Beverly Ruth Wiebe

Female 1956 - 2020  (64 years)


 

Wiebe, Beverly Ruth

www.jostfuneralhome.com

Beverly Ruth Wiebe—Bev—was born March 13, 1956, in Kajiji, in the Belgian Congo, to Arthur and Ella Voth Wiebe. Art built schools and clinics and maintained mission vehicles, while Ella, a nurse, provided health care and education to the people and their children in the region. With the advent of a revolution, in 1960, that would free Congo from Belgian colonial rule, the Wiebe family flew home to the United States. Four-year-old Bev, looking out the window of their airplane as they flew across the US, saw clouds below and thought they were on the ground, “but someone moved all the clouds when we landed.” Flying with Bev were her sister, Janice, and her brother, Carl, both of them born in the Congo. Another brother, Dale, flew with them unseen. He would be born in Garden City, Kansas, where Bev’s Wiebe grandparents and her Uncle Ted were farmers. At home in “Garden,” the family welcomed two more boys, Glenn and Virgil.

The Garden Valley Mennonite Brethren Church, a new congregation founded the year before Bev’s family left the Congo, became a central part of Bev’s early life. There she professed her faith in Jesus Christ and was nurtured by Sunday School classes and Sunday worship services. She also learned the ministry of compassion from her parents, who welcomed people of all kinds into their home. On Sundays, the dinner table was often expanded to include guests invited to join the Wiebe family of eight. As the oldest of six children, and with her mother working as a nurse and her father working for the State of Kansas to provide services for the blind, Bev took more than her share of responsibility for her siblings and chores around the house. She carried that sense of responsibility throughout her life, along with a duty to care for people in need, especially children.

Bev’s concern for children led her, first, to pursue a teaching career. She began her own education at Georgia Matthews Elementary School, in Garden City, and Garden City Junior High, before graduating from Garden City High School, in 1974. For the next four years she studied at Tabor College, in Hillsboro, Kansas, majoring in elementary education. She began teaching first graders the following year. Her experience as a teacher led Bev to consider school children in relation to their families, and this led her to a different vocation. In 1982, Bev began a program at Kansas State University in Child and Family Development, earning a Master of Arts degree in 1985. Her degree focused on marriage and family therapy. Upon graduating, Bev moved to Reba Place, in Evanston, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. There she began a counseling service with John Lehman where, as in every dimension of her life, Bev strived to integrate her faith with her work.

In 2000, Bev returned to Kansas and her beloved Flint Hills to begin a family-therapy practice in collaboration with John Lehman in Florence, Kansas. While Bev counseled children and their parents, her deep desire for children of her own went unfulfilled until she adopted a newborn, Michael Christopher, in 2002. Soon after, Bev moved her practice and family to Hesston, Kansas, where Lisa, her adoptive cousin, joined them. Lisa, who had Down Syndrome, came to live with Bev and Michael when her parents, Nettie and Ted, could no longer care for her. Lisa lived happily with Bev and Michael until her death in May 2019, 30 years later than doctors had predicted.

Bev’s life included crushing disappointments and pain, concern for which she waved away to talk about others whose circumstances were worse. She worried that her contributions to people’s lives were not truly significant, despite the host of people who have testified to the significance of her role in their lives; for some, she was lifesaving. Although some of Bev Wiebe’s life dreams were not realized, in her life too-soon ended, she enriched more lives than would take two lifetimes.

In every chapter of her life, Bev maintained a keen sense of humor, an eye for the simple beauty of God’s creation, and a fierce love for Michael and the rest of her family. In Evanston, she created intricate mobiles that brought the delicate balance of the Flint Hills prairie to her home, and she pressed flowers to decorate hand made and heartfelt cards to her friends and family. A keeper of the land and protector of nature, she grew a prairie paradise around her own home, tending her garden with dear friends like Cindy Combs and Lorna Harder.

Even as her body’s strength faded, her indomitable spirit remained.

She leaves behind her son, Michael, as well as her five siblings and their families: Janice and Ben Ollenburger, Mary, Katherine and her husband Michael Chester; Carl and Marcella Wiebe, Daniel; Dale and Elizabeth Wiebe, Aaron and Nathan; Glenn and Maura Wiebe, Jake and Erin; and Virgil Wiebe and Susan Schmidt, Maggie and Lucas. She goes to join Lisa; her parents, Art and Ella; her aunts and uncles. May they find perfect peace.

In lieu of flowers, Bev requested memorial funds be sent to:

Asian Youth Services

ATTN: Shari Fenton, 5701 N. Sheraton Rd, Apt 6N, Chicago, IL 60660

Village2Village

12175 Visionary Way, Ste 106, Fisher, IN 46038, or online at village2villageproject.org


Owner/SourceHarvey County Genealogical Society
DateSep 2020
Linked toBeverly Ruth Wiebe




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