THE PIONEERS

THE PIONEERS


We are the Pioneers because we were the first. We started school in tents due to the steel strike in 1955. We were the only class - all freshmen, then in the following years, always the upperclassmen. Because we were such a small class, we all knew one another. We chose the school colors, uniform, and wrote our alma matter. We published the first yearbook and named it "Esprit" for our sense of spirit. And we were the first class to celebrate a 50th reunion - still the Pioneers. How wonderful to reminisce and reconnect with one another!

50TH REUNION

50TH REUNION

PHS 50 YEAR SCHOLARSHIP FUND

PHS 50-YEAR CLUB SCHOLARSHIP FUND


Following our 50-year class reunion in March 2009, the class of '59 gifted Providence High School with a special scholarship fund to be used for financially-needy students. This fund is called: PHS 50-Year Club Scholarship Fund. This fund will last in perpetuity as long as we, and other classes as they reach the 50-year anniversary of their graduations, continue to contribute to it. If you are able and willing to contribute to our alma mater, will you please designate "PHS 50-Year Scholarship Fund" as the payee on your check or credit card gift. With our assistance the scholarship will go on forever -- and the Class of 1959 will always be remembered.


Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Almita Jimenez Bey-Carrion


After eight years at Saint Finbar and four at Providence, I attended the University of San Diego College for Women for two years. Although I was accepted by Northridge University for my Junior year, my life took a turn. In 1961 I joined the Army, taking my Basic Training in Alabama, then was stationed at Fort Eustis, Virginia. This was before the Civil Rights Movement, so quite an experience being in the South. Seven months after arriving in Virginia I met my husband-to-be, Rueben Carrion, who was born and raised in Newton, Kansas. Our wedding day was all arranged and scheduled for Nov. 10, 1962, but the Cuban Missile Crises broke out. Rueben was sent to Florida and I spent what should have been my wedding day morning crying in the shower. After things settled down, Rueben's CO, who felt bad that we had to cancel our wedding, allowed him a five day leave back to Virginia. We were finally married in the Fort Eustis Catholic Chapel on November 17, 1962. We lived in Williamsburg for awhile and at the end of 1963 moved to California to make our home. We've been happily married for forty-six years, have five grown children (three adopted), ranging from age 44 to 33, and six grandchildren ages 22 to 4. During the early years of our marriage we were also foster parents.
Since my Senior high school year, when I taught Catechism to children in a downtown Los Angeles parish, I have always been active in our parish, wherever we happened to be living. I've been President of the Legion of Mary, Co-Director of RCIA and Lector, for instance. Around age forty-two I returned to college, getting my B.A. in Religious Studies from Mount Saint Mary's College in Los Angeles. During that time I also completed a two-year Archdiocese of Los Angeles' Certification Program for Spiritual Directors and have been a Spiritual Director for over 25 years. After completion of my B.A. it took me seven summers to achieve a Master's Degree in Spirituality from Santa Clara University, Santa Clara, CA. This required that I stay at Santa Clara U. for six weeks each summer, which I never could have done without the love, encouragement, and support of my wonderful husband and our five children who were still living at home. I graduated at age 52 with my M.A.
In 1988 the Passionist Congregation of Priests and Brothers hired me to be on the all-priest retreat team at Mater Dolorosa Retreat Center, Sierra Madre, CA. Prior to beginning my employment with the Passionists they sent me to Catholic Theological Union in Chicago where I was able to take two summer classes and meet with other lay people from around the country who were involved with the Passionist Congregation in one way or another. We were given a grand tour of Chicago, a visit to the Provincial House, and each evening our group met for further immersion in the history and ministries of the Passionists around the world.
I was the first woman to be on the retreat team in the history of Mater Dolorosa and had to preach (yes, preach!) every weekend during the retreat season, which was September to May. The weekend retreats were mostly for men, although we had about 4 women's retreats a year. The men had a challenging adjustment to make when a woman became part of the retreat team after sixty-plus years of "no women" on their retreats. Most accepted this paradigm shift; some few never did. During my years at Mater Dolorosa, apart from my ministry of Spiritual Direction, I provided special programs at the retreat center, primarily for women, but also a prayer group for men. Once a year I conducted a Day of Prayer and Reflection at Saint Andrew's Abbey, Valyermo, for parish secretaries of the L.A. Diocese. I was also privileged to assist a Passionist priest in conducting a pilgrimage to Italy during that time, visiting the holy places and shrines of several Passionist saints. My years at the retreat center were some of the most enriching years of my life.
