Religious sister, NFP
tutor, catechist and mother: Catholic Women of the Year announced
The annual awards
honour women who have 'made an outstanding contribution' to the Church in
Britain
A religious sister, a mother,
a Natural Family Planning tutor and a trainer of catechists are among those
honoured in this year’s Catholic Women of the Year awards.
The awards will be presented
in London in October.
The youngest of the winners
is Catherine MacMillan, a writer, speaker and musician (and daughter of the
composer Sir James MacMillan). She became unexpectedly pregnant at 18, and
resisted pressure from doctors to have an abortion.
Her daughter, Sara, was born
severely disabled, and died earlier this year aged five. Catherine has spoken
and written about Sara, saying the pain of bereavement is “worth it to have
those almost six years of joy, love, heartache and extreme pride … What we had
is the alternative to the guilt and the pain of being pressured to end something
that is not our choice to end.”
The other winners are: Olive
Duddy, director of the Natural Family Planning Teachers Association; Caroline
Farey, a trainer of catechists currently based at the School of the Assumption
at Buckfast Abbey; and Sister Jane Louise, a former Anglican sister now leading
the Sisters of Our Lady of Reconciliation based in Walsingham.
This year’s lunch takes place on Friday 28 October, at the
Amba Hotel in Marble Arch, London.
Sister Jane Louise told the
Catholic Herald: “I have to say I am very surprised that this has happened,
there are so many other women out there who are far more deserving of this
award. However, I accept it on behalf of the other two Sisters who came on the
same journey as myself, Sister Wendy Renate (RIP 23rd March 2016) and Sister
Carolyne Preston.
“I am grateful that our
journey has been acknowledged, and so it continues in ways none of us could
have predicted, but that is just the way God is, He has kept us on our toes, or
should I say on our knees! A big thank you to all concerned.”
Dr Duddy was nominated by
committee members of the Natural Family
Planning Teachers Association, of which she was chair for six
years. It pioneered the Symptothermal method of NFP, which Dr Duddy says
is “effective in helping couples become pregnant 30% and to avoid pregnancy
99.96% which is much better than any other method of family regulation”.
She has also taught the
method in Kyrgyzstan, where it has since been developed into a widely-used
school programme, and developed a 12-week online course. Dr Duddy, who has five
children and eight grandchildren, worked as a GP in Prestwich, which, she says
“was 80 per cent Jewish and a wonderful experience of family life”. Since
retiring she has run marriage preparation courses.
Dr Farey is currently
Director of Studies for the School of the Assumption at Buckfast
Abbey, with special responsibility for training tutors. She has written and
taught for many years, especially in Thomism, sacred art and catechetics. Dr
Farey was also one of three lay women experts at the 13th General Synod of
Bishops on New Evangelisation in 2012.
The annual Catholic Women of
the Year Luncheon began in 1969, with the aim of honouring women who have
served the Church, and providing a discussion forum. It also raises money for
charity.
The organisers say: “The
occasion is an opportunity to celebrate women within the Church who have made
an outstanding contribution to the Catholic Church in Great Britain.
“Within our dioceses, many
women are working hard behind the scenes to catechise, evangelise and foster
the faith of those within their parishes. There are also women in positions of
great authority who act as representatives of the Church in an ever more
secular environment.”
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