
Remembering Sister Emily
Interview with Sister Emily Hurter
By Sister Mary Clare Buthod
January 20, 2007
February 4, 2007, Sister Emily Hurter, an absolute delight, will celebrate her 100th birthday. Benedictines, students, family and friends will join Sister with wonderful festivities by sharing fascinating memories. I asked sister if I could interview her. Sister with her engaging sense of humor asked, “What will you do with the interview?”
“I’ll share it with all our parents in preparation for the celebration,” I explained.
“What if I die before February 4?” she asked.
“Just don’t,” I responded.
Barbara Hurter was the daughter of John Lewis and Maud Hurter. The family lived in Ochiltree County, Texas where Barbara was born in a home, half of which was a dug-out. She had eight brothers and sisters and loving parents who were dedicated, skilled farmers. Barbara’s father was able to purchase an abandoned one room schoolhouse, attach it to the dug out, and convert it into a kitchen. When Barbara was five years old when a prairie fire burned their home down.
She and her sisters enjoyed attending a two-room school house in Huntoon, Texas. Barbara attended high school in Perryton, Texas while she lived with her sister, Inez, and cared for her sister’s new baby.
Barbara and her sister, Vivian, attended Catholic College in Guthrie OK. While attending school, Barbara felt God calling her to the religious life and she was filled with the desire to be a sister. She wrote her mother that she wanted to enter the convent. Little did Barbara know that her sister Vivian had written her parents the same thing! Barbara’s mom told them to come home for a few weeks and visit about their future.
Eventually, they both entered the convent and not too long after this, two of their sisters, joined them. Sister made perpetual vows in 1931. The four sisters from the Hurter home were: Sister Emily, Sister Bernadette, Sister Mary Ellen and Sister Isabelle.
Sister Emily remembers World War I as frightening. Her brothers were too young to serve; however, they really wanted to fight for their country.
Sister was both teacher and principal in Catholic Schools for 55 years. Her teaching brought her all over Oklahoma: St. Mary’s in Guthrie, St. Francis Xavier in Tulsa, St. Joseph Orphanage in Bethany, Marquette in Tulsa, St. Michael’s in Henryetta, St. John’s in McAlester and Monte Cassino in Tulsa.
A splendid Monte Cassino math teacher, Sister Emily is quoted as saying, “No one can get very far in life without math!” Students recall that no one taught math like Sister Emily. She was kind, gentle and deeply caring about each student. If an eighth grader didn’t learn math one way, she taught it another. Spending time before, after or weekends with youngsters and mathematics was part of her mission. Eventually every student was a star!
Sister Emily remembers one youngster, now Sister Agatha, as volunteering to clean erasers for her. “Clap them together, not on the building,” Sister Emily would admonish. Today both sisters laugh at a “clapping eraser” duty which has vanished from many schools. Former students, nieces, nephews and long-time friends enjoy visiting with this dear sister who comes to prayers and meals daily and entertains her Benedictine Sisters royally!
When asked about her life as a Benedictine, Sister Emily considered, “Being a sister has surely brought me closer to God.” “Now, Sister Agatha, that’s my statement, don’t you go using it!” Sister Emily teased with a glint in her eye!
“What advice would you give to others?” I asked.
“Do all things for God and everything else will fall into place,” she reflected. Sister says this with faith because this is exactly how she lives her life.