Content deleted Content added
m →New Jerusalem Laura: Typo fixing, replaced: cites → cities using AWB |
m changed the lyrics quoted from the MeWithoutYou song "Timothy Hay" to be the correct lyrics |
||
(36 intermediate revisions by 20 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{Short description|American Religious Sister and anti-war activist}}
{{for|the civil rights attorney and academic|Margaret McKenna (academic)}}
{{Good article}}
In 1989, McKenna helped to found New Jerusalem Laura, a [[North Philadelphia]] addiction treatment center that strives to help people recover from substance abuse without the use of medication,<ref name=Thompson /> by substituting community service, discussion, and Bible study as routes to recovery.
==Early life and education==
McKenna grew up in [[Hackensack, New Jersey]] and upon graduating from high school entered the Medical Mission Sisters, a [[Catholic Church
==Activism==
{{Quote box
{{Quote box |width=24em |align=right |quote=''me and Sister Margaret on the Pentagon lawn<br/>arrested, our wrists in a plastic tie''|source=—"Timothy Hay" by [[mewithoutYou]]<ref name=mewithoutYou>{{harvnb|mewithoutYou|2009|p=8}}</ref>}} McKenna has been arrested for several acts of [[civil disobedience]] since becoming an activist in the 1970s.<ref name=Campellone>{{harvnb|Campellone|2010}}</ref> In 1987, she participated in a protest over the [[Iran–Contra affair]] during the bicentennial celebration of the signing of the constitution in Philadelphia.<ref name=Stevens>{{harvnb|Stevens|1987|p=A36}}</ref> In 1988 on Easter Sunday, McKenna and three other [[Plowshares Movement|Plowshares]] activists accessed the third deck of the {{USS|Iowa|BB-61|6}} and symbolically hammered on empty [[Tomahawk (missile)|Tomahawk]] missile housings before pouring their own blood on them.<ref name=Ellis>{{harvnb|Ellis|1988}}</ref> At the same time, a banner that read "Follow the nonviolent Christ" was placed on the side of the ship.<ref name=Thompson>{{harvnb|Thompson|2009}}</ref> The group was charged with trespassing, and McKenna was sentenced to four months in prison.<ref name=Thompson /> In 2007, McKenna, as well as musician [[Aaron Weiss]], was arrested for participating in a "[[die-in]]" to protest the civilian casualties of the [[Iraq War]] on the grounds of [[The Pentagon]] in [[Arlington County]], [[Virginia]].<ref name=JonahHouse>{{harvnb|Jonah House|2007}}</ref> This event was referenced in the song "Timothy Hay" by Weiss's band, [[mewithoutYou]], on their album ''[[It's All Crazy! It's All False! It's All a Dream! It's Alright]]''.<ref name=Hagerman>{{harvnb|Hagerman|Weiss|2009}}</ref>▼
| width = 24em
| align = right
| quote = ''me and Sister Margaret on the Pentagon lawn<br/> with our wrists in a plastic tie''
| source = —"Timothy Hay" by [[mewithoutYou]]<ref name=mewithoutYou>{{harvnb|mewithoutYou|2009|p=8}}</ref>
▲
{{clear}}
==New Jerusalem Laura==
McKenna and
New Jerusalem Laura's addict counseling methods were influenced by those of One Day at a Time, founded by the Rev. Henry Wells.<ref name=Thompson /> For the first 60 days of their stay, recovering addicts are prohibited from contacting the outside world, must surrender their cigarettes, and must be escorted if they leave the building. During this time, residents occupy their time with chores, community service, meetings, and Bible studies.<ref name=Campellone />
McKenna believes that the reason for the New Jerusalem Laura's success is the community. "In a recovery community, you can't get away with [lying], because it shows," she said. "It forces you to be honest."<ref name=Thompson /> Nearly 400 residents have graduated from the program since its inception.<ref name=MMS /> Of those, close to seventy percent are reported to remain drug-free, well above the results of traditional recovery methods.<ref name=MMS />
Line 25 ⟶ 31:
===Bibliography===
*{{cite web|last=Campellone|first=Christopher|title=North Central: Addicts and Activists Provide an Oasis on Norris Street|url=http://philadelphianeighborhoods.com/2010/06/16/north-central-addicts-and-activists-provide-an-oasis-on-norris-street/|work=Philadelphia Neighborhoods|publisher=Temple University|
*{{cite web|last=Ellis|first=Lisa|title=An Activist Nun Trying To Provoke People To Think|url=http://articles.philly.com/1988-04-12/news/26249993_1_female-prisoners-protesters-religion-professor/3|work=The Philadelphia Inquirer|year=1988 |
*{{cite web|last=Hagerman|first=Sarah|first2=Aaron |last2= Weiss |title=mewithoutYou: Let It Go|url=http://www.jambase.com/Articles/18525/mewithoutYou-Let-It-Go/0|publisher=Jam Base|
*{{cite web|last=Jonah House|title=Feast of the Holy Innocents Faith and Resistance Retreat Pentagon December 28, 2007|url=http://www.jonahhouse.org/archive/FRDec07Pen.htm|publisher=Jonah House|
*{{cite web|last=Kolodziej|first=Maureen|title=Sister McKenna speaks about her call to serve|url=http://www.lasalle.edu/collegian/features/articles/06/oct18/mckenna.html|work=Collegian|publisher=La Salle University|
*{{cite web|last=Medical Mission Sisters|title=Sister Margaret McKenna|url=http://www.medicalmissionsisters.org/meet/sister_margaret.htm|publisher=Medical Mission Sisters|
*{{cite AV media notes|title=It's All Crazy! It's All False! It's All a Dream! It's Alright |year=2009
*{{cite web|last1=Schenk|first1=Christine|title=And the desert shall bloom|url=http://ncronline.org/blogs/simply-spirit/and-desert-shall-bloom|website=National Catholic Reporter|
*{{cite news|last=Stevens|first=William|title=Congress Marks Birth at Fete in Philadelphia|newspaper=The New York Times|year=1987
*{{cite web|last=Thompson|first=Isaiah|title=The Rehab Wars|url=http://archives.citypaper.net/articles/2009/12/10/the-rehab-wars|publisher=Philadelphia City Paper|
==External links==
*[
{{DEFAULTSORT:McKenna, Margaret}}
[[Category:People from Hackensack, New Jersey]]
[[Category:American Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns]]▼
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:University of Notre Dame alumni]]
Line 48 ⟶ 52:
[[Category:Chestnut Hill College alumni]]
[[Category:American anti–Iraq War activists]]
[[Category:Catholics from New Jersey]]
[[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:21st-century American Roman Catholic nuns]]
|