Hawaii’s 2019 Jubilarians – Hawaii Catholic Herald

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HAWAII’S 2019 JUBILARIANS


“God, our Father, guide of humanity and ruler of creation, look upon these your servants, who wish to confirm their offering of themselves to you. As the years pass by, help them to enter more deeply into the mystery of the church and to dedicate themselves more generously to the good of humanity.” (Prayer of the renewal of vows from the Mass of Religious Profession)

Celebrating Lives of Discipleship


The Catholic Church in Hawaii honors those men and women who have given themselves to God and humanity, in vow and in sacrament, as they celebrate the anniversaries of their discipleship. Please join Bishop Larry Silva and Hawaii’s jubilarians in a Mass of gratitude, 10:30 a.m., Saturday, May 11, at the Co-Cathedral of St. Theresa. Lunch to follow.

70 Years

  • Sister Rose Annette Ahuna, OSF
  • Sister Theresa Chow, OSF
  • Sister Mary Edward Sugioka, OSF
  • Sister M. Ancilla Yim, OSF
60 Years

  • Brother John Campbell, S.M.
  • Sister Francine Costello, CSJ
  • Sister Geraldine Ching, OSF
  • Brother Frank (Paco) Gomes, S.M.
  • Sister Norberta Hunnewinkel, OSF
  • Father Christopher Patrick Keahi, SS.CC.
  • Sister Jean Larm, CSJ
  • Sister Katherine Francis Miller, SS.CC.
  • Sister M. Agatha Perreira, OSF
  • Sister Margaret Leonard Perreira, CSJ
  • Sister Patricia Rapozo, OSF
  • Sister Sara Sanders, CSJ
  • Sister Beatrice Tom, OSF
50 Years

  • Brother Daniel Casey, CFC
  • Father Thomas Choo, SS.CC.
  • Father Michel W. Dalton, OFM Cap
  • Sister Anne Clare De Costa, SS.CC.
  • Father Albert Gene Garcia, SS.CC.
  • Father John Keenan, SSS
  • Father Patrick Killilea, SS.CC.
  • Sister M. Esther Pagdato, OP
  • Father William Francis Petrie, SS.CC.
25 Years

  • Father Constantino Atinaja Jr.
  • Father Joseph Diaz
  • Father Khanh S. Hoang
  • Sister M. Novie Omictin, OP
  • Father Francisco Nicomedes S. Sanchez
  • Sister M. Ermelinda Tagnipez, OP
  • Father Exsequel Tuyor
70 years a religious

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Sister Rose Annette Ahuna, OSF



Born: 1930, Hilo

Community: Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Community

Past ministries: 61 years in education at schools in New York, Honolulu and Hilo; four years at St. Elizabeth Convent and Bishop Home in Kalaupapa, Molokai

Present ministry: Retired; community service; St. Marianne Cope presentations at the Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of Peace

Reflection: As I celebrate my 70th anniversary, I cannot help but reminisce about the many people God has placed in my path as stepping stones to his service. Therefore, I gratefully credit:

  • My parents and family, dedicated colleagues in my ministries, the guidance and encouragement of superiors and administrators, Sisters with whom I have lived and am privileged to live with, students I have taught and with whom I have been associated.
  • The freedom of time set aside for prayer, meditation and vacations, the travel opportunities and enjoying God’s world of creation.
  • The opportunity of being present for Mother Marianne Cope’s canonization in Rome, appreciating our priceless Franciscan heritage and sharing our Catholic faith with the global world.
  • Accepting our community’s request for volunteers to Kalaupapa at St. Elizabeth Convent/Bishop Home with Sister Theresa Chow for four years, giving me an insight into Mother Marianne’s administrative wisdom, deep prayerfulness, protective and compassionate love, untiring patience and determination in improving the patients’ lives.
  • The dedication of the Sacred Hearts priests, following St. Damien’s footsteps, in serving all those living throughout the peninsula.

In prayerful celebration, I thank each one of you for being part of my Franciscan journey!

