Journey with ACN – Holy Land

JOURNEY WITH ACN is our Friday newsletter which is regularly posted to our blog.   Our weekly newsletter was designed to acquaint you with the needs of the Catholic Church around the world – and with various projects we have been able to realize together with ACN benefactors.

This week:   The Holy Land


 

A car for the parish priest in Nablus

Nablus is the largest city in the Palestinian Autonomous Territories and it has a long and honourable history behind it. It is here, among other things, that the tomb of the patriarch Joseph is situated, one of the most sacred places of Judaism, and also a place of pilgrimage for Christians, Muslims and Samaritans. It is 63 km by car from Jerusalem. This city, which has almost 300,000 inhabitants, is today a centre of trade and industry. Soap and sweets are made here, among other things. The average age of the population is young, with over half of the people aged under 20.

The majority of the inhabitants are Muslim, but there are also around 650 Christians in Nablus, of whom 250 are Catholic. Father Johnny Abu Khalil ministers not only to the Catholics living in the city itself but also to those in 3 sub-parishes. There is also a Catholic school in Nablus.

Given the size of this territory,  and in order to fulfill  his many duties, a car is an absolute necessity for this priest . Unfortunately, last winter his car caught fire and was completely burnt out. It has not yet been established just how this fire was caused, but the fact is that he now has no car. And while the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem has temporarily given him the use of a car to help him continue with his apostolate and minister pastorally to the faithful, the car is also needed elsewhere.

ACN-20140321-06331

Despite this generosity, Father Khalil still needs a car of his own and has turned to ACN for help – and we have promised to help him with a contribution of $18,250.

 

CENTRAL – AFRICA: HISTORY OF A CONFLICT (III)

 

If the lines that you are reading are often stained with suffering, you will also see that they contain love stories which allow for transcendence. You will encounter men and women capable of acts of such beauty and of such solicitude, that you will recognize in them, propagators of hope which help us believe that life – is more powerful than death.

 


 

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© ACN

 

How far can the suffering go?” 

 

Eva-Maria Kolmann, ACN International

Adapted by AB Griffin, ACN Canada

Joy broke out and the people danced in the streets when the news of the resignation of interim president Djotodia was announced on January 10. Just two weeks later, the Séléka ex-rebels withdrew from Bouar. “They were armed to the teeth, and they set off in a convoy in the direction of Chad,” reports Father Beniamino Gusmeroli after the days of fear and severe unrest. But the initial joy did not last long: on the same day, the retreating rebels entered Bocaranga with 31 vehicles. There they attacked the mission station of the Capuchins, where some 2,500 refugees were sheltering at that time.

120 spent cartridge cases were found in the house

 © ACN/AED


© ACN/AED

“It was an apocalyptic day,” Polish Capuchin priest Robert Wnuk describes what happened. “Shooting and detonations could be heard everywhere. There were numerous groups of 10-15 rebels each. They forced their way into all the rooms. The refugee women were sitting there on the floor with their children.  The rebels threatened the priests and also fired on the church,” Father Robert reports. “They fired and fired and fired as if they were crazy.”

The bullets left large holes in the walls and floors and later, 120 spent cartridge cases were found in the house. A woman and a man had died, and one of the friars was wounded. A doctor was struck in the face, and a bullet narrowly missed his head.  The rebels stole all the cars and took money, computers, telephones and cameras.  Then they moved on to the Sisters’ convent where the same scenario was repeated. Ngaoundaye Ngaoundaye Ngaoundaye On the same day, rebels also attacked the mission in Ngaoundaye, where they took a locally-born friar hostage, but later released him. The following day they looted the Capuchins’ mission station in Ndim.

Father Robert cannot believe what took place in his mission station amidst the many helpless refugees: “These are war crimes, crimes against humanity! Crimes against defenceless women and children! The perpetrators are now in Chad, which although it has closed its borders evidently lets armed criminals enter the country in cars that they stole from the missions and aid organizations.”Ngaoundaye Ngaounda

 

And in his desperation and disappointment he asks himself questions. “Protective troops have been in the country for some months. But in reality they are only in Bangui. They supposedly came to protect the civilian population. For many days we have asked the military authorities in Bangui and Bouar for help, but we always get the same answer: ‘Let’s see, we’ll see what happens, we have made a note of it…’ They give replies like this during a military intervention? They ask us on the telephone for information about the situation on the ground, and then nobody responds. Nobody! How far can the suffering go?” 

