Thank You, Dean Gillis

Georgetown 海角论坛 Dean Chester Gillis embraces a student at the 2016 Commencement ceremony. Gillis leaves the deanship at the end of this fiscal year and will return to his position as a member of the theology faculty. (Photo by Melissa Nyman/Georgetown 海角论坛)
April 28, 2017 鈥聽It鈥檚 been a week of honors for Georgetown 海角论坛 Dean Chester Gillis.
Last weekend, the outgoing dean traveled to John Carroll Weekend 2017 in Austin, Texas, to receive the Patrick Healy Award 鈥斅燼n honor bestowed annually on a non-alumnus member of the university community who exemplifies Georgetown鈥檚 mission. On Wednesday, University President John J. DeGioia delivered a speech honoring Gillis in a beautiful Dahlgren Quadrangle ceremony, filled with colleagues and friends from across the university. He’s even had an award named after him: The 海角论坛 Academic Council has just established the Chester Gillis Award, which will honor students who exemplify the value of a liberal arts education in the Jesuit tradition.
Gillis has been an exemplary leader for the 海角论坛 since taking possession of the Dean鈥檚 Office in 2008. But the celebrations held this week honor much more than a nine-year deanship 鈥斅爐hey honor a man who has spent decades living out the values that Georgetown espouses and brightening the lives of all he encountered on the Hilltop.
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When Chester Gillis (P鈥08,鈥12) arrived at Georgetown in 1988, it wouldn鈥檛 have been hard to predict he would become a distinguished academic. He had studied philosophy and religious studies at Belgium鈥檚 Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, earned a Ph.D. in theology at the University of Chicago, and taught philosophy of religion to graduate students at Drew University.
Though unfamiliar with Georgetown prior to his hiring, the newest theology professor was a quick study. Before long, he was playing a central role in welcoming others to the university community. Terrence Reynolds, former chair of the Theology Department, counts Gillis as one of the first friends he made here.
鈥淗e聽helped me聽get acclimated to the university, and we often got together after work for long, friendly talks,鈥 Reynolds said. 鈥淲e shared a number of聽theological and philosophical interests, and we just enjoyed talking to each other.鈥
Gillis rose through the ranks of the Theology Department over the next decade, and was eventually named its Chair in 2001. Along the way, he developed a reputation as a tough but brilliant professor who took a genuine interest in students鈥 success.
鈥淗e was a challenging professor, but a great one,鈥 Senior Associate Dean Thom Chiarolanzio said. 鈥淲hen students I advised had difficulties in his class, he was always thorough in responding to them, trying to help them, and figuring out what was the best solution for them.鈥
Blessed with a skill for balancing teaching, research, and management, Gillis published three books and scores of articles in his time as a theology professor, all while maintaining an excellent reputation among students and taking on leadership roles in academia.
Frequently consulted by the media on religious matters regarding the Catholic Church and the Papacy, he has appeared on numerous television news programs. He was the initial holder of the Amaturo Chair in Catholic Studies, and a founding director of the Program on the Church and Interreligious Dialogue. He followed up his theology Chair term with two years directing Georgetown鈥檚 doctorate program in liberal studies.
When former 海角论坛 Dean Jane McAuliffe accepted the presidency of Bryn Mawr University in early 2008, the hardworking Gillis was tapped to serve as interim dean.
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The 鈥渋nterim鈥 modifier always introduces a degree of uncertainty to any title, but Gillis did not let it deter him from approaching the job with purpose. He impressed the advising deans and office staff from day one. When the university conducted a year-long national search for the next dean, the permanent answer soon became clear 鈥斅燼nd not just because the sharply dressed Gillis came straight out of 鈥渃ollege dean鈥 central casting.
鈥淚 was thrilled when he was named dean,鈥 Chiarolanzio said. 鈥淐het is a huge defender of the liberal arts, and when universities shift priorities and move in different directions, he鈥檚 always been one to make sure the liberal arts have a voice.鈥
The first few years of his deanship brought significant challenges. The 2008-2009 financial crisis hit the college from multiple angles: Donor funding became scarcer, and cautious prospective students shied away from the traditional liberal arts disciplines the 海角论坛 encourages. Gillis heard the latter concern so many times that he developed a trademark quip in response.
鈥淚 know exactly how you feel,鈥 he says to the prospective student (or parent, or donor) skeptical of a Liberal Arts major. 鈥淭here weren鈥檛 any theology companies hiring when I graduated!鈥
Even as he brushed off skepticism of his beloved liberal arts with public levity, Gillis guided the 海角论坛 through turbulent times with a sober and steady hand. Soon, he moved from careful stewardship to active growth of the 海角论坛鈥檚 academic programs. During Gillis鈥 tenure, the 海角论坛 instituted minors in business, film and media studies, creative writing, statistics, education, inquiry and justice, biological physics, statistics, Korean, Persian, Turkish and our newest minor in disability studies; as well as a department of African American studies and a major in justice and peace studies. This year the 海角论坛鈥檚 acceptance rate continued to set a record low for any Georgetown undergraduate school, and the incoming first-year profile is the most impressive it has ever been.