70 years a religious

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Sister Theresa Chow, OSF



Born: 1928, Kingman, Arizona

Community: Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities

Past ministries: Teacher in New York, Ohio, Hilo, California; parish minister in New York, California, New Mexico, Kauai; volunteer in Kalaupapa for eight years

Present ministry: Retired; volunteer at St. Francis Hospice

Reflection: I grew up in a Taoist environment, went to a Buddhist temple to honor a relative that died, the arrival of a newborn baby and to celebrate Chinese New Year. At the temple, a monk would chant prayers, words I did not understand. We burned incense. That was the extent of my time at the temple.

My first experience with Christianity was through neighborhood children who attended a parochial school. They recited the Our Father, Hail Mary, Act of Contrition and Prayer to the Guardian Angel. Another phrase I heard very often was: “If you do something bad, God will punish you.” These were repeated at play. I very seldom heard these words again.

My life changed drastically when my sister suddenly appeared in my life. She had just graduated from high school. Our family had been scattered and separated since the death of our biological mother. I grew up having a “guardian” at age 3. I did not know where our two brothers were.

My sister became my savior and cared for me until my graduation. She was the oldest and I the youngest. I made up my mind to go to church one day. I thought, “Shall it be Protestant, Episcopal, Mormon, Christian?” I decided on the cathedral at Fort Street because it was on the bus line, convenient and easier to get to than other churches. I met a priest there, talked with him and promised to return weekly for instructions. I went home and told my sister that he wanted to see her too. This was not true but I did not want to go alone. Before long we were baptized on the feast of the Assumption, Aug. 15. One thing led to another and Sacred Hearts Father Matthew Lochs, who baptized us, suggested I attend a vocation retreat at St. Francis Convent in Manoa. The Franciscan Sisters made me feel at home. After being a Catholic for only two years, I began my life as a Sister of St. Francis.

The highlight of my religious life was the privilege and honor to be present at the exhumation of St. Marianne Cope in Kalaupapa. I watched the forensic team dig, document and meticulously brush every piece of bone and place it in the exact position found in the grave. My last wish was to touch Marianne before she was finally laid in the zinc case ready to be transported to our motherhouse in Syracuse, N.Y. I wanted the connection with this beautiful, holy person, feel her spirit of sacrifice, her great love of the less fortunate, and her Franciscan charism. I placed my hands on her skull and with a silent prayer, a final goodbye, thanked her for her love, devotion, care and dedication for all the abandoned and dejected souls of Kalaupapa.

70 years a religious

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Sister Mary Edward Sugioka, OSF



Born: 1930, Pearl City

Community: Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities

Past ministries: Teacher in the primary grades; also worked in the medical records department at St. Francis Hospital

Present ministry: Retired

Reflection: I am a convert to the Catholic faith. And I am ever grateful for this gift as well as my vocation to the Franciscan Family. I am the only Catholic in my family. I joined the Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities after graduating from St. Francis High School in 1948.

Most of my teaching career was spent in the primary grades as I enjoy youngsters.

I taught at St. Joseph Elementary School, Hilo, for 14 years in grades two and one. Returning to Syracuse, I taught grades three and four at Assumption Academy. Before retiring, I worked in the Medical Records Department at St. Francis Hospital-West in Ewa. Today I am totally retired.

70 years a religious

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Sister M. Ancilla Yim, OSF



Born: 1927, Honolulu

Community: Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities

Years of service in Hawaii: 27 active years, nine years in community and prayer ministries

Past ministries: In New York, catechist, elementary and secondary teacher, principal, college librarian; in Hawaii, teacher, librarian, principal at St. Joseph School, Hilo; counselor, administrative assistant at St. Francis School, Honolulu; program director, Hawaii Region Sisters of St. Francis Associates

Present ministry: Prayer ministry

Reflection: Sister Ancilla grew up as a Catholic and graduated from Sacred Hearts Academy under the loving guidance of her Catholic father and Buddhist mother. Margaret (her birth name) and her sister Theresa were very active in the Sodality at Our Lady of Peace Cathedral. Although an alumna of Sacred Hearts Academy, Margaret entered the Sisters of St. Francis whom she met when her sister Winnie attended St. Francis Convent School. She truly exemplifies the virtues in the Prayer of St. Francis.