 A climate full with hate and violence explodes

Meanwhile, the Séléka have also withdrawn from Bozoum. Even shortly beforehand, the rebels had burned down 1,300 houses in the close vicinity, making 6,000 people homeless. In the now empty Séléka barracks there are slogans on the wall such as: “This is the law of Hell,” signed by somebody calling himself, “The Devil Incarnate.”

“The UNO decision in favour of a military intervention came too late,” criticizes Father Aurelio Gazzera who has been working in the Central African Republic for twenty years. “The eight-month reign of terror by the Séléka has created a climate of hatred and vengeance which has exploded into mad and demonic rage that is directed against everybody: against the Muslims, many of whom had profited from the Séléka and let themselves be protected by the rebels to avenge themselves, and the rest of the population, who are often seen by the Muslims as accomplices of the Anti-Balaka.”

The Italian Carmelite priest explains that to present the Anti-Balaka as “Christian militia,” as is often done is a mistake. “There is not much about them that is Christian,” he explains. “They carry fetishes and amulets for protection, and they are full of anger after having to endure long months of assaults and violence. An explosion of madness has taken place. There are arbitrary killings; disabled people are left behind, and so on. We need a strong military presence in the whole district to stop the crazy murders!”

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The missionary, who conducts peace negotiations with all population groups in Bozoum, reports that the discussions have been made more difficult by the fact that many supporters of the Anti-Balaka have drunk a lot of alcohol and thus become unpredictable. In many places the Church is now also protecting the Muslims who are living in fear of vengeance. Thus for example, Father Aurelio is providing the Muslim refugees with drinking water and rice at his own expense, and attempting to prevent the Anti-Balaka from massacring the Muslims, and at least sparing the women and children.

During the Séléka’s withdrawal, Father Aurelio Gazzera himself was almost killed when several outraged Muslims attacked him with stones and weapons. But a Séléka rebel and another Muslim protected him and saved his life. Meanwhile, in the city of Bozoum, rumours were spreading that the priest was dead. When he reached his mission in the evening in his smashed-up car, the people cried for joy. “They spread their clothes in front of my car, and greeted me almost as if I were the Messiah. It was unbelievable. We gave thanks by saying an Ave Maria – also for those who commit evil.” 

Many more prayers will still be required for those who commit evil. In Bossemptélé, where 80 people were killed this week and the Séléka even looted the hospital of the Camillian Fathers, the Anti-Balaka has meanwhile demanded ransom money from the Carmelite Sisters. The Sisters have been told that if they fail to pay it within two days they must hand over the Muslim civilians who have sought shelter in the mission. Otherwise the members of the Anti-Balaka themselves will force their way into the convent premises and kill the Muslims.

The violence spirals faster and faster. And a humanitarian disaster looms, because the situation in the country is resulting in many more malnourished children .

ACN-20140130-04723And yet, there are hopeful moments: “In Bozoum the children are now able to go back to school again,” says Father Aurelio happily. And there are also small miracles: A catechist had fixed a rosary to a door lock. The rebels didn’t dare to break the door open during their looting debauchery. But the greatest miracle is the courage with which, day by day, Catholic priests and members of religious orders set their own lives against the whirlpool of violence. They try to save what can be saved.

“Ciao, now I must go to the refugees,” says Father Beniamino Gusmeroli. Because for the missionaries, their brave service is the most normal thing in the world.

Coming up:

And yet, at the heart of this drama, lives an event whose love story is worthy of being told around the entire world so as to give hope.  An even where union reigns within disorder, where the celebration of Mass echoes the sound of gunfire; where the faithful sing so loud that the sounds of rebellion fall into the depths of the Word; and where love gives birth, showing that it is more powerful than is war.

 Chronicle of a love story

© ACN/AED

Update on Novena for Central Africa: A miracle in Bozoum

We would like to share this amazing experience  with you so that you might bear witness to the power of  our  fervent prayers for Central Africa: Yesterday was the first day of the Novena for Peace.  ACN felt it was imperative to launch this prayer initiative because the news arriving daily from the country was both frightening and alarming.

The situation seems to have escalated into a state of civil war, and sadly,a  high probability exists that the situation may develop into a conflict between Muslims and Christians.

Much effort  has been put into this Novena, because we really felt  it necessary.  And, because the people and bishops of the country were so thankful in the knowledge that we would not leave them to suffer this situation alone.

Yesterday, we witnessed what we might call ‘the first miracle’.

