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from Pages Magazine March/April 2004 Reprinted with permission
Cheryl Reed grew up
terrified of nuns. The long, black dresses they wore looked
spooky and her fundamentalist family told her they were evil
idol worshippers. As an adult, she met a nun for the first
time and asked her about the monastic life of women. I would
begin a journey that would span years and result in this spring’s
Unveiled: The Hidden Lives of Nuns (Berkley).
Reed, now an investigative reporter for the Chicago Sun-Times, began research that included several extended periods of living in monasteries, getting up in the middle of the night for prayers, sharing their meals, and helping with their ministries.
“Whatever they did, I did,” she says. “I helped deliver a baby in Texas.”
Because she immersed herself in their lives, the nuns were extraordinarily open with her. Far from robots who chant the policy line. They were a diverse group of women with one common thread – they had sacrificed everything most women treasure for their calling.
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