Sister Ancilla’s educational ministry spanned the elementary to collegiate levels. The sound of music filled her soul as a pianist and organist, and later as a choir member at St. Pius X Church. She once skillfully directed a double cast of “The Sound of Music” at St. Joseph School, Hilo, complete with “real” Sisters of St. Francis on stage. In the final years of active ministry, Sister Ancilla shared her Franciscan knowledge and spirituality as director of the Hawaii Region Associates.

Sister Ancilla has always enjoyed the attention and affection of her family who faithfully visit their sister and Auntie Margaret with treats of Chinese food, treasuring her gentle, quiet spirit and beaming smile. Her sisters, Toni and Winnie, and the Yim family look forward to honoring her 70 years of faithful commitment.

60 years a religious

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Brother John H. Campbell, SM



Born: 1940, Brooklyn, New York

Community: Society of Mary (Marianists)

Past ministries: Teacher, track coach, Chaminade Preparatory School, Florida; assistant novice master; president, Chaminade-Madonna School, Florida; guidance counselor, Saint Louis School

Present ministry: Retired, spiritual director, counselor, Marianist board member

Reflection: Brother John H. Campbell, S.M., was born in Brooklyn in 1940. He attended Chaminade High School in Mineola, New York, before entering the novitiate in August 1958 and professed his first vows as a member of the Society of Mary in 1959.

In August 1962, he graduated from the University of Dayton with a bachelor of science degree in biology and was sent to Chaminade Preparatory School in Hollywood, Florida, to teach biology, math and religion and began the cross-country and track teams which eventually won three state championships.

In 1964, Brother Campbell left Florida to be the assistant novice director in Virginia and studied at the University of Virginia graduating with a master’s degree in school psychology.

He returned to Chaminade in 1968 and taught religion and psychology. In 1985 he became the first president of Chaminade and was involved in the merger of Chaminade High (all boys) with Madonna Academy (all girls). In 1995, He began his second term as president of Chaminade-Madonna.

In 2003 he was asked to mission at St. Louis School as a member of the guidance department until 2010 when he retired. He continues to be in mission as a spiritual director, individual and couples counseling, retreats and a member of three Marianist boards. He also was chairman of the Honolulu diocesan pastoral council.

60 years a religious

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Sister Geraldine Ching, OSF



Born: 1940, Honolulu

Community: Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities

Past ministries: Leadership for the Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities

Present ministry: Director of Mission and Ethics Programs at St. Francis Healthcare System of Hawaii

Reflection: I have enjoyed all my ministries. As an educator and school administrator I learned the role and importance of servant leadership. As a leader in my community of sisters, I learned that culture plays a huge role in how we interact with others. In my current role as mission leader, I am humbled and awed by my lay colleagues who remind me every day that they are part of a huge legacy that they plan to move well into the future!

60 years a religious

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Sister Francine C. Costello, CSJ



Born: Philippines

Community: Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet

Past ministries: Hawaii — Teacher, St. Anthony, Kailua; novice director; Hispanic ministry; receptionist, St. Patrick School; CSJ Congregational Leadership Team; CSJ Vocation Committee. 21 years in Peru — educator in Catholic and public high schools; religious formation of adults in rural communities; diocesan Human Rights Advocate Team; pastoral ministry; parish administrator; CSJ Vocation Formation Team

Present ministry: Health care director for the Sisters of St. Joseph in Hawaii; CSJ/LARC vocation committee

Reflection: I love my community, the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet. As a member of 60 years I am becoming the person, the woman God calls me to be, “of all that a woman is capable,” our description of growing into wholeness and holiness.

Serving God’s people in Hawaii and in Peru challenged me to meet their needs in their cultural, current and social situations. They call me to creativity, to alternate and possible means. More important is that I learned and continue to learn from them, from their cultural viewpoint.

I’m grateful to my community for the experiences in other cultures — Peru, Chile, Mexico, Japan, Gulu-Uganda. Their people are marked by their hospitality to the ”stranger” among them, evident in the Old Testament, and in a new way, in Jesus as he lived welcoming everyone without distinction. This is our Aloha. Aloha with joy!

