{"id":2026,"date":"2015-06-03T20:11:16","date_gmt":"2015-06-04T01:11:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.scarboromissions.ca\/?page_id=2026"},"modified":"2015-06-24T09:34:26","modified_gmt":"2015-06-24T14:34:26","slug":"sister-rose-thering-o-p-1920-2006","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.scarboromissions.ca\/interfaith-dialogue\/jewish-christian-relations\/pioneers-of-dialogue-in-the-modern-jewish-christian-relationship\/sister-rose-thering-o-p-1920-2006","title":{"rendered":"Sister Rose Thering, O.P. (1920-2006)"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"An<\/a><\/p>\n

A native of rural Wisconsin, Rose Elizabeth Thering was born on August 9, 1920, and was one of 11 children in her large German-American family. From an early age, she felt a calling to Catholic religious life and, after being taught by the Dominican Sisters of Racine (Wisconsin), she decided to join that congregation, making her perpetual vows in 1946. An educator throughout her long religious life, Sister Rose earned a Bachelor\u2019s degree from Dominican College in Racine, before going on to graduate studies\u2014a Masters degree from the College of St. Thomas in St. Paul, MN, and a Ph.D. from St. Louis University in 1961. Her doctoral study focused on the presentation of Jews and Judaism in the Catholic textbooks that were used to teach religion at that time, and uncovered a range of inaccurate, exaggerated or stereotyped images that negatively affected the way in which many parochial school students thought and felt about Judaism. It was one of three textbook studies undertaken at the time under the sponsorship of the American Jewish Committee (AJC), looking at how various religious and ethnic groups were portrayed in Jewish, Catholic and Protestant educational materials.<\/p>\n