their Nov. 2018 fall general meeting in Baltimore.
Sister Eileen McKenzie, president of the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration, said Sister Thea’s canonization would “delay the spirituality and the gift of the Black Catholic Church” and “give courage to our African American brothers and sisters who often don’t have platform.”
It could even be significant for her order. One in every of the first values of Franciscans is continual conversion, Sister McKenzie explained, noting that Sister’s Thea’s canonization would call the community into deeper conversion.
“Her spirituality, her witness, her prophetic spirit resonates with us today. It’s hard to even speak of Thea previously tense. It’s as if she’s with us today,” Father Nutt said.
“Going Home Like a Shooting Star” was funded partially by the Catholic Communication Campaign. Streaming opportunities might be announced by the Diocese of Jackson. To look at a preview of the film, visit: https://youtu.be/tkzhnKG7mxc