Cecilia Springer, also known to her friends as “Grace,” was born in Manhattan on April 7, 1931 to her Jewish father and Catholic mother who owned a family home on West 42nd Street.  She was an only child raised in the Catholic faith at home and Blessed Sacrament Parish on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.  She attended Notre Dame Academy, founded and administered by the Sisters of Saint Ursula, on West 79th Street.  After high school graduation, she attended the College of Mount St. Vincent, Riverdale, the Bronx, and received a Bachelor of Arts degree. 

Discerning that she had a religious vocation, Cecilia entered the Sisters of Saint Ursula in 1952, a religious community founded in France whose mission was to educate young women.  The Sisters’ retreat house on the Hudson River in Dutchess County, “Linwood,” is known to many Catholics in the New York metropolitan area.  Cecilia taught second, fifth and eighth grades for twenty-two years as a Sister of Saint Ursula and then worked in community affairs through the Diocese of Providence, Rhode Island, educating many in the tenets of social justice and serving as a prison minister through the late 1970s until the mid-1980s. 

She also left the Sisters of Saint Ursula and lived the rest of her life as a single lay woman, devoted to her parish of St. Francis Xavier on West 16th Street in Manhattan, its adult choir, and all its social justice causes.  Unfortunately, her support of her parishioner friends’ justice causes was not reciprocated by the parish when she requested support for her childhood sexual abuse claim against a religious sister.  Victim/survivors often journey alone or with a few advocates and supporters.     

During a three-year sabbatical in the late 1980s, Cecilia traveled to Italy and France and then returned to New York City to work for the Share Program whose purpose was distribution of healthy food at low cost for underserved communities in Harlem and the Bronx.  She also worked for FEGS (Federation Employment and Guidance Services), helping Russian immigrants with medical training and finding work in the United States.  After retiring, Cecilia tutored young children and substitute taught at a parochial school in Forest Hills, Queens.  She also began to become involved in the movement to assist victims of sexual abuse and their families, for she was a victim/survivor of childhood sexual abuse by her high school Principal. 

Cecilia participated in successful efforts to pass the Child Victims Act in New York State in 2019, and as her health deteriorated, she endeavored to hold the Archdiocese of New York and the Sisters of Saint Ursula accountable for the sexual abuse she endured.  She died on April 5, 2021, two days before her 90th birthday and the same day that the Sisters of Saint Ursula once again objected to her deposition going forward.  At the same time, the Cardinal Timothy Dolan and the Archdiocese of New York had a continuing objection to Ms. Springer’s emergency deposition taking place.  She died without having the opportunity to obtain the justice she deserved by the Sisters of Saint Ursula, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, and the Archdiocese of New York who acted shamefully and without compassion.

“Cecilia has left a legacy of kindness, respect, and dedication to causes of justice,” said her attorney, Mitchell Garabedian of Boston, MA.  May she rest in peace.  A memorial Mass will be scheduled for St. Francis Xavier Parish in Manhattan at a later date.