 A miracle in Bozoum

Some days ago we had received from Fr. Aurelio Gazzera of Bozoum, [Central Africa] the message, that in the town and in his mission (where about 6000 people found refuge),  they feared severe impending massacres. Father Aurelio began negotiating with both armed groups (the Seleka and the Anti-Balaka). The latter had put forth an ultimatum. Their condition was the complete disarming of the Seleka rebels. If they would not concede to laying down their arms, a mutual bloodbath would take place, bringing certain death to hundreds of innocent civilians.

Yesterday, December 17th, (the first day of the Novena initiated by “Aid to the Church in Need”), coincided with the ultimatum deadline,  and in the morning the worst threatened to happen.

Finally by 15:30 we got the news: French troops had arrived in Bozoum, just a few hours before, the news had been that the troops could not leave Bangui, at all.

“They  were welcomed as liberators,” Fr. Aurelio says. The Anti-Balaka have already laid down their arms, and the Seleka-rebels will soon be disarmed by the French soldiers. “PEACE!” the people shout! “I told the refugees that the violence committed by the Seleka is OVER! They can return to their homes. In the end we sang and danced the great GLORIA. This evening the atmosphere is joyful. It is as if it was already Christmas!” 

Central African Republic, Bouar diocese, Bozoum, Holy Mass in the Mission of the Italian Carmelite Fathers, with Fr. Aurelio Gazzera OCD

Central African Republic, Bouar diocese, Bozoum, Holy Mass in the Mission of the Italian Carmelite Fathers, with Fr. Aurelio Gazzera OCD

 

Text by Maria Lozano, ACN International

Adapted by Amanda Griffin, ACN Canada

December 18th – SECOND DAY: NOVENA for Central Africa

 For the Pastors and the faithful;

For the living stones of the church.

“O Adonai and leader of Israel, you appeared to Moses in a burning bush and you gave him the Law on Sinai. O come and save us with your mighty power”

COME QUICKLY, LORD. COME, O SAVIOUR!

GRANT US PEACE

“Sunday Masses were celebrated in the parishes only in the morning, as holding Masses at night was impossible given the continued security threats. Attendance at the liturgies varied from church to church, but overall there was a decline. Father Iréné Fernand, vicar of the Church of Our Lady of Africa commented: “Ah, my friends, this was the first time in my life that I said Mass for just nine faithful in a parish that often attracts 3,000 faithful on Sundays. ‘There where one or two are gathered in my name, Jesus says, I am in their midst.’ Christ was with us and still is with us.” The parish served by this pastor was subject to repeated threats by the seleka to the point of exasperating him and prompting him to say: ‘Ah, those Seleka! They came to the parish of Our Lady of Africa at 11.30, the third time in two days. The result : a pick-up truck was stolen and three cars were damaged. … Thanks to the intervention of a parishioner and French troops, they were not able to take off with the other cars.’

These men without scruples! They have no respect, not even for the sacred … All the parishes prayed for peace in the Central African Republic. One thing is certain: God will not remain silent in the face of all these prayers offered him by these men and women for the intention of the Central African Republic.

Letter P. Dieu-Béni Mganga, 8th December, Archidiócesis de Bangui

ACN-20131214-03689 REMEMBER, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was it known that anyone who fled to thy protection, implored thy help, or sought thy intercession was left unaided. Inspired with this confidence, I fly to thee, O Virgin of virgins, my Mother; to thee do I come; before thee I stand, sinful and sorrowful. O Mother of the Word Incarnate, despise not my petitions, but in thy mercy hear and answer me.

Amen.

Text by Maria Lozano, ACN International

Adapted by Amanda Griffin, ACN Canada

Egypt – “A Church is growing as its faith deepens”

By Oliver Maksan, ACN International

Adapted by AB Griffin

The tension after the fall of the Muslim Brother Muhammad Mursi can be felt all over Egypt. Life in Cairo is carrying on, the cafés and teahouses of this huge megacity are full. But the people are more attentive than otherwise and more nervous. The taxi-drivers are avoiding certain districts. The army is now guarding important points with tanks and soldiers. Repeatedly helicopters and whole squadrons of aircraft fly over Cairo’s centre. This is intended to highlight the army’s solidarity with the demonstrators on Tahrir Square, and also to convey a feeling of security. On Friday there were bloody clashes between supporters and opponents of Mursi.

