What is going on this fall at the Women's Rehabilitation Center?
October has
begun. It is a warm day, and the sky clears up by the afternoon. All is quiet
and bright at the Women's Rehabilitation Center of St Elisabeth Convent. The
golden autumn is at its best: wind sets the leaves of the beautiful birch trees
in constant motion; the dahlia, marigold, and aster flowers are in full bloom;
the fruit of this blessed season — the red apples, the deep blue grapes, and
yellow and orange pumpkins — please the eye and the heart.
The almost
ready new bright wooden church in honor of St Sergius stands surrounded by birch
trees, the leaves of which have hardly been touched by the golden color. If you
come closer, it looks like a big and noble knight in a fairytale palace.
There is no
one outdoors. All sisters are having an akathist. I am met by cats who approach
me trustfully, wishing to get to know me. “Pyatnashka” (dotted cat) purrs
loudly and unceremoniously jumps into my car. In a couple of minutes, it is
sitting on my shoulder.
A visit to the rehabilitation center for me is like visiting a sick
person in a hospital. This time, it is easier because we already know each
other. A hospital is not just a place where sick people have to stay: it is
also the place where they are healed. It depends on care, a doctor's skill, and
of course on the hospital itself, for it is said that even walls may help in
healing. We are not going to talk about the social importance of this place and
about the life stories of the women who now stay here. It is no secret for
everyone that social rehabilitation in the center is a "life saver"
for the drowning. Today, on this wonderful day, we are going to ask Nun Barbara
(Atrasievich) how the construction of St Sergius Church is going on, how big
the sisters' harvest this year is, and how they are going to celebrate the patron
saint's day…
The builders
plan to cover the church with a permanent roof by winter. What about the domes?
"God willing, we will mount the domes before winter, too, it's hard to
plan anything specific," Nun Barbara replies. "Right now, we are
about to finish a parish house near the church. I cannot say anything about its
future use — we might use it to provide accommodation for the priests who come
to serve in the center, or we might use it as a guest house."
Currently, a
priest visits the rehabilitation center every Tuesday. The divine services are
held in the basement of the church. We hope that the Liturgy on the patron
saint's day will be celebrated on the ground floor, provided the weather is
fine."
There had been a church here several years
ago — the parish church of v. Nialidavičy — but it had become defunct by the
time our monastic sisters came here. The church was destroyed by fire on the
eve of the Annunciation in 2011, precisely during the negotiations of the
Convent and the authorities with regard to buying this land. The police said
that the most probable reason was arson: someone had been well-informed enough
to take all icons out of the church. Well, what can we say now?.. Let bygones
be bygones. Only broken and besmirched bells remind of that accident now, and
the sisters try not to remember evil. They have their own lives, their own
homework to do. "We read an akathist daily: to St Nicholas the
Wonderworker, St Mary of Egypt, St Pantheleimon, SS Cyril and Maria (parents of
St Sergius of Radonezh), and the Inexhaustible Chalice icon of the Mother of
God. We choose a time for it depending on the season and weather conditions. In
the summer, when it was hot outdoors, we prayed the akathist at lunchtime,
around 1p.m. As it is getting colder outdoors, we will change the timetable to
fit into the rhythm of winter chores."
The simple
farm living teaches to enjoy simple things. For instance, the sisters have
gathered the harvest — that's great news. They've had a good harvest of
tomatoes — amazing! They tried planting the sprouts for the first time, and
everything went fine: the tomatoes grew well both in a greenhouse and in the
open.
At present,
there are twenty-eight women at the Centre. "We have had a hike in the
number of people with mental disorders lately," Nun Barbara says.
"Sometimes they are not even diagnosed yet but their behavior and
condition tells that they need help. They wandered far and wide and at last
they landed here at the Centre.
We have
decided to assign one house, the smaller one, to mothers with children due to
the renovation going on. Unfortunately, it can only accommodate three or four
families. Right now, there are two mothers with their children and one woman
expecting a baby in the center.
See that
house over there? It is for the sisters who do not want to leave us anymore,
who have become permanent residents of our Centre and help us actively. One
room is for the less able: currently, it is home for one old lady who was
discharged from a mental clinic (she cannot talk, and no one knows anything
about her) and a woman who has memory problems. She has been here for about a
year. When they brought her to our center, her daughter was very anxious
because doctors had told her that her mother's condition would deteriorate, that
she is to be treated with extreme caution, to the extent of not even moving
furniture in her room. So another sister stayed with her all the time. Now this
woman can move around the rehabilitation center on her own! We even transferred
her from one house into another due to the renovation, and everything went
fine. It seems to me that her condition has improved noticeably, although
doctors predicted it would get worse. It is with God's help that this place
manages to fulfil its purpose of social rehabilitation. Everything we planned
during the project planning stage is currently being implemented, albeit on a
small scale…"
CONVERSATION