Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Inspiring All Who Visit | Page 20

People and Happenings Volunteer Profile: Rosemarie Smurzynski By Jennifer Johnston, Webmaster, Media & Imaging Coordinator Volunteer Rosemarie Smurzynski has been visiting Mount Auburn Cemetery for nearly three decades. She vividly remembers some of the earliest Friends’walking tours in the early 1990s led by Janet Heywood, former Vice President of Interpretive Programs, and by a very young David Barnett, then Director of Horticulture and today the Cemetery’s President. She also recalls volunteering at Mount Auburn’s booth at the New England Flower Show some 25 years ago, before the Cemetery even had an official volunteer program. It is the original vision of the Cemetery—as a place of repose for loved ones who have died and a place of comfort for those who mourn— that continues to resonate with Rosemarie. If time-travel were an option, she says, she would love to attend the Cemetery’s Consecration Ceremony, September 24, 1831, to hear the moving address of Judge Joseph Story, which outlined not just an intellectual vision but also the great importance of creating a landscape of exceptional beauty in which future generations could find solace. Her previous careers—briefly as a fifth- and sixth-grade teacher and then as a Unitarian Universalist Minister—(she graduated from Harvard Divinity School in 1980, and was ordained in 1981) prepared her well for volunteer work at the Cemetery, sharing the stories of Mount Auburn with visitors of all ages and being present and compassionate while teaching and listening. Since becoming a volunteer docent in 2010, Rosemarie has led numerous public programs at the Cemetery, was a member of the Margaret Fuller Bicentennial Committee celebrating the birth of Fuller in 1810, and led tours for visiting Unitarian Universalists as well as students from local high schools. Her programs encompass a wide-range of themes: from mothers, symbols, poets, to angels, monument symbolism, public lots, and, most notably over the last four years of its sesquicentennial, the Civil War. Stories of courage, honor, and sacrifice uncovered during her preparation for tours on the Abolitionists of Boston, the Battle of the Wilderness, and the Battle of Fredericksburg 18 | Sweet Auburn affected her deeply. Like characters in Stephen Crane’s The Red Badge of Courage, one of her favorite books growing up, she believes that Union soldiers “still inspire us to this day to live and to live for what we believe.” For Rosemarie as for many others, the monuments of Mount Auburn tell stories of once-vibrant lives. Some of our residents were legendary public figures, while others may only have been missed by a few family members. She cites, for example, the epitaph of “M. W. B,” in the St James Public Lot which illustrates her story:“She lived unknown, and few would know, / when Mary ceased to be,/ But she is in her grave— /And oh! the difference to me.” Says Rosemarie, “Mount Auburn is an important place to realize the value of one’s own life as someone in the future may stand in the exact place where you are standing today and that might even be in front of your future grave.” In travels with Tom (photo above, center), her husband of over 50 years, they often visit cemeteries, reading the international language of symbols on monuments in cities from Warsaw to Rome, Florence, London, and Paris. Such visits have enriched her understanding of the symbols used at Mount Auburn, which can unlock the meaning of subtle narrative threads running through the Cemetery. In addition to leading tours and programs, Rosemarie has a regular Friday shift at Mount Auburn’s Visitors Center and she has spoken at the Cemetery’s 2014 Candle Lighting Ceremony and the 2012 Service of Commemoration. Rosemarie loves history. She is a member of the Boston Athenaeum, Historic New England and The Massachusetts Historical Society where she often attends events. She and her husband Tom are parents of a son, Ken, married to Susan, a daughter, Marlene, and the grandparents of two girls. From time to time Rosemarie officiates at memorial and graveside services to commemorate the dead.