Only a few streets from the world-famous square there is the snack bar of a Coptic Christian. He doesn’t want his name or his picture to be published. You never know, he says. At the entrance to his shop on Saturday, however, there hangs a poster that cannot be overlooked. It shows the head of the army Al-Sisi, who announced last Wednesday that Mursi had been deposed. To the left and right of it there are the Grand Sheikh of the Azhar University and the Coptic Pope Tawadros II. The Coptic snack bar owner thus wants to send out a message: “We Christians and Muslims belong together in Egypt. That’s what makes up our country. Most of my customers are Muslims. We won’t allow anyone to drive us apart.” But this is precisely what the strategy of the defeated Islamists appears to be nowadays.

ÉGYPTE-2” We’re nervous.”

In Cairo on Sunday, in the Franciscan church devoted to Saint Joseph Holy Mass is being celebrated. The enormous church is only sparsely occupied. A younger visitor who, before the Mass, had lit a candle in front of the image of the Madonna says why this is so: “We’re nervous. You never know what the Islamists are planning. They blame us for the fall of Mursi. Of course, that’s a load of rubbish. The vast majority of the people wanted to get rid of him, not only us Christians.”

The Franciscan Father Michael Selim Zaki is celebrating Mass this Sunday in the Church of St Joseph under greater tension than otherwise. “I have already watched very carefully to see who comes through the door. We’re afraid of the Islamists’ revenge,” he says afterwards in the vestry. The young priest is Egyptian and knows only too well the attacks on Christians in his country. “We Christians are an easy target because we don’t use violence. It’s easy to attack us. But we trust that the army will protect us. They must free the country of the violent Islamists.” They are very nervous and upset at the moment because they’ve had to give up power. “They wanted to make Egypt their property. But Egypt does not belong to the fundamentalists. We’re not Afghanistan.”

Hatred towards Christians ÉGYPTE-3

In fact,the Islamists’ hatred has already claimed the first Christian victims. On Saturday a Coptic-Orthodox priest was murdered by masked Islamists. The cleric was secretary to the Bishop of Al-Arish, a coastal town in the north of the Sinai Peninsula. According to reports in the Egyptian media, Abuna Mina Aboud was killed in his car. The Coptic diocese reports that the murder had instilled panic in the Christians in Al-Arish. The Islamists there have not stopped spreading hate slogans against the Christians. Sinai has long been seen as a stronghold of extremist Islam. The home of Father Michael, the tourist destination of Luxor in the south of Egypt, was also the scene of anti-Christian attacks. “On Friday of last week Islamists set light to a dozen Christian houses in a place near Luxor and they destroyed our businesses. There have also been fatalities among the Christians. But we’re used to this.”

“Stick to the Eucharistic faith”

Even so Father Michael finds it possible to see something good in the situation. “The Church is growing as its faith deepens. It’s an old law that the Church grows when it experiences difficulties. The blood of the martyrs is the seed of Christians.” The priest knows of house communities which had formed in the recent past to read the Holy Scripture. “While reading the Holy Scripture they experience how the Lord shows us that he is close even today.” Father Michael had preached previously about the closeness of the Lord in the Eucharist. After all, the Catholics in Egypt celebrated the festival of Corpus Christi on Sunday. For a number of years they have been following the Orthodox calendar. “There’s no question of a procession,” says Father Michael, “that used to be held previously when the spirit was more liberal. It’s no longer possible today. But in my sermon I still encouraged the faithful to stick to the Eucharistic faith. The dominant Muslim majority in the country do not share it with us. For us Christians the Holy Eucharist is the source of life. Without it we can do nothing.”

In response to the question as to what Christians in the west can do for their Egyptian brothers in faith Father Pater Michael does not need long to find an answer: “Come and visit us as tourists. Many Christians are employed in the tourist industry. Egypt is a beautiful country. Your visit will secure the livelihood of Christian families. If you are afraid and do not wish to come: you can always pray. Pray for Egypt and us Christians. I beg you to do this with all my heart.”

Ukraine – Renovations of a parish

 The following series of texts has an objective to introduce you to the many kinds of assistance needed by various organizations, parishes or Catholic communities throughout the world.  We invite you to travel with us to all the continents that you may see how very important your support is to them.

 

Enjoy the read !

