Sister Berta Sailer Obituary
Sister Berta Sailer Obituary
Sister Berta Sailer Obituary
Sister Berta Sailer, once hailed as the “Mother Teresa of Kansas City,” passed away
peacefully Jan. 25, 2024, in Kansas City, at the age of 87. Sister Berta, who co-founded
Operation Breakthrough, devoted her life and her voice to children and parents in poverty.
She was born Judith Felice on Dec. 10, 1936, in Chicago, the only child of Cecelia Sailer.
Raised by her grandmother, Bertha Sailer, young Judy spent time in the convent where her
grandmother worked as a cook. She graduated high school in 1954, with dreams of serving
the poor in Africa. Money was tight, and becoming a nun looked like the most feasible
route to the life of service she envisioned. She entered Mount Carmel Convent in Dubuque,
IA, where she took the name “Sister Berta,” to honor her grandmother. In 1957, she became
a professed member of the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, commonly known
as “the BVMs.” She completed degrees in education and history at Mundelein College in
Chicago and taught in Chicago Catholic schools. It was there that she encountered the
forces that defined her life’s work.
In 1958, Sister Berta’s order sent her to Our Lady of Angels School, where 92 children had
just died in a fire. There she learned on the fly how to comfort and teach traumatized
children. She also met a fellow BVM, Sister Corita Bussanmas. The pair bonded while
running a club for wayward teens, gang members who called themselves “The West Side
Jokers.” The nuns confiscated the flasks of whiskey boys tried to sneak in and, believing
the boys would behave better if they had something to do, Sister Berta helped them form
a softball team and once took them to rent motorcycles – a move that cemented her
reputation as a loose cannon in the parish.
Sister Berta followed her friend Sister Corita to Kansas City in 1968 to teach at St. Vincent’s
School at 31st and Flora, where she let live chickens roam the school after her students
finished their project on egg incubation. Her punishment for a kid shooting spit wads? She
threw 100 beans down a flight of stairs and told him he could not go home until he found
them all. Students who had been thrown out of public schools learned at St. Vincent’s –
and adored Sister Berta! Along the way, Sister Berta and Sister Corita opened a daycare
center in the convent living room, so mothers with young children could work and support
their families.
When the nuns learned the diocese might shut down St. Vincent’s because, as white
families left the neighborhood the school was no longer serving Catholic children, Sister
Berta led the charge to keep it open, ultimately deciding with Sister Corita to forge on
without church backing. They incorporated the school and childcare program as a not-for-
profit called Operation Breakthrough in 1971. There, Sister Berta worked 365 days a year
for 44 years, until a broken hip and shoulder sidelined her in 2015.
A tireless advocate for children in poverty, Sister Berta was the go-to person for three
generations of families in the urban core. She stood up for them in court, in Jefferson City
and Washington DC. She helped them bury their dead, diaper their babies and keep going
when it seemed like the whole world was against them.
Operation Breakthrough grew to serve more than 700 children each weekday, offering on-
site medical and dental care, occupational, speech and play therapy, and a host of family
services, in addition to educational enrichment. With a two-generation approach to
helping children reach their potential, Sister Berta spent as many hours uplifting – and
scolding – parents as she did children. She took every opportunity to put Operation
Breakthrough parents and potential supporters on common ground, battering away at the
mindset of “us” and “them.” She created the “City You Never See” bus tour – a trip through
the urban core, narrated by parents of children at Operation Breakthrough – to educate
the public about the challenges of families in need. Her “100 Jobs for 100 Moms” program
entreated employers to give struggling mothers a chance to support their children.
With her devotion and irreverent wit, she inspired hundreds, perhaps thousands, of
volunteers, donors and advocates to join her in serving children in need. She adopted this
saying as her motto, frequently handing out copies of it: “Be the kind of woman that when
your feet hit the floor every morning, the devil says, ‘Oh, crap! She’s up!’ ”
Sister Berta received many honors, including the Kindest Kansas Citian Award in 2001 and,
along with Sister Corita, the Community Service Award from the Women’s Political Caucus
in 2007, the Marion and John Kreamer Award for Social Entrepreneurship from the
University of Missouri-Kansas City in 2014. She and Sister Corita were inducted into UMKC’s
Starr Women’s Hall of Fame in 2021.
No honor was more important to Sister Berta, though, than being “Mom” to the four
children she and Sister Corita adopted: Yauti, Ronnie, Vanshay and Tyrez. An infamous
worrywart, she was likely to call them a dozen times an hour if they weren’t home by 10
p.m., but they never doubted how much she cared.
Sister Corita passed away in 2021. Sister Berta’s survivors include her daughters, Kenyauta
Sailer and Vanshay Purnell; sons Ronald Sailer and Tyrez Scott; honorary sons Myles Cason
and Chris Waxter, along with his children Lailani and Christian; and four grandsons: Kyler,
Mylo and Kamdyn Sailer and Roderick Ryles Jr. Also surviving are more than 70 young
people who spent some part of their childhood living under Sister Berta and Corita’s roof,
including Darius and Jaya Phillips.
The family would like to express their thanks to Sister Berta’s devoted care team: Paige,
Johnetta, Terry, Tami, Yolanda, C’Ashinae and Lana.
Funeral services for Sister Berta are pending and will be announced on Operation
Breakthrough’s website, operationbreakthrough.org. In lieu of flowers, please consider
memorial contributions to The Sister Corita and Sister Berta Irrevocable Trust (for the care
of their family) in care of Country Club Bank, One Ward Parkway, Kansas City MO 64112 or
to Operation Breakthrough, 3039 Troost Avenue, Kansas City MO 64109.
(operationbreakthrough.org)
Former Senator Claire McCaskill once called Sister Berta “the Mother Teresa of Kansas
City.” Mayor Sly James gave her his cell phone number – and answered her calls. The
Obamas invited her to the White House. But for Sister Berta, it was always the children
who belonged in the spotlight. “The child who will grow up to cure cancer might be here in
our Center today,” she frequently said in the halls of Operation Breakthrough, “and we
better make sure they have what they need to succeed.”