Sr. Marguerite Bartz - LWMAB
by Lewis Williams OFS
Title
Sr. Marguerite Bartz - LWMAB
Artist
Lewis Williams OFS
Medium
Painting - Drawing, Pastels, Watercolor, Acrylic And Oils
Description
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Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament (SBS) Sister Marguerite’s home was the small Dine’ community of Navajo, NM. Sculpted red sandstone and eroded volcanic outcrops intermingle in this high desert, windswept land. Marguerite followed her orders founder St. Katherine Drexel’s call to this land 10 years ago, serving the local Navajo from St. Berard’s mission, supported by the Franciscan of St. Michael, AZ. Her beloved call was to educate local children and adults in faith. Many challenges faced her and the people, ranging from poverty, poor nutrition, diabetes, alcohol and substance abuse, suicide and more. Yet she was fed by finding Christ in this new family, walking with them as best she could in ‘Hozhoni’, the Beauty Way. On the eve of All Saints day, she went to bed. Very early the next morning, she heard an intruder. The 18 year old burglar, apparently surprised by her presence, reacted and brutally murdered her. Not at church the next morning, one of her sister friends went to check on her, and found her body.
Viewing herself as a wounded healer, flawed but following her call, she was joyful when at times she sensed herself being used as God’s tool. In service to others, she saw herself in reflection of the Eucharist; as bread taken, blessed, broken and given. In life and in death, it is abundantly evident to those who knew her.
In this image, as a sign of her holiness, I sought a unique aura of light (a halo). She walked in two worlds, so images that blended these kept coming to me in prayer.
Eventually, the idea of a Navajo home, a traditional hogan came to me. The SBS sister’s have a hogan at their Desert House of Prayer, and this was often used by Marguerite. The opening in the roof of the hogan became the light that encompasses her head. She wears a favorite vest. The symbols above her head are from a Navajo woven rug, the symbol to me emphasizing fours and threes; the four sacred directions, mountains, seasons, etc… of the Dine’, and the three crosses within the three diamonds indicative of how she lived as a Catholic within the world of the people she loved so much. The idea of the Holy Trinity was powerful to her. The border color is turquoise.
b. July 31, 1945 - d. November 1, 2009
Uploaded
March 9th, 2016
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