60 years a religious

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Brother Frank Gomes, SM



Born: 1940, Makawao, Maui

Community: Society of Mary (Marianists)

Past ministries: Teacher at Saint Louis School, Honolulu, and St. Anthony High School, Wailuku; missionary to Mexico; Hispanic minister in California and Hawaii; parish pastoral worker; caregiver

Reflection: I was the second of three sons of Frank Jr. and Lucy De Rego Gomes. Alexander and Johnny were my constant companions as we grew up in a Catholic family and educated in Catholic schools. Sunday Mass was part of the routine along with visiting our grandparents at Haleakala Ranch. We even had clothes reserved for wearing only on Sunday.

I attended St. Joseph Elementary School in Makawao under the watchful eyes of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange. I was an altar server for 10 years. After graduating, I attended St. Anthony High School with the Marianist priests and brothers as teachers.

I became a member of the Marianist family in 1959. I was happy to be part of the faculties at Saint Louis High School on Oahu, and my alma mater on Maui.

Mexico called and I served the beautiful people of Apaseo El Grande, Guanajuato. I was happy there and in the poverty of the people of God I saw Christ.

In 1993, I entered Hispanic ministry at St. Maria Goretti Parish in San Jose, California, and founded the Santee Mission that is still alive and well.

I returned to Hawaii to serve the Spanish-speaking Catholics on Oahu and Maui. I also visited the Hispanic inmates at Halawa Prison.

A call from my brother Johnny in 2003 took us back to Makawao were we lived together until his unexpected death in 2018. This time together gave us the great opportunity to be parishioners again at St. Joseph Church. Johnny rang the church tower bell every Sunday and I served as lector and/or eucharistic minister. I also directed adult Bible study and served on the parish council.

The greatest joy, and a confirmation of my vocation, came with the time I spent with Johnny. Caring for him was like touching the Lord. If Johnny was not the Word of God, then God never spoke. He taught me how to love and how it felt to be loved. He gave me a new life. I miss him. The saddest moment came when I put Johnny to rest alongside my mother and father, a grave that we both had visited many, many times before.

Life continues with great things remaining to be done under the guidance of Mary, Our Lady of Guadalupe, to bring Christ to his people and to “do whatever he tells you.”

We need to work harder toward stopping all abortions. Yes, we can. Si, se puede.

60 years a religious

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Sister Norberta Judith Hunnewinkel, OSF



Born: 1941, Evanston, Illinois

Community: Sisters of Saint Francis of the Neumann Communities

Year arrived in Hawaii: 2012

Years of service in Hawaii: 10

Past ministries: Teacher and social worker

Present ministry: Retired; volunteer at the Saint Francis Adult Day Center

Reflection: I am one of two children in the Hunnewinkel Family. Our family moved many times (I’m an expert at packing!) throughout the United States due to my father’s employment. I finished high school, while boarding at the Convent School in Syracuse, New York.

I decided to enter our community, impressed with the sisters’ joy and I wanted to make a difference in the world. I had an interesting novitiate with 29 other women. I continued a very mobile lifestyle in community, moving every few years (What a way to see multiple convents!) I taught for 19 years, mostly at elementary levels. After a short stint in Peru, I received my master’s degree in social work and spent 25 years ministering in The Hoboken Shelter. Now in Hawaii, I have ministered in various areas within the Saint Francis Health Care System, where I now volunteer.

My life as a Sister of Saint Francis has been filled with joy, sorrow, challenges, and so many blessings with the people through which I ministered. I feel truly blessed!

60 years a religious

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Father Christopher Patrick Keahi, SS.CC.



Born: 1937, Honolulu

Community: Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary

Past ministries: Provincial superior, vice provincial, seminary professor, provincial secretary, vocational director, superior of St. Patrick Monastery. Pastor at St. Joseph, Maui; St. Augustine, Waikiki; Maria Lanakila, Lahaina; Holy Cross, Kauai; Blessed Sacrament, Honolulu; and St. Michael, Waialua. Associate pastor at Holy Trinity, Kuliouou; St. Joseph, Waipahu. Police chaplain for the Honolulu and Maui Police Departments

Present ministries: Chaplain, Sisters of the Sacred Hearts; military contract priest for Joint Base Pearl Harbor/Hickam and Marine Corps Base Hawaii, Kaneohe

Reflection: I have enjoyed 54 years of active priestly and religious ministries.

