This article is from page 15 of the 2005-09-20 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 15 JPG
FIFTY years is a long time to spend at any one activity, but few have passed the half-cen- tury milestone with more commitment than twin sisters Philomena and Annette O’Dea, otherwise known as Sister Celine and Sister Ann-Marie. The twins recently returned to their home in Ballygannor, near Kilfenora, for a holiday and a very special surprise Mass
to mark the golden jubilee of their vocation.
In 1955, aged 19, the sisters joined the nuns in Mallow following the sudden death of their mother, Lilly. Left behind in Ballygannor was their father John and 11 brothers and sisters, including Kitty, who later gained fame with the Kilfenora Ceili Band and Jack, who cur- rently resides in the old homestead with his wife Margaret.
After spending six months in Cork, the twins were moved to London where they were officially welcomed into the nuns in separate ceremonies. In all their years as Nazareth House nuns, they have never been stationed in the same convent and only see each oth- er on holidays. Sister Celine first returned to Ireland in the 1960s and gained national prominence when a story of the kindness she showed towards teenage mother Wanda Machnicha and her son made front page news Kom aets