Beyond academics, he proved to be a very successful fundraiser and 鈥渇riend-raiser鈥 for the 海角论坛 and for the university. In the recently completed For Generations to Come:聽 The Campaign for Georgetown, the 海角论坛 raised $167 million toward the campaign鈥檚 four pillars: to attract the best faculty and students, and to ensure academic excellence, quality student life and transformative opportunities.
He greatly enhanced the role of the 海角论坛 Board of Advisors to become an activist as well as an advisory group, expanding its membership to include a diverse spectrum of parents, alumni, and parent/alumni members. He led the Board鈥檚 campaign to create the Mar铆a and Alberto de la Cruz Art Gallery, opening next year in the Walsh building.
Gillis鈥 sum of tangible academic and fundraising accomplishments is clearly impressive. But as anyone who knows him will readily attest, describing his career only in these discrete terms still sells him vastly short.
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In her toast at the President鈥檚 Reception on Wednesday, Senior Associate Dean Sue Lorenson emphasized that Gillis has always been a man of and for the students 鈥 making it only appropriate, she felt, to recount students鈥 thoughts on their outgoing dean.
鈥淒ean Gillis not only actively seeks, but seriously considers student opinion,鈥 read an account from 海角论坛 Academic Council President Casey Nolan (C鈥17). 鈥淗e has been our champion and our role model time and time again.鈥
Chiarolanzio noted that these listening skills had a real impact on policy.
鈥淗e鈥檚 established minors based on student input,鈥 Chiarolanzio said. 鈥淗e鈥檚 put in a lot of academic programs that benefit students within the larger context of the 海角论坛鈥檚 Liberal Arts degree 鈥 and we wouldn鈥檛 have that if he weren鈥檛 around encouraging it.鈥
Former students confirm that this image isn鈥檛 a recent phenomenon, nor is it restricted to students who frequented Academic Council meetings. Richard Frohlichstein (C鈥11) met Gillis when the dean spotted he and some friends shoveling sidewalks after the infamous Snowpocalypse of 2010. He invited them into his home for hot chocolate, and the two have stayed in touch even after Frohlichstein graduated and enrolled in Yale Law School.
鈥淗e has the capacity to make connection with students at an individual level,鈥 Frohlichstein said. 鈥淗e remained a source of advice and a strong connection to Georgetown for me, and for a lot of other students.鈥
Gillis and his wife Marie hosted groups of young alumni in their townhouse, often making an effort to connect former students who had things in common but didn鈥檛 know each other.
鈥淚 made friends in the alumni community through Dean Gillis,鈥 Frohlichstein said. 鈥淗e knew what we were interested in, and he鈥檇 always look to connect us.鈥
Of course, it鈥檚 impossible to discuss Gillis鈥 famous gatherings without mentioning his wife, Dr. Marie Varley Gillis. Nicknamed 鈥淢rs. Dean鈥 by Frohlichstein and affectionately referred to as the 鈥淒olley Madison of 36th Street鈥 by the dean himself, Marie served as an engaging, gracious host and partner, frequently growing as close with members of the 海角论坛 community as her husband did.
And while students are regular guests at the Gillis household 鈥斅爄n addition to small, informal gatherings, the dean regularly invites the 海角论坛 student body for dinner, hosting the first 20 or so to respond 鈥斅爐he Gillises鈥 hospitality doesn鈥檛 stop there. A near-constant rotating cast of faculty, staff, donors, and friends call on their 36th street home for dinners and drinks, always to a warm welcome and a full table.
鈥淢arie and Chet have really opened up their home to everyone,鈥 Chiarolanzio said.
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Gillis finishes out his term as dean at the end of the fiscal year 2017. Among all the awards ceremonies and receptions are some sadder occasions (his final student dinners, GAAP weekends, and Commencement ceremonies)聽and happier ones (his last Georgetown Day in an office adjacent to Copley Lawn). It鈥檚 the end of a deanship that was marked, more than anything, by a willingness to treat those around him 鈥斅爏tudent, alumnus, faculty, or staff 鈥斅燼s family.
鈥淎s you might not expect for an office of our size, our boss has been with us every step of the way,鈥 Lorenson said. 鈥淐heering us, comforting us, always encouraging us to take all the time we need to celebrate or grieve or heal or grow, always finding a way to make it work, always ensuring us that, well, families look out for each other.鈥
While he won鈥檛 be making calls from the dean鈥檚 desk anymore, Gillis is not finished with the Hilltop. He has a year of sabbatical (with a book to write, another to update, and articles to publish), but he plans to return to the classroom afterwards.
To be sure, time with his beloved wife, his research and writing, his favorite golf clubs, and an occasional cocktail will replace some of the time spent in meetings, travel, and university dinners. But any who think he鈥檒l cease to be a force for good in the Georgetown community 鈥斅爓ell, they simply don鈥檛 understand Chester Gillis.