|
America
Magazine's "Of Many Things" considers The Small Things:
A Day in the Life of Brother James E. Small, SJ
Thursday,
March 28, 2002
Vol.
186 No. 9, March 18, 2002
Copyright © 2002 by America Press, Inc. americamagazine.org
Reprinted with permission from America
Of
Many Things
By John W. Donohue, S.J.
Nearly
100,000 new books were published in the United States last year,
and most of them were ignored by The New York Review of Books and
the Sunday book sections of The New York Times and The Washington
Post. Although these three are heavyweights in the book review business,
they have space to examine only two dozen or so titles in an average
issue. That means the rest of a year’s new arrivals will go
unnoticed unless they attract the interest of some smaller periodical.
That
does happen. If there should be, for instance, a Journal of Medieval
Icelandic Studies, it will welcome a sprightly monograph on housing
in 12th-century Reykjavik.
It
is, then, both logical and seemly for America, which describes itself
as a Jesuit magazine, to call attention to a biography of a contemporary
Chicago Jesuit that might easily be lost sight of in the 2001 cascade
of new books.
George
R. Kearney’s The Small Things: A Day in the Life of Brother
James E. Small, S.J., is a 204-page paperback, with 20 black-and-white
photographs, that was published last autumn by Xlibris Corporation
and is available at www.xlibris.com or by calling (888) 795-4274.
This
is the story of 80-year-old James Small, who grew up as one of the
six children of a Chicago policeman. After World War II service
in the U.S. Navy, he was himself a Chicago police officer for five
years. He then chose to become a Jesuit brother, and in November
1952 he entered the Chicago province of the Society of Jesus.
Since
1969 Brother Small has been a member of the Jesuit community at
Loyola Academy, a coed Jesuit high school in the Chicago suburb
of Wilmette with a current enrollment of more than 2,000 students.
His
main assignment there is that of a carpenter and maintenance man,
but besides his basement workshop he also has a studio, where he
paints pictures whenever he has a spare moment. Although he occasionally
does originals, most of his paintings are copies of celebrated works,
like Van Gogh’s “Starry Night,” or of poster illustrations.
Like Grandma Moses, he paints quickly, and when he finishes a picture
he frames it himself.
Some
of these paintings are commissioned; others are auctioned off at
a Loyola Academy fundraiser each spring. In these ways, Brother
Small has brought in nearly $500,000 for the school. But his greatest
benefactions, as George Kearney makes clear, are his benign presence
within the school community and the inspiration of his example.
Mr.
Kearney, himself a 1995 graduate of Loyola Academy, deftly braids
three strands together in his book. With a novelist’s eye
for concrete details and significant incidents, he follows the six-foot-three
Brother Small through a typical day, which begins at 4:00 a.m. and
ends 18 hours later.
Running
along with this chronicle and a vivid evocation of the school world
are flashbacks that summarize Brother Small’s pre-Loyola days.
When he gathered these materials, Mr. Kearney taped hours of conversation
with his subject. The book’s third strand is made up of copious
extracts from Brother Small’s reflections on the human condition
and on leading the Christian life.
He
recalls, for example, that as a policeman he saw the body of a man
who had been killed during a holdup. That made him realize, he says,
that he himself should become “a person who helps other people.”
In
recording these dialogues, George Kearney often sounds like the
Boswell of the Journals—a young man of energetic idealism
who is prompted by his friend’s words to scrutinize his own
behavior.
It
is a reasonable guess that this remarkable book is unlike any other
published last year. It takes its title from Mother Teresa’s
comment that the love of God can be expressed in small kindnesses.
Readers
will conclude for themselves that such small services actually have
a greatness quite their own.

Brother Jim Small speaks to a crowd gathered
at a recent book signing in Chicago.
Author, G.R. Kearney, looks on.
Photo by Russ Berkman for
Chicago Province Jesuits.
Copyright
© 2002 by America Press, Inc. americamagazine.org. All Rights
Reserved. Reprinted with permission from America,
March 18, 2002.
|