By Lisa Benoit |
Hawaii
Catholic Herald
Though not all
Catholic, the five-member forensic team that exhumed the remains of Mother
Marianne Cope won the hearts of the Franciscan Sisters by their reverence and
care.
Except for
Vincent Sava, the leader, the team’s members were last minute recruits.
Sava
is a parishioner of St. Jude
Parish, Makakilo, and volunteered his time because of his personal interest in
the project.
The original
group handpicked by Sava, a forensic archeologist with the Joint POW-MIA
Accounting Command Central Identification Laboratory in Honolulu,
was unexpectedly deployed to Southeast Asia to
help identify victims of the recent tsunami.
But the nature
of Sava’s work had accustomed him to sudden
changes in plans, and he didn’t panic.
With a few
short weeks to regroup, Sava sent an e-mail call out to Hawaii’s archeological community.
Amy Buffum, an
archaeologist with Garcia and Associates, responded. A University of Hawaii
graduate specializing in physical anthropology and psychology, she has 10 years
of Hawaiian archeology experience. Though not a Catholic, Buffum admires Mother
Marianne and her work.
“You don’t have
to be Catholic to understand that she is a wonderful woman,” she said.
Sava
also gathered three associates
from the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command — Roger Antrim, Alec Christensen and
Sardiaa Plaud.
Christensen, a
forensic anthropologist at the Accounting Command for two years, “thought it
would be an interesting experience.”
“I liked the
opportunity to both come here and to see this special place that I had heard
about but never seen and to be part of this special event,” he said.
Plaud, an
evidence manager and a graduate of Chaminade University of Honolulu, has been in
Hawaii since
1997.
Antrim, a life
support investigator, has been here since 2001.
Franciscan
Sister Davilyn Ah Chick, who worked with the group as an unofficial assistant,
had high praise for Sava and his team.
“He got people
who worked well for the cause and shared their expertise far beyond words could
say,” she said.
The dig
Sava
had gone to Kalaupapa with an
assistant in November to study the site. Using subsurface probing, they were
surprised to find that Mother Marianne was buried two feet deeper than they
thought.
On Jan. 21, two
days before the formal start of the exhumation, Sava
and Antrim arrived to do some preliminary digging.
“At first we
started with small trowels and shovels,” Sava
said. “We were trying to find the outline of the grave shaft, which we never
found because the surface layers had been worked and reworked over the years,”
he said.
The second day,
they turned to shovels and picks to make the work go faster. They sifted the
exhumed dirt through screens set up nearby.
“We divided the
artifacts into two groups,” he said. “One was grave fill — debris and objects
that find their way into dirt wherever you go, like broken glass and shells.”
“The other
artifact group was actually grave contents that we could attribute to Mother
Marianne in her coffin or immediately around her coffin. These were artifacts
we knew were involved in the burial and the interment.”
By Monday, the
team came to the remains of Mother Marianne.
“Sister said
that Mother Marianne is full of surprises,” Sava
said. “Where we expected her head to be, her feet were.”
The monument at
Mother Marianne’s grave, a nearly life-sized statue of the crucified Jesus
embracing St. Francis of Assisi,
was erected several years after her death. For some reason it was mounted at
her feet. Some speculated that she was buried to be facing east and toward her
convent and the monument the patients gave her in her honor.
Sava
’s original plan was to expose the
entire skeleton and photograph it, but position and condition of the bones
didn’t allow it.
“We found that
they were very fragile,” he said. “They were crumbling, which we thought was
due to osteoporosis.”
The findings
The
identification of the body would be “circumstantial,” not “positive” which
involves DNA or dental records.
“From a forensic
standpoint, in identifying Mother Marianne, I think the rosary items were most
important. The crucifixes, the metal and the loops — those are very prominently
displayed in her photographs,” Sava said.
“When we point out the similarities, between the artifacts and the photographs,
that is very good circumstantial evidence.”
The team found
two crucifixes, a medal and various bits of rosary hardware. Another important
artifact was the cross found at her head.
“Sister Mary
Laurence (Hanley) documents in her book that that cross was on the coffin lid,”
he said. “It had two little holes in it for tacks, so we assuming it was
mounted on the outside of the lid.”
“We could see
by the position of the artifacts, especially the nails, that we had an
undisturbed burial,” he said. “Had we the time, we could have documented the
position of these items, but the overall impression is that everything is where
it should be. There was nothing to indicate a disturbed grave since her
interment.”
Sava
also found the water-worn stones
that are a Hawaiian offering to the dead, and buttons and safety pins used in
her clothing during burial.
Fulfilling work
Except for Sava, the team members had never heard of Mother Marianne
before signing up.
“It’s an
opportunity to be involved in an historical event,” Sava
said. “As anthropologists, we tend to like to participate with the remains of
historical people. Unfortunately, it is very rare event. And when you can
become part of it, it is very professionally fulfilling. And as a Catholic, it
is personally fulfilling as well.”
In addition to
participating in “a part of history,” Plaud said the “favorite part” of the
experience was meeting the Franciscan Sisters.
“They were the
highlight of the trip,” she said. “Seeing their excitement and how much she
meant to them.”
Buffum agreed.
“Just the way they treated us over here — these people have been incredible,”
she said. “I really didn’t expect that.”
Buffum’s
mother, a Catholic nurse in her home state of New Hampshire, had told her that she would
have “some sort of an epiphany.”
“I said that I
don’t think so, but this is pretty close to one. They really took us and graced
us,” Buffum said.
Christensen
said that, as a forensic anthropologist, his job is to return people to their
families.
“Normally, when
we recover and identify individuals, we don’t get to meet the families,” he
said. “Here, I have met members of her family,” both biological and religious,
“and that has been great experience.”
Antrim liked
“the quietness of the place” and didn’t want to leave. “Everybody knows
everyone and everyone is friendly, even if you didn’t know them,” he said.
Sister Davilyn
said that it was “very humbling” to work along side this team.
“I experienced
the reverence that they have for someone who died,” she said. “God blessed us
with all of these wonderful people. They assisted us in promoting her cause.
That was planned by God.”