60 years a religious

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Sister Jean Larm, CSJ



Born: Kaneohe, Oahu

Community: Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet

Past ministries: 45 years as a teacher, caregiver, housekeeper

Reflection: My story begins when the 11th child was born to Grace and Yune Larm in Kaneohe, Oahu, the night of March 2, 1935. My education was mostly in public schools except for two and a half years at St. Ann School, before we moved to Honolulu. I graduated from Farrington High School, attended the University of Hawaii, became a Catholic at 21. During my instructions the seed for my vocation was planted. However, because I was a convert, I had to wait two years. So I finished my senior year and taught a year at St. Theresa School.

I entered the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet in Los Angeles and taught at St. John the Evangelist School and Star of the Sea School in San Francisco before returning to Hawaii. I made my final vows and taught at St. Joseph, Waipahu, St. Anthony, Kailua, Christ the King, Maui, St. Theresa, Honolulu and Holy Trinity, Kuliouou.

The highlights of my 60 years as a Sister of St. Joseph of Carondelet are all the gifts and blessings God has gifted me with: the many friendships made with sisters in different provinces, my family, parents, school staffs, children, parishioners, other religious orders, priests, deacons and even strangers. There are places I have been that were beyond my expectations, constant surprises that God blesses me with: the Holy Land, Rome for the canonization of our own St. Damien, an experience of winter by spending time in all our provinces, and many places right here in the United States.

I am truly blessed and forever grateful to God for the hundredfold he has gifted me with. And I will strive to live what God requires of me: to act justly, to love tenderly, to walk humbly with God, and to serve one another.

60 years a religious

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Sister Katherine Francis Miller, SS.CC.



Born: 1939, Honolulu

Community: Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary

Past ministries: Educator at Sacred Hearts Academy; novice mistress; provincial; general councilor

Present ministry: Campus minister and theology teacher, Sacred Hearts Academy

Reflection: Some of my joys and highlights as a Sister of the Sacred Hearts have been experiencing the closing of the Second Vatican Council in Rome; working with young women in campus ministry at the Academy; working for a month with indigenous people in Ecuador; serving Ethiopian refugees and domestic workers in Rome; and living out my ministry of adoration before the Blessed Sacrament every day for the past 60 plus years.

60 years a religious

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Sister M. Agatha Perreira, OSF



Born: 1939, Amauulu, Big Island

Community: Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities

Past ministries: Teacher in Hawaii for 14 years, in New York for 11 years, California one year, clerk stenographer in Kalaupapa hospital for one year, special services technician, receptionist St. Francis Medical Center West, 13 years a sacristan at St. Francis Convent

Present ministry: Retired

Reflection: “There are many reasons why I answered the call to religious life. Mass, prayer, the Sodality of Mary, my parents, and the Sisters of St. Francis were all channels toward God’s call being answered. Therefore, reflecting on my 60 years as a Sister of St. Francis, I thank God for continued blessings.”

60 years a religious

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Sister Margaret Leonard Perreira, CSJ



Born: Ewa, Oahu

Community: Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet

Past ministries: Teacher and administrator in elementary schools in California and Hawaii; service in congregational leadership and as the community treasurer and assistant archivist

Present ministry: Semi-retired and assistant community archivist.

Reflection: Ewa was my birthplace and hometown for the first 18 years of my life. I consider myself fortunate to have been able to attend Sacred Hearts Academy for 12 years and Chaminade College for one year, the first year it became co-ed, commuting from Ewa to Kaimuki daily.

In September of 1958, I entered the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet in Los Angeles. Within the next eight years, I completed my formation, received my BA and MA degrees and taught for four years in elementary schools in California before returning to Hawaii in 1966 with five other island girls who entered in 1958. We professed our final vows at St. Theresa Church, now the co-cathedral. The “homecoming and final profession” was indeed a highlight with parents, relatives, friends, former teachers and classmates at both the eucharistic celebration and festive luau. The attendance at this profession ceremony made it obvious that the sisters had made a difference in the lives of our laity.

With a grateful heart and joyful spirit, I spent nearly 50 years ministering in elementary schools in Hawaii as teacher, administrator and computer instructor. My educational ministries on Oahu and Maui included St. Theresa School in Kalihi, St. Anthony School in Kailua, St. Joseph School in Waipahu, St. Anthony Grade School on Maui, Star of the Sea School in Kahala and St. Patrick School in Kaimuki.

