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Sister Antona Ebo feted as example of living the Gospel message

Presentation honored Franciscan Sister of Mary for her ongoing work in racial justice

Come. Listen. Live. Witness.

Those are the words by which Sister Mary Antona Ebo continues to live and those by which she was celebrated at a presentation July 30 at the Missouri History Museum in Forest Park.

Music, poetry and acting, peppered with photos and past video interviews with the Franciscan Sister of Mary and civil rights icon, were woven into a nearly two-hour program to recognize Sister Ebo. She's most famous for her role in the 1965 march in Selma, Ala., for voting rights for blacks, but also known for her groundbreaking ministry as a woman religious and in health care.

The celebration also was timed with the History Museum's exhibit on the civil rights movement in St. Louis, which runs through April 2018.

The 93-year-old guest of honor was unable to be present, and instead watched the event at home via livestream with a small group of family and friends. Throughout the program the crowd cheered her, with some yelling out "Ebo!" as they turned toward the video camera to greet Sister Ebo at home.

Just as important was the message of how the local community must stay engaged in the movement for racial justice post-Ferguson, and doing so through Sister Ebo's example — which is brightly illuminated by her Catholic faith.

"This was all about demonstrating the completeness of her life," said Philip Deitch, a longtime friend of Sister Ebo's who organized the program. Her example doesn't solely lie in the the moments at Selma, he said, but also through her leadership roles in health care and even within her religious community.

"You don't get to sit back and say 'I've done enough,'" Deitch said. "If there's still an issue that needs work and you can do something — do something. None of us have the right to sit back and say we've done enough, and that's what I have learned from her."

Sister Ebo was a trailblazer in many aspects. She was among the first group of African-Americans to enter the Sisters of St. Mary (now Franciscan Sisters of Mary) in 1946. She continued that in her ministry in hospital administration, joining then-segregated St. Mary's Infirmary in St. Louis. She later became administrator of St. Clare Hospital in Baraboo, Wis., becoming the first African-American to lead a hospital in the state of Wisconsin.

Over the years, she became involved in interfaith work and other social justice issues. In 2014, she visited Ferguson after the death of Michael Brown, in which she told others that they must "raise the rug up and look at what's under the rug" in Ferguson.

Several videos of Sister Ebo speaking in the past decade, which were shown at the program, demonstrated that her words are just as relevant today.

"My favorite words out of Isaiah 55 are 'come, listen, live and witness,'" she said in a 2006 awards ceremony. "Those were the words that were represented when we as a group went to Selma. ... We choose life for ourselves and our people and that's what it's all about. The call was to come to listen to one another — that's where our unity comes from. By knowing one another, (to) listen to one another, and then bring forth new life."

Father Art Cavitt of the St. Charles Lwanga Center, who spoke at the History Museum event, said that Sister Ebo encompasses "all the tenets of the Gospel. It's coming, it's listening, it's acting, it's living, it's testifying. It's keeping God in the picture as we integrate practically what it is we're going to do for justice and in education and equality and all those things."

Others must live up to what Jesus calls us to do in spreading the Gospel message, which has always been Sister Ebo's example, said Frederick and Teresa Scurloch, friends of Sister Ebo's from her home parish, St. Matthew Parish in the Ville neighborhood of north St. Louis. Members of the St. Matthew and several other nearby parishes sang at the event.

"She lives up to what Jesus told us to do — to go into the world and show love to our brothers and sisters," Frederick Scurloch said. "She embraces everybody. She's never left anyone out. If you just talk to her for a minute, this is a glimpse of what Sister Ebo truly is. She is an example of what God wants us to be." 

Social justice conference

The inaugural Sister Antona Ebo Social Justice Conference will take place from 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 30, at the Cardinal Rigali Center in Shrewsbury.

Rev. Starsky Wilson, former co-chair of the Ferguson Commission, president and CEO of the Deaconness Foundation and pastor of St. John's UCC, will be the keynote speaker.

The conference also will feature workshops on the death penalty, voice of the poor, human trafficking, care for God's creation, school-to-prison pipeline, health and mental health and immigration. Some workshops will be offered in Spanish.

The event is a collaboration among the archdiocesan Peace and Justice Commission, Catholic Charities, St. Vincent de Paul Society, Office of Laity and Family Life, Catholic Youth Apostolate, St. Charles Lwanga Center, Office of Hispanic Ministry, Office of Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs and the Catholic Education Office.

To learn more, contact Marie Kenyon at (314) 792-7062 or email [email protected]. 

>> Civil rights exhibit at Missouri History Museum

"#1 In Civil Rights: The African American Freedom Struggle in St. Louis" features the history of the local civil rights movement and St. Louis' role in advancing the cause of racial justice.

The exhibit dates back to the Dred Scott decision, moving all the way to the events from Ferguson. It also includes artifacts from Cardinal Joseph Ritter's move to desegregate Catholic schools in 1947, as well as St. Louis University's involvement in desegregation in the 1940s.

The archdiocesan Annual Catholic Appeal and the St. Charles Lwanga Center are among the supporters of the free exhibit, which is open through April 15, 2018.

The Missouri History Museum is located at 5700 Lindell Blvd. in Forest Park and is open daily from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. The museum is open until 8 p.m. on Tuesdays. For more information, visit www.mohistory.org. 

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