[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 120 (Tuesday, August 2, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5244-S5245]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO SISTER MARY NORBERTA MALINOWSKI
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, in 1855 in Warsaw, Poland, Blessed
Angela founded the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Felix, an order
dedicated to serving the poor, the sick, and the disabled. Today,
thousands of Felician Sisters carry on a tradition of compassionate
service around the world.
Today I wish to pay tribute to one of their number, a remarkable
woman in Bangor, ME, the city where I live. Her name is Sister Mary
Norberta Malinowski, but she is known and loved throughout Maine simply
as Sister Norberta. She has dedicated her life to serving God by
serving those in need.
Sister Norberta became a registered nurse in 1956 and began her
career as one of the first pediatric nurse practitioners at
Massachusetts General Hospital. After earning advanced degrees in
public health and management, she received faculty appointments at
Harvard Medical School and the Boston College Graduate School of
Nursing.
In 1982, Sister Norberta became president and chief executive officer
of St. Joseph Hospital in Bangor. As she prepares to step down after 29
years of service, her accomplishments are being celebrated by the Maine
Legislature, the city of Bangor, the Honor Society of Nursing, the
Maine chapter of Business and Professional Women, and many others.
There is much to celebrate. Under Sister Norberta's courageous and
visionary leadership, St. Joseph has been transformed into the largest
community hospital in Maine. She was instrumental in bringing many
firsts to the region and to the State, from digital mammography and
laparoscopic surgery to allowing fathers in the delivery room.
The Felician Sisters were founded with a particular focus on serving
the Polish countryside. Sister Norberta continues that tradition by
leading the effort to ensure primary care services for rural Maine and
to organize small community hospitals under the Maine Health Alliance
to create a statewide network of care.
Sister Norberta's contributions as a health care executive are only
part of her inspiring story. She has given thousands of hours of her
personal time to charity and has applied St. Joseph's facilities to
such needs as providing laundry and food services to the area's
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homeless shelters. Countless other quiet acts of kindness testify to
her caring heart and deep humility.
The 16th century Capuchin friar canonized as St. Felix was known in
his time as ``the saint of the streets of Rome'' for his daily journeys
through the city dispensing food, medicine, and comfort to the poor,
the sick, and the troubled. Sister Norberta has lived that legacy
through the streets of Bangor and the country roads of Maine, and I
join in thanking her for her blessed service.
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