My goal was to prepare students for adulthood with an emphasis on integrity, morality and discipleship. There was also a summons toward community service as vice-province treasurer, on the vice-province leadership team, then caregiver for my mom and presently assistant archivist for my community.

Ministering to all without distinction — students, parents, coworkers and parishioners through love and service in word and deed — has been a great source of joy and blessing. I am truly grateful to God, my parents, teachers, Sisters and Fathers of the Sacred Hearts, and my CSJ community for their love, guidance and inspiration.

60 years a religious

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Sister Patricia A. Rapozo, OSF



Born: 1939, Hilo

Community: Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities

Past ministries: Teacher for seven years in New York and nine years in New Jersey; served in Hawaii for 44 years

Present ministry: Spiritual services liaison sponsorship

Reflection: My motto for my entire life as a Franciscan Sister has been, “To love. To serve. To share.” It is not based on any particular Scripture. It is what I fashion my life around doing. The ministries I currently engage in at St. Francis Spiritual Services are a continued extension of my commitment to love, to serve, to share. If you live one day at a time for the love of Jesus, Mary and all the Angels, you will be blessed daily.

60 years a religious

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Sister Sara Sanders, CSJ



Born: 1940, Oklahoma

Community: Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet

Year arrived in Hawaii: 1980

Years of service in Hawaii: 39

Past ministries: Teacher of grade school, high school, and adult education; high school campus minister; curriculum writer on the natural history of Maui; coach and athletic trainer; school administrator; school librarian; congregational leadership; parish choir director and cantor

Present ministry: Chemistry teacher at St. Anthony High School, Wailuku; parish choir member; member of the Catholic Charities Maui Leadership Council

Reflection: My years in ministry as a Sister of St. Joseph have taken me to Arizona and several California cities where I have met and served with many wonderful people. But it is here in Hawaii that I found that the Spirit of Aloha meshed perfectly with our community’s charism of inclusive love, including love of earth — our common home.

I am so proud of all “my kids” who have grown into loving parents, servant leaders who assist others through their professions, and active members of their civic communities where they actively engage in and promote Catholic social teaching — the mission of Jesus to bring all together as one in the Father.

Accepting the call to become a Sister of St. Joseph has been the best decision of my life!

60 years a religious

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Sister Beatrice Helelani Tom, OSF



Born: 1940, Honolulu

Community: Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities

Past ministries: Served in New York state and Hawaii, back and forth, in the areas of education, pastoral care and spiritual retreats

Present ministry: Healthcare

Reflection: Early in her religious life, Sister Beatrice Tom served as a school teacher at various schools in New York state and at St. Francis School in Honolulu. In the mid-1970s, she was the director at Covenant House in New York City, assisting homeless and at-risk youth.

In the late-1970s and early 1980s, Sister Beatrice served as assistant administrator at St. Francis Hospital and the Stella Maris Retreat Center. She later went on to be the chief executive officer for the St. Francis Healthcare System of Hawaii. Sister Beatrice currently serves as president at Our Lady of Keaau on the Waianae coast.

She says, ‘’My greatest joy is helping God’s people along with my fellow Sisters at the St. Francis Healthcare System.”

50 years a religious

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Brother Daniel J. Casey, CFC



Born: 1950, Chicago

Community: Congregation of Christian Brothers

Year arrived in Hawaii: 2014

Past ministries: Teacher and administrator at Christian Brother high schools in Illinois, Michigan, Arizona, California and Honolulu; congregational leadership in Illinois and New Jersey.

Present ministry: On sabbatical, not in full-time ministry; member of Honolulu Diocesan Pastoral Council; member of the executive committee, Leadership Association of Religious Congregations

Reflection: I am the oldest of five children, educated in grammar school by the Sisters of the Holy Cross and in high school by the Christian Brothers. I have degrees from Lewis University, Romeoville, Illinois; University of Notre Dame and the University of San Francisco.

As a teacher and administrator, I have always been energized by the spirit of young people. I have been blessed by a supportive, prayerful, and joy-filled community life.

Leadership has given me the opportunity to appreciate the complexities and holiness of the human condition. Leadership has also given me the opportunity to travel to six continents, exposing me to the beauty of our global community.

