Fr.
Ignatius Lissner is often called the "founder of SMA's American
Province" and he represents the earliest SMA presence in
the United States. Born in France in 1867, he was ordained to
the SMA priesthood at age 24. After serving a period in Africa,
he made a fundraising visit to North America and saw a need for
ministry to blacks in the United States. He and fellow
SMAs began mission work in America, struggling against both racism
and anti-Catholic bias. Fr. Lissner earned the respect and support
of those who shared his vision, among them the nun who today is
known as St. Katherine Drexel. The heiress-turned-nun Mother Drexel
remained a lifelong friend of Fr. Lissner. Fr. Lissner
and his other SMAs started numerous churches and schools, particularly
in the American South. He was determined to train African-Americans
to become priests and nuns, following the SMA tradition set out
by the society's Founder, Bishop Melchior de Marion Bresillac.
Fr. Lissner helped establish a black order of nuns, the Handmaids
of Mary, and he also built SMA's first seminary in the United
States in 1921. Located in Tenafly, New Jersey, it was the
only integrated seminary in the country at its time. When SMA
decided to officially designate an American Province in 1941,
Fr. Lissner became its first Provincial Superior. He proved to
be a strong administrator despite many hardships and challenges
during his time of service. Due to poor health, he retired in
1948 and died two years later on August 7, 1948. He is buried
in Tenafly, New Jersey. Click here
for a detailed biography of Fr. Lissner. |