Rueben was able to retire at age fifty-five after twenty-eight years with United Parcel Service. That was fifteen years ago. We moved to southern Nevada (Pahrump) in 1994 and in 2001 we moved to Gardnerville, in northern Nevada, where we live now. Gardnerville is an hour south of Reno and a half hour from gorgeous Lake Tahoe. Our valley is nestled against the majestic Sierra Nevada mountains where forest, lakes, rivers and waterfalls abound. At an elevation of 4,750 feet, we are blessed with the beauty and diversity of the four seasons. This is an ideal location for nature lovers such as Rueben and myself who like to spend as much time as possible outdoors hiking, bird-watching, and RVing. Two winters ago we took up snow-shoeing. We're proud of the fact that our small property has been designated a wildlife habitat, having complied with the specifications to be so designated by the National Wildlife Federation. Between January and December we attract at least 24 species of birds to our property.
My hobby is nature photography and earlier this year I won First Prize for a photo I took of a Bald Eagle last March. Bald eagles come down to our valley ranches to feed on the placenta of newly born calves. Local shops have sold my photo greeting-cards and some of my larger photographs.
At present Rueben has a four-day-a-week job at one of our local hotel/casino's as casino cashier. He's always been a people-person, so loves this job were he deals with the public. As always, I continue to be involved in our parish. For six years now I've facilitated two programs: Women's Scripture Sharing and a Contemplative Prayer Group for women and men. Five years ago I was elected Dean of the Nevada Chapter of Benedictine Oblates which is affiliated with the Benedictine Sisters of Virginia.
Sister Cecilia Mary was my piano and choral teacher during my years at Providence. I grew very close to her, as well as to Sister Alphonsa Maria, both being significant influences during my high school years. So much of who and what I became I owe to them. I stayed in touch with Sister Cecilia Mary after I graduated, exchanging many letters, which I still have, and an occasional phone call. A few years after I married she came to visit Rueben and I in our home. We had two children by then. When she was dying of cancer I flew to Seattle to see her. During that visit I also saw Sister Esther who had taught me, my brother and sister at Saint Finbar. I also got to see my 2nd and 4th grade teachers: Sisters Bernadette and Catherine.
Unfortunately, Sister Alphonsa Maria passed away not long after we graduated, so I never had the opportunity to thank her for all she did for me. Not in person, anyway, though many times in my prayers and heart. Academic non-achiever that I was (I hated school back then), it was at her insistence and intervention on my behalf to the Mother Superior of USD College for Women that I got accepted to that wonderful school. My grades didn't warrant admission to any college, nor did I want to go, but Sister Alphonsa Maria somehow believed that what had to happen was for me to continue my education, somehow shed my cocoon along the way, and the butterfly would emerge. She was right, against all my resistance and protestations. She spoke with my parents about "her plan for me," so between the three of them, off I went to USD to live and study for two years.
It's been wonderful to read about some of my former classmates here and I hope we hear from many more. However, it has deeply saddened me to read the names of our dear classmates who have passed away. May they be living in the joy of God's eternal love.
Our five children are scattered between Las Vegas and southern and northern California, making it difficult to get everyone together. However, I can include here a photo taken this past Thanksgiving weekend of our three daughters, the boyfriend of one, three of our grandchildren, Rueben and myself. Missing are our two sons, three grandchildren, and the son-in-law who took the photo.
With fond memories and best wishes to all,
Almita Jimenez Bey-Carrion
snowfall6@msn.com

POSTED BY ALMITA JIMENEZ BEY-CARRION

1 comment:

Carol Lex Tanner said...

Almita, your post-PHS life story is inspirational. So many firsts! I was touched to read how Sr. Alphonsa Maria influenced your life. Thank you for sharing all of this with us. I look forward to seeing you in March.

Carol Lex Tanner