Jeanette Dandurand was a newlywed in 1960 when she approached the pastor of St. Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr Parish in Posen and told him that she could help by playing the organ. “The nuns taught me, and I knew the Polish songs,” said Dandurand, now 83. She learned to play the piano and organ in grade school at St. Susanna in Harvey. When the regular organist wouldn’t show up, she would play, and eventually, she became the regular organist. She was still the music minister when St. Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr Church, now part of a combined parish with St. Christopher in Midlothian, hosted its last regularly scheduled Sunday Mass July 24. She was lauded by the parish June 12 for her 62 years of service with the installation of an honorary street sign, a Mass and a dinner. The event was a surprise for Dandurand, who was expecting to play for a reunion Mass for one of the classes of the former parish school. To make Dandurand believe the ruse, one of her friends went so far as to make two versions of the parish bulletin so Dandurand wouldn’t know anything about it. They had to do it that way, according to Tina Hahn, who worked in the office of St. George School in Tinley Park when Dandurand played the organ for school Masses and taught music to the students once a week. “She’s like the person in the parable who is invited to a party and takes the lowest seat at table,” Hahn said. “If she knew about it, she wouldn’t have shown up.” Unless, maybe, she thought she could help. Dandurand and her husband, Francis, had six children, 20 grandchildren and now 10 great-grandchildren. After St. Stanislaus’ school closed, she had grandchildren attending St. George. She went to a grandparents’ Mass there, and there was no music. “I thought, ‘I could play the organ,’” she said. The principal didn’t have money for a music teacher, but could pay her to play at school Masses. She said she wouldn’t do it unless she could go into the classrooms to teach students the songs. “You could hear them all through the hallways,” Hahn said. “It was a gift to anyone who had ears to hear them.” She also planned a Christmas program each year, and a spring program for students who would perform at area nursing homes. Father Robinson Ortiz, pastor of St. Stanislaus and St. Christopher Parish, said the whole Dandurand family has been heavily involved in the parish, with her husband making many of the wood furnishings for the sanctuary. But one of Dandurand’s most important contributions was the way she welcomed Hispanic Catholics who moved into the parish in the early 2000s, Ortiz said. “For daily Mass, she would play Spanish songs because that’s who was there,” Ortiz said. She has been an important part of the liturgy team for decades, he said. “She’s an expert. She’s very good in liturgy,” Ortiz said. “She prepares all the ceremonies. She’s very easy to work with. She worked with Spanish choir, she was a very good instrument to make that bridge.” For her part, Dandurand said she started in the pre-Vatican II era, when everything was in Latin and Polish at the parish. As the changes of Vatican II were implemented, she had to learn about the new liturgical norms. For the last 15 years or so, she has worked to incorporate Spanish songs at St. Stan’s. “There are thousands of them,” she said. “And they know them all by heart.”
St. Moses the Black pantry expanding to meet increased need When the St. Columbanus Parish opened its food pantry in 2004, it served about 50 households each week. Now part of St. Moses the Black Parish, the food pantry regularly serves more than 700 households each week, distributing more than 2 million pounds of food and clothes each year.
Homeless, hungry focus of first ‘Carlo Fest’ event Students preparing for confirmation and first Communion at Blessed Carlo Acutis Parish spent the morning of March 23 imitating their parish’s patron by making bag lunches for hungry people.
Replica of beloved Michoacán image of Jesus installed in Mundelein parish In Huandacareo, Michoacán, nearly half a million devotees process with the image of “El Señor del Amparo” (“The Lord of Protection”) through the streets on Holy Thursday night, from the end of the Mass of the Lord’s Supper until about 5 a.m.