Stirring things up at the senior center
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It’s impossible to strike up a conversation with Anne
Hogan-Shereshevski at the Costa Mesa Senior Center and not take
immediate notice of her flashy, red bowler hat and matching red,
dangly earrings. She’s quite aware that these goofy accessories clash
with the rest of her ensemble, but the former nun and teacher enjoys
explaining why she wears them -- because they’re fun and because she
wants to belong.
This New York native’s not shy. From Hogan-Shereshevski’s
upbringing to her affiliation with the Costa Mesa Senior Center’s
eccentric Red Hat Society, the 83-year-old has a vivid memory of her
life, which also included a role in a French order of nuns. She sat
down with the Pilot’s Jeff Benson to remember her past and shed light
on her future.
Where did you grow up?
I was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., on the anniversary of the sinking of
the battleship Maine -- Feb. 15, 1898. I always tell everyone I was
born on the same day, but it was really 1921. My students would
always tell me I don’t look that old.
I grew up in Ozone Park in Queens County, N.Y. It was a
middle-class neighborhood. I went to all-Catholic schools all my
life, and for high school, I went to Our Lady of Wisdom Academy and
was taught by French nuns. I was a good student -- good in languages.
But then I failed geometry. Now I love it.
What sparked the change?
Well, after repeating it, I fell in love with the teacher and
decided to enter the French order (of nuns). Geometry led the way
into the order. The name of the order was the Daughters of Wisdom,
but we called ourselves the “Wise Old Girls.” I had a great love for
the French language, and in the order, they only spoke French. I took
three years of French in high school and ended up teaching it for 14
years. I entered the order at a young 18 and studied in Ottawa.
Can you describe your experience as a nun?
It was like the Army. You take vows for five years and then you
pronounce your final vows. I was in Canada when I was supposed to be
graduating from St. John’s University, and at the same time, June 15,
1946, I could not attend my brother’s ordination to the priesthood
because of final vow seclusion. It was very strict. They gave
nicknames to the nuns. I was called “Soeur de la Sourire,” which is
French for “Sister of the Smile.”
That same year, my newly ordained brother, the late Fr. Edward P.
Hogan, came to Canada to deliver the English sermon. At the final vow
services, when he got up to the stand to talk, he looked so youthful
that I thought he was the altar boy. But he was my brother, Father
Ed.
When it came time for him to be ordained as a priest, we couldn’t
be together. This was the first time I’d seen him since then. It was
a big surprise, because he didn’t tell me. Then I returned to New
York.
What were some of your limits as a member of the order?
You had a rule of silence but only two hours a day of recreation.
Night time was called the “grand silence.” We weren’t allowed to
talk, so we used sign language.
How did you get your start in teaching?
In 1941, after my profession, I was sent back to New York to
matriculate in St. John’s University full time. I was to be a
teacher. Between my first vows and my final vows, I was assigned to
teach 45 screaming third-grade boys in St. Mary Gate of Heaven
Grammar School in Ozone Park.
After 1942, I was sent to St. Charles Hospital for polio patients
to teach in the wards. I taught reading, math, religion and geometry
to children in all grades.
How did you end up in Costa Mesa?
I decided to graduate from the nunnery in July, 1969. I lived in Queens County, N.Y., and was helped to get a job in Manhattan. Then I
moved to Mt. Morris, N.Y., south of Rochester. After teaching for two
years, I felt the call to come to California, where my sister and her
five children lived in Los Alamitos. I settled in Costa Mesa in 1977.
I attended the Garden Grove singles (club) in 1977 and met my
future Jewish husband there. I wondered what he was doing at a
Positive Christian Singles group, and he said he was looking for a
nice lady.
Was it difficult to be married to someone with a different
religious background?
Not really. We were married for seven years and neither one of us
converted since we were both happy with our own religion. And I
really had fun with him. I got to meet most of the rabbis of Orange
County.
What types of activities are you involved in at the Senior Center?
I cause trouble. I’m an advocate for seniors. I was a member of
the Senior Advisor Council until it disbanded. I tried to be a
liaison between the board, the staff and the seniors. I tried to
settle problems among seniors.
I’m seriously thinking of forming a concerned seniors group or a
think tank to resurrect the Senior Advisor Council.
I’ve been active at the Senior Center since its opening in 1992,
and I’m always busy advocating for seniors. I work on three
publications a month. One is the monthly Senior Reporter, where I
usually highlight a senior and write about senior events. The second
one is a hot sheet for the Senior Center. And the third is a “holy
flier” for seniors in my church, St. Joachim’s Catholic Church.
Now I play the piano twice a week at the center, and I do a mean
“alley cat” dance every Friday in the dining room.
Is there a story behind that red hat you’re wearing?
I am an unofficial member of the Red Hat Society. I have all the
jewelry and the red hat, but I’m too busy to attend the meetings or
go on the outings.
It kind of started with this poem, which said, “When I grow old, I
will wear purple with a red hat.” It’s just social, and the people
are known by the crazy red hats they wear. We go on trips and out to
restaurants and shows to reach out to others.
What are your future plans?
I’m thinking about writing a book sometime soon. I’ve had 22
people begging me to write my story, and I’m thinking of calling it
“The Roman Nun meets the Wandering Jew.” I’d like to follow my
niece’s footsteps as she just had her first book published.
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