‘Beauty
springing from the breast of pain’
By Sister Mary Laurence |
Special to the Herald
Mother Marianne
Cope was born Barbara Koob on Jan. 23, 1838, in Hessen, West Germany,
the fifth of 10 children of Peter Koob, a farmer, and Barbara Witzenbacher
Koob.
A year after
she was born, the family immigrated to Utica,
N.Y. where the surname Koob was
eventually changed to Cope. Barbara became a U.S. citizen when her father was
naturalized.
Though she felt
called to religious life at an early age, Barbara delayed entering the convent
to support her family and ill father. She joined the Sisters of Saint Francis
in Syracuse, N.Y., a month after her father’s death in
1862, taking the religious name Marianne.
As a young sister,
she served as a teacher and principal in several New York schools. It has been her intention
to be an educator, but her life soon became a series of administrative
appointments. As a member of the Franciscan Sisters governing board, she helped
establish two of central New York’s first
hospitals, St. Elizabeth’s in Utica (1866) and St. Joseph’s in Syracuse
(1869).
Unique for
their time, both hospitals served the sick no matter their nationality,
religion or color.
Mother Marianne
undertook the job as head administrator of St. JosephHospital
with innovation, intelligence, charisma and energy. Long before hospitals
understood the importance of cleanliness, she demanded sanitary conditions when
caring for patients. She was also a firm advocate for patients’ rights and
accepted those others rejected.
In 1883, Mother
Marianne answered a desperate plea from the Hawaiian government for someone to
begin a system of hospital nursing. It was an appeal already turned down by
dozens of other religious communities.
She accepted
the mission even when she learned she was to care mainly for leprosy patients.
“I am not afraid of any disease,” she said.
Mother Marianne
and six sister companions arrived in Hawaii
on Nov. 8, 1883.
In 1884, at the
government’s request, Mother Marianne opened MalulaniHospital, Maui’s
first general hospital. On Oahu, she was given full control of the BranchHospital
at Kakaako, which served leprosy patients. In November 1885, she established
Kapiolani Home for homeless female children of leprosy patients.
Two years after
she arrived, Mother Marianne was honored by King Kalakaua with the medal of the
Royal Order of Kapiolani for her acts of benevolence.
In 1887, new
government officials closed the Oahu hospital
and receiving station for Hansen’s disease patients, sending them directly to
Kalaupapa. Mother Marianne extending her mission to Kalaupapa knowing it
jeopardized her chance of returning home to Syracuse.
“We will
cheerfully accept the work,” she said. She explained by mail to Syracuse that believed it
to be God’s will.
Arriving at
Kalaupapa with two youthful assistants several months before Damien’s death,
Mother Marianne assured the ailing priest that she would care for his patients
at the settlement’s Boys’ Home. After he died, she initiated the building of a
new Baldwin home, named after its chief
benefactor.
Mother
Marianne’s treatment of patients was far ahead of her time, encouraging their
education and growth, irrespective of the fact that they were dying of a fatal
disease. She arranged classes in needlework and landscaping as well as
spiritual direction by settlement priests and pastors.
Robert Louis
Stevenson, in his visit to Kalaupapa praised Mother Marianne and her sisters in
verse, describing their presence as “beauty springing from the breast of pain.”
The writer concluded: “He marks the sisters on the painful shores, and even a
fool is silent and adores.”
Mother Marianne
died on Aug. 9, 1918, of natural causes.
Sister Mary Laurence is the director of the cause of Venerable Mother
Marianne Cope of Molokai.