Experiences of prayer, spiritual direction, retreats, programs, spiritual reading and more have helped me grow in my relationship with God.

50 years a religious

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Father Thomas Young Bok Choo, SS.CC.



Born: 1942, Honolulu

Community: Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary

Past ministries: Parish priest at St. Ann, Kaneohe; St. Patrick, Kaimuki; St. Joseph, Makawao; St. Augustine, Waikiki

Present ministry: Retired

Reflection: Father Choo was born and raised in Honolulu, growing up in Kaimuki, where he attended St. Patrick’s School and Saint Louis High School. The highlight of his years in the ministry was helping to plan and celebrate the 150th anniversary of the founding of St. Augustine Church. The 2004 festivities included a Hawaiian music concert, hula and a big steak dinner across the street at the Waikiki Beach Marriott Hotel.

50 years a religious

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Father Michel W. Dalton, OFM Cap



Born: Brooklyn, New York

Community: Order of Friars Minor, Capuchin

Year arrived in Hawaii: 1996

Past ministries: Parish priest on Guam; pastor at St. Elizabeth Church, Aiea, and Immaculate Conception Church, Ewa; vicar of the Leeward Oahu Vicariate, now the Leeward and Central Oahu Vicariates; member of the Bishop’s Administrative Advisory Council; chairperson, Presbyteral Council

Current ministry: Pastor at Holy Trinity Church in Kuliouou, Honolulu

Reflection: After my ordination to the priesthood in 1978 I embarked on the wonderful journey of serving God’s people on the Continental United States, on Guam, and on Oahu. It has been a great adventure to be able to meet so many good people and learn from their life experiences. One of my passions is to preach the Word of God effectively. I often say that I’m a shepherd who loves to preach and a preacher who loves to shepherd. I sincerely hope to be able to do this for many more years.

One of my ministry-passions is to work with our deacons and to assist in the retreat portion of their formation program. It is exciting to minister with them.

In my spare time I enjoy being outdoors, going on long walks, and even taking in a round of golf every now and then. I also enjoy traveling and have been blessed in being able to see many countries and to visit religious sites and places of natural beauty. My life and ministry have been full of rewarding experiences.

50 years a religious

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Sister Anne Clare De Costa, SS.CC.



Born: 1948, Honolulu

Community: Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary

Past ministries: Served in various capacities in Hawaii at Sacred Hearts Convent, Sacred Hearts Academy, St. Ann Church and School, St. Patrick Church and School, St. Anthony Retreat Center

Present ministry: Director of education, St. Patrick Church and School; superior, St. Anthony Retreat Center

Reflection: My vocation started with the family life created by my parents Richard and Beatriz De Costa. We were a truly Catholic family in every sense of the word. We attended church together, volunteered and participated in parish events, prayers and novenas. All five of us children (one boy four girls) attended Catholic schools in elementary, high school and college. Our family was enthroned to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and Mary. We prayed the rosary as a family.

While attending St. Theresa School in Honolulu, I felt the call to be a Maryknoll sister. At our eight grade graduation, Sister Mary Joseph said that we were starting a journey for the rest of our lives and this journey started now. For high school, I attended Sacred Hearts Convent and Sacred Hearts Academy. The first time I entered the convent chapel, I knew this was where the journey would continue.

God blessed me with experiences and opportunities to reach out to children, families and so many other people along the way. It hasn’t always been easy; it wasn’t always where we would have travelled. But this journey has constantly and always found its source and reason in the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.

50 years a priest

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Father Albert Gene Garcia, SS.CC.



Born: 1942, Honokaa

Community: Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary

Past ministries: Teacher at Damien Memorial High School and Star of the Sea Elementary; pastor at Sacred Heart, Waianae, St. Ann, Kaneohe and St. Michael, Waialua; associate pastor at St. Anthony, Maui, Sacred Hearts, Waianae, St. Patrick, Kaimuki, and St. Augustine Waikiki; chaplain to Sacred Hearts Sisters

Present ministry: Retired at St. Patrick Monastery

Reflection: In his 50 years of priesthood, he was noted for his musical composition of a Mass in Hawaiian that is still sung at Puuiki and Waianae Catholic Churches. Father Garcia is also an artisan whose art work can be seen at....
 
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