ICA Update No. 109 | Page 30

In Memoriam Sister Mary Henry Williges, O.P. ‘43 “I hope someone will hold my hand as I move into the presence of God.” What a privilege it was to hold those precious hands which, throughout Mary Henry’s life, reached out lovingly and creatively to all – her parents, siblings, sisters, lay friends, first graders, St. Vincent boys, adult students, colleagues. It was indeed a sacred experience for us. Born on September 6, 1925, Clara Maria Theresa Williges, as she was named at her baptism two weeks later, grew up in the Mission District of San Francisco. Her father, John Henry Williges, was an immigrant to California from Hanover, Germany and her mother, Marie Elizabeth Delwisch, also of German descent, was a native San Franciscan. Mary Henry once shared that her childhood, was “loads of fun; we had a heavenly family life.” She and her brother Teddy, who became Father Theodore Williges, a Franciscan missionary, were the two younger children and were very close until Teddy’s death. Her sister, Margaret Williges Zukowski and her brother John (called Jack) Williges, both older, predeceased her by several years. When she was a senior at Immaculate Conception Academy, Sister Patricia Reilly admired freshman Clara Williges, who she found always to be “…friendly, upbeat, jovial, happy and a true people person.” These traits nurtured early on within her loving home continued to characterize the whole of Mary Henry’s life. The cross of poor health that she carried most of her