Home   |  About Us   |  Contacts   |  Products    
 News Items:
 Headlines
 News Briefs
 Stories
 Movies
 Word To Life
 More News:
 Vatican
 Africa
 Special Sections:
 2007 in review
 China
 Inside the Curia
 Archives:
 2006 in review
 Vatican II at 40
 John Paul II
 Other Items:
 Client Area
 Links
 Origins
.
 Did You Know...

 The whole CNS
 public Web site
 headlines, briefs
 stories, etc,
 represents less
 than one percent
 of the daily news
 report.

 Get all the news!

 If you would like
 more information
 about the
 Catholic News
 Service daily
 news report,
 please contact
 CNS at one of
 the following:
 cns@
 catholicnews.com
 or
 (202) 541-3250

.
 Copyright:

 This material
 may not
 be published,
 broadcast,
 rewritten or
 otherwise
 distributed.
 
 Copyright
 (c) 2006
 Catholic News
 Service/U.S.
 Conference of
 Catholic Bishops.

 CNS Story:

SISTERS-BIKERS Sep-3-2008 (740 words) With photo. xxxn

Sisters, motorcycle gang form unlikely bond in Milwaukee

By Amy Guckeen
Catholic News Service

MILWAUKEE (CNS) -- Don't let their veils and name -- Sisters of Charity of St. Joan Antida -- deceive you. Members of the Milwaukee order aren't just brides of Christ. They're biker girls.

"We're part of a gang," the sisters laughed over coffee. They belong to the Sisters of the MMG (Muskegon Motorcycle Gang).

When the Harley-Davidson 100th anniversary celebration rolled around in 2003, someone at St. Joan Antida High School, the all-girls high school on Milwaukee's south side sponsored by the order, suggested that the sisters open their grounds to Harley riders looking for a place to rest their heads during the festivities. The Muskegon Motorcycle Gang from Michigan took the sisters up on their offer.

"It was a bit scary," said Sister Ann Josepha Lencioni of the decision. "But the sisters pulled together and felt it would be a good thing for Milwaukee."

For the riders, some of whom had never interacted with a Catholic sister before, the feeling was mutual.

"It wasn't that we were scared; we just wanted to make the nuns as comfortable as possible," said Mike Ankeny of the group, which signed contracts to follow a few house rules such as no smoking indoors. "We're a good mix, even though we're on different parts of the tree."

As Harley upon Harley made its way through the wooded driveway to the Bethany Retreat Center on Milwaukee's northwest side, the riders and sisters wondered just what they had gotten into as they recalled the stereotypes of Catholic nuns and biker gangs.

"I was a little nervous," said rider Patty Matuzeski. "We didn't know what to expect -- but it was so much more than we ever could have imagined."

Within five minutes of their arrival, Sister Ann Josepha said, any apprehension experienced by the two groups had faded. Over the next few days, the riders and sisters were dining with each other, cracking jokes and taking rides on the group's bikes.

"They are such incredible people who are concerned about and love the sisters," said Toni Vitrano, director of communications for the order. "Professional people -- they're not Hell's Angels, just a group of people that love motorcycles."

While some of the riders are Catholic, others are not, but it is no matter when it comes to the impact the sisters have on the MMG, as evidenced in their exit surveys after the 100th anniversary.

"As someone not raised in a religious environment, after staying with all of you and getting to know all of the sisters I feel a few steps closer to God!" wrote one participant.

After bestowing on them the title Sisters of the MMG and bidding the sisters farewell in 2003, the unlikely friends stayed in touch, writing Christmas cards and e-mails. As bikers rolled into Milwaukee Aug. 30-Sept. 1 for the 105th Harley-Davidson anniversary, the MMG found their way back to the sisters for another weekend of fun and fellowship.

"Hospitality is very important to our community," said Sister Theresa Rozga of their ministry to the riders, which included preparing a daily complimentary breakfast and offering snacks, soda and beer throughout the day. "We have the opportunity to offer them hospitality and to share what we have been given with them."

In that sharing, the two groups have found some unexpected similarities.

"We're kind of alike," said Patrick Corbin. "They're stereotyped; we're stereotyped."

The MMG, made up of professionals working in various career paths such as nursing, engineering and the postal service, not only spend their time enjoying their bikes, but also devote their time to serving others, recently raising $11,000 for the Make-A-Wish Foundation. The group plans to do future fundraisers to aid the sisters in their service to the poor. Some members also take part in Muskegon Bike Time, the city's three-day motorcycle event.

"A lot of us are strong in our faith too," said Bill Carothers, who served as the point person between the sisters and the MMG.

There are no official membership requirements in the MMG, which is held together by friendship. The gang, 15 years old, numbers around 100 riders, Carothers said.

The sisters, who hold their faith as dearly as the Harley riders hold their bikes, only had one piece of advice for their friends as they returned to Michigan at the conclusion of the weekend: "Ride nice. Pray hard."

END


Copyright (c) 2008 Catholic News Service/USCCB. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed.
CNS · 3211 Fourth St NE · Washington DC 20017 · 202.541.3250