Rosemarie Burian

Rosemarie Burian

Spiritual Director at the Tao Center in Wheaton, IL


Rosemarie Burian, OSF, D. Min., is a Wheaton Franciscan Sister, teacher and founder of the Bethlehem Center/Northern Illinois Food Bank.[1] She was the Pastoral Associate at St. Mark Catholic Church in Wheaton, Illinois. She went on to found Bethlehem Center which is now called the Northern Illinois Food Bank.[2]

Through her experience with the St. Mark's Food Pantry, she witnessed the devastating effects of both spiritual and material poverty. Too many children were going to bed and suffered from malnurished, it is hard to imagine that hunger exists in the US but it does. So serious was the problem that the US Senate set up a select committee to look into the issue.

In response to this need, Sister Rosemarie assembled a group of people to work with her on this project. They became the first board of directors: Bonnie Goodman, Cathy Truesdale, Jim Truesdale, Clevis Cabrera, Joyce Shannon, Nick Hindman, Paul Wood, Barb Williams and Willie Williams. Sister Rosemarie also met with many local leaders, Leah Krantz, from The Greater Chicago Food Depository [3] and Bernie Kleina, the Executive Director of the Hope Fair Housing Center.[4]

It was also discovered that thousands of pounds of edible food was going into landfills. The board contacted manufacturers and grocery stores to try to recover some of it.[5] They realized a food bank could be a way of recovering and distributing this much needed food.

The name Bethlehem, meaning "House of Bread" was chosen. Sister Rosemarie was officially named the first Executive Director on September 28, 1982.[6] What began as a way to help solve what was thought to be a temporary problem, has grown [7] and as of June 2012, one in five children in Northern Illinois face hunger.[8]

Burian left to pursue other interests in December 1986. She went on to be a chaplain then a Spiritual Director and is currently teaching classes in Meditation and Mindfulness at the Tau Center, a spirituality ministry of the Wheaton Franciscans.[9]

References

  1. Chicago Tribune News. "Feeding the Suburbs".
  2. Forest & Bluff Magazine. "Look North".
  3. Greater Chicago Food Depository. "Hunger in Chicago".
  4. Hope Fair Housing. "History".
  5. CalRecycle. "Food Banks and Food Recovery Organizations".
  6. Northern Illinois Food Bank. "History".
  7. Hunger in America: 1 in 7 rely on food banks. http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/08/17/hunger-study-food/14195585/
  8. http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20120606/news/706069973/
  9. Tao Center. "Program Facilitators".
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.