Kathleen P. Deignan

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Kathleen P. Deignan, Ph.D., (born December 17, 1948), is a theologian and sacred song writer who has been engaged in the ministry of liturgical musicianship for over thiry-five years. Professor of Religious Studies at Iona College, she is also the founder and director of the Iona Spirituality Institute, a project for the celebration and study of the spiritual life. She received her masters degree in Spirituality Studies and her doctorate in Historical Theology from Fordham University in New York. She is the author of Christ Spirit: The Eschatology of Shaker Christianity and she writes and lectures widely on issues of classical and contemporary spirituality, particularly the legacy of spiritual master Thomas Merton. Her book, When the Trees Say Nothing: Writings on Nature, is the first collection of Merton’s writings on nature (Sorin Books) 2003,and her latest work, Thomas Merton: A Book of Hours is a daily breviary for engaged contemplatives drawn from the poetry and psalms of Thomas Merton.

Kathleen has written over two hundred songs for worship and prayer, many of which have been recorded. She has been part of two liturgical ensembles. With friend and fellow artist, Evelyn Avoglia, she founded Schola Ministries, a project in service to the liturgical and contemplative arts. This ministry which began with the worship community at Sacred Heart University, now flourishes at the Benedictine Grange where she is composer in residence and leader of song with the sacred song ensemble [Anima Schola]; she is also composer in residence for Schola Ministries.

As a member of the Congregation of Notre Dame, Sister Kathleen has also been engaged in the mission of liberating education which at times is expressed in peace and social justice concerns, and also spiritual animation. She initiated and formerly directed, the Iona College Institute for Peace and Justice Studies in Ireland and the Iona College Spirituality Institute’s Celtic Spirituality Pilgrimage to Ireland which has fostered and focused her scholarly and creative interests on the richness of her Celtic inheritance. One of Kathleen's current projects is exploring the images and metaphors of Celtic ways of prayer and song.

Sister Kathleen is also engaged in the contemporary ministry of interreligious dialogue as a form of peace-making, and her interfaith engagements with Jews, Muslims and Buddhists have brought her around the world.

Her parents, Patrick Paul and Bridget, were born in the west of Ireland and later emigrated to London where Kathleen was born. Another emigration brought the Deignans to New York where Kathleen was raised on Manhattan's Upper West Side.

Her sister Ann Deignan is a physician and poet, likewise engaged in creative expression, and in ministry to the poor of Nicaragua. In her first book of poems, Mythos Gate, Ann escorts us into the creative realm of the poet’s imagination in its habit of deep storytelling, largely inspired by the mythologies of the ancient world. Her latest volume is Migration, with poems that explore the mystery of impermanence. Ann's first play, Mind the Way, was performed in a reading at the New Works Series at the Irish Repertory Theater in New York City in April 2006.

The death of their mother Bridget has given rise to a memorial in her honor - "The BRIDIE FUND" for orphan girls in Nicaragua. The Deignan sisters have also sponsored scholarships for aspiring Irish musicians participating in the Douglas Hyde Summer School in County Roscommon, Ireland.

Sr. Deignan is widely acclaimed for her compositions and writings, acclaimed by the [[National Catholic Reporter]] on November 15, 2006, as "marvelous, inspiring, comforting, jolting, consoling...".

[edit] Discography


Recordings
A Garden Once Again
Borne by Grace: Songs of Contemplation and Praise
Bride Spirit: Songs of the Beloved
Of Thanks and Wonder
Pax Amor Christi: A Trinity of Songs
Returning: Songs for the Journey Home
Sabbath: Songs for Worship
Stations: Songs for the Paschal Journey
The Servant's Heart
Visitation: Songs of the Congregation of Notre Dame
Sentinel of the Invisible: Jeanne LeBer