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Sr Madeleine Kisner

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Sr Madeleine Kisner

Birth
Offerle, Edwards County, Kansas, USA
Death
20 Nov 2009 (aged 82)
Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas, USA
Burial
Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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'Adorer of the Blood of Christ Sister Madeleine Kisner died Friday, Nov. 20, in Wichita. She was 82. A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated Monday, Nov. 23. Burial was in the ASC community.


Sister Madeleine was a professed Adorer for 66 years, a Newman University alumnae, a longtime professor of English, and a respected scholar of John Henry Cardinal Newman and his works.


Born May 26, 1927 [Dorothy A. Kisner] in Offerle, Kan., her family later moved to a farm near Plains, Kan. At age 14 she decided to follow her older sister, Mary, into the ASC religious congregation. She entered the novitiate in 1942 and received the name of Madeleine. She pronounced her first vows on July 1, 1943, and her permanent vows in 1948.


Sister Madeleine attended Sacred Heart Academy, a predecessor institution of Newman University, from which she graduated in 1945. She then taught at several parochial schools in Kansas, New Mexico, and Colorado. She earned a bachelor's degree in education in 1957 from Sacred Heart College, another predecessor of Newman, and a master's degree in English in 1971 from Creighton University, Omaha, Neb.


She completed a doctoral degree in English at the University of Michigan in 1975 and immediately joined the faculty at Newman as a professor of English and creative writing, where she taught until 1991. She later did post-doctoral work at the University of San Francisco in California and lived and studied in Durham and Cambridge, England.


Over a teaching career of close to 50 years, she taught at the elementary, secondary, and collegiate levels, including overseas stints teaching basic English in Romania, and was known for her dynamic teaching methods.


"She was a very popular teacher and was our own 'Auntie Mame,'," said Charlotte Rohrbach, ASC, professor emerita of history and now director of mission and archives at Newman, who was a colleague and friend of Sister Madeleine.


"She didn't know a stranger. She just loved to be with the students and often attracted the students who needed the help of one kind or another, but they needed the kind of attention she gave them. She didn't always do things the way other people thought they should be done, but as she thought they should be done. She definitely marched to her own drummer."


Sister Charlotte added that Sister Madeleine's love of people and relish for life had far-reaching effects on students, ASC Associates – a group of individuals who have an affiliation with the Adorers – colleagues, and many others.


"So many of our alumni say they went on beyond their education at Newman or went into the field they did because of her," she said, "and there are so many people who are ASC Associates and friends of the university and the Adorers, her religious community, because of her. Several of the Associates in this area joined the group because of their relationship with Sister Madeleine."


Sister Madeleine also enjoyed traveling, and after leaving the classroom because of health issues, she took up research on John Henry Cardinal Newman, the university's namesake, including extended study in Dublin, Ireland. She was later named a Newman Scholar and spearheaded a drive for works by Newman and artifacts and information about Newman that now make up a significant collection in the university's Dugan Library and Campus Center.


In 1997, she took a position at the Newman Center on the campus of Wichita State University and served as a volunteer for about 10 years.

'Adorer of the Blood of Christ Sister Madeleine Kisner died Friday, Nov. 20, in Wichita. She was 82. A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated Monday, Nov. 23. Burial was in the ASC community.


Sister Madeleine was a professed Adorer for 66 years, a Newman University alumnae, a longtime professor of English, and a respected scholar of John Henry Cardinal Newman and his works.


Born May 26, 1927 [Dorothy A. Kisner] in Offerle, Kan., her family later moved to a farm near Plains, Kan. At age 14 she decided to follow her older sister, Mary, into the ASC religious congregation. She entered the novitiate in 1942 and received the name of Madeleine. She pronounced her first vows on July 1, 1943, and her permanent vows in 1948.


Sister Madeleine attended Sacred Heart Academy, a predecessor institution of Newman University, from which she graduated in 1945. She then taught at several parochial schools in Kansas, New Mexico, and Colorado. She earned a bachelor's degree in education in 1957 from Sacred Heart College, another predecessor of Newman, and a master's degree in English in 1971 from Creighton University, Omaha, Neb.


She completed a doctoral degree in English at the University of Michigan in 1975 and immediately joined the faculty at Newman as a professor of English and creative writing, where she taught until 1991. She later did post-doctoral work at the University of San Francisco in California and lived and studied in Durham and Cambridge, England.


Over a teaching career of close to 50 years, she taught at the elementary, secondary, and collegiate levels, including overseas stints teaching basic English in Romania, and was known for her dynamic teaching methods.


"She was a very popular teacher and was our own 'Auntie Mame,'," said Charlotte Rohrbach, ASC, professor emerita of history and now director of mission and archives at Newman, who was a colleague and friend of Sister Madeleine.


"She didn't know a stranger. She just loved to be with the students and often attracted the students who needed the help of one kind or another, but they needed the kind of attention she gave them. She didn't always do things the way other people thought they should be done, but as she thought they should be done. She definitely marched to her own drummer."


Sister Charlotte added that Sister Madeleine's love of people and relish for life had far-reaching effects on students, ASC Associates – a group of individuals who have an affiliation with the Adorers – colleagues, and many others.


"So many of our alumni say they went on beyond their education at Newman or went into the field they did because of her," she said, "and there are so many people who are ASC Associates and friends of the university and the Adorers, her religious community, because of her. Several of the Associates in this area joined the group because of their relationship with Sister Madeleine."


Sister Madeleine also enjoyed traveling, and after leaving the classroom because of health issues, she took up research on John Henry Cardinal Newman, the university's namesake, including extended study in Dublin, Ireland. She was later named a Newman Scholar and spearheaded a drive for works by Newman and artifacts and information about Newman that now make up a significant collection in the university's Dugan Library and Campus Center.


In 1997, she took a position at the Newman Center on the campus of Wichita State University and served as a volunteer for about 10 years.



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  • Created by: David G. Stuart
  • Added: Apr 1, 2012
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/87813822/madeleine-kisner: accessed ), memorial page for Sr Madeleine Kisner (26 May 1927–20 Nov 2009), Find a Grave Memorial ID 87813822, citing Adorers of The Blood of Christ Convent Cemetery, Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas, USA; Maintained by David G. Stuart (contributor 2804148).