Servant of God Thea Bowman

Servant of God Thea Bowman
(born Bertha Bowman)
"Servant of Slaves"

(1937 - 1990)

"I bring my whole history, my traditions, my experience, my culture, my African-American song and dance and gesture and movement and teaching and preaching and healing and responsibility as gift to the Church."


QUICK FACTS:
  • Born December 29, 1937 in Yazoo City, MS to a physician and educator
  • Descendant of slaves
  • Converted from Protestantism to Catholicism after asking her parents if she could become Catholic at the age of 9
  • Enrolled at St. Rose Convent and Viterbo University at the age of 15
  • The first and only African-American Franciscan Sister of Perpetual Adoration
  • Taught in elementary, secondary, and university levels for 16 years
  • Spoke across the country on Catholicism and race topics such as "What does it mean to be Black and Catholic?" 
  • Helped found the National Black Sisters Conference
  • Helped found the Institute of Black Catholics as Xavier University of Louisiana
  • Served as Director Office of Intercultural Affairs in the Diocese of Jackson
  • Received her PhD in English from Catholic University of America in 1972
  • Diagnosed with breast cancer in 1984
  • Helped create the first Catholic Gospel Hymnal: Lead Me, Guide Me published in 1987
  • First African-American woman to address the US Conference of Catholic Bishops (1989)
  • Died at the age of 52 on March 30,1990
  • Cause for Canonization officially opened in 2018
  • Sainthood Phase: "Servant of God"
  • Remaining phases: "Venerable", "Blessed" and "Saint"
  • The first US native born African American whose cause for canonization has been opened by the Catholic Church

 
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VISIT THE OFFICIAL CAUSE FOR CANONIZATION WEBSITE

To report any spiritual or physical favors granted through prayer in Sister Thea’s name, please write: 

Sister Thea Bowman Cause for Canonization
237 E. Amite Street
Jackson, MS 39201
or Email:
mary.woodward@jacksondiocese.org.

 

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