 

By ACN International

Adapted by AB Griffin, ACN Canada

The parish of Saint Stanislaus in Balta is the oldest Latin-rite Catholic church in the diocese of Odessa-Simferopol in the south of Ukraine. After the long years of atheist Soviet domination, the parish has come alive once again. Holy Mass is celebrated daily, and there are also many other religious events. Every Wednesday there are catechism classes for the children, on Thursday’s preparation for the First Holy Communion, on Saturdays a Bible study meeting and on Sundays after Mass, catechetical instruction for adults. There are also meetings for altar servers and for adults preparing for baptism or for marriage. “The members of my parish like to get involved, whether in preparing for the religious feasts or in other things for the Church – and not only through their work but also through their financial contributions,” writes Father Marcin Planeta, the parish priest, proudly.

The importance of the sisters’ nurturing

Beginning in 2007 there has also been a community of Vincentian sisters working in the parish. They care especially for the children of broken homes. Many of the parents are alcoholics and cannot look after their children properly. As a result the children themselves become acquainted far too early with alcohol and cigarettes, or begin stealing. The sisters offer these children security and loving acceptance. They also care for their physical well-being, for the sisters have set up a daily mealtime service for the children, who would otherwise not get a hot meal. Afterwards, they can sit quietly and do their school homework, with which they also get support. There are also constructive leisure time opportunities and religious instruction. There are now 40 such children and young people benefiting from the sisters’ help, and their numbers are steadily growing. In the summer they have an opportunity to go camping. By helping the children, the sisters and the parish priest can also reach out to the parents, so that they too can get the help they need.

But the parish has one major problem. It is in urgent need of repair and renovation; the roof is leaking and there is a lack of adequate drainage around the foundations has resulted in considerable water damage and dampness. As a result Holy Mass has to be celebrated in the presbytery. The floor, the external rendering and inner plastering of the walls, the ceiling, the roof – everything needs to be renovated. Despite the generosity of the parishioners, the parish simply cannot afford the total cost of the renovation work, and so Father Planeta has turned to ACN for help. We have promised him $24,400.

If you wish to make a donation, please call us:  (514) 932-0552 or 1 (800) 585-6333

Ivory Coast – Self-sufficiency project: rice and maize fields for 20 parishes

The following series of texts has an objective to introduce you to the many kinds of assistance needed by various organizations, parishes or Catholic communities throughout the world.  We invite you to travel with us to all the continents that you may see how very important your support is to them.

 Enjoy the read !

 

By ACN International

Adapted by AB Griffin, ACN Canada

 For many years the 60 different ethnic groups living in Ivory Coast (Côte d’Ivoire) had rubbed shoulders peaceably enough. Towards the end of the 1990s however, the situation worsened and in 2002 a civil war broke out lasting until 2007. Even after the formal end of the civil war, this West African country – which earned its name from the lucrative ivory trade in which elephants were hunted in the region for many years – has continued to make headlines on account of routine violent flare-ups.

COTE-D'IVOIRE-1Today ordinary people are struggling to rebuild their lives. While on one hand this country is now economically the strongest member of the West African Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA), on the other hand over 43% of its population still live in poverty; indeed over 50% in many regions.

Ivory Coast has a very young population, with an average age of just 20 years of age. Almost 40% of the population of close to 22 million are children or young people aged 15 and under. Some 16.8% of the population are Catholic. Christians of all denominations account for something over one third of the total, while Muslims make up somewhat less than a third; 35% – the largest group by a small margin – belongs to various traditional African religions.

The Catholic Church is organized into 15 dioceses. The diocese of Odienné, located in the northwest of the country, is still very young. In fact, this year it will be celebrating its 10th anniversary. It lies in a region that was a bastion of the political opposition during the civil war and which consequently saw heavy fighting. For a time, when the country was divided in two, it lay within the territory controlled by the rebels of the Forces Nouvelles de Côte d’Ivoire.

The great poverty here is disquieting to Bishop Antoine Kone who is concerned for his people. He writes: “Most of the people here are small peasant farmers. They are dependent on the very rare rainfalls and on the infertile lateritic soils. The only people who manage to obtain a good harvest are those who can afford tractors, ploughing oxen, good quality seeds, fertilisers and pesticides. But all those things are too expensive for the majority of our Christian people.”

Resulting in, of course, impoverished parishes, because the people can barely afford to contribute. The bishop is hoping that the parishes obtain their own sources of income so as to become less dependent on financial support. His idea is to plant rice and maize fields to be maintained by the parishioners. At the same time the poor would also benefit. Bishop Antoine is thinking of the words of Jesus at the feeding of the 5,000: “Give them to eat yourselves!” (Mt 14:16). And he asks, “Can we preach the Gospel of life to men and women who have empty stomachs and who are malnourished?”

At a cost of $20,400 we can help some 20 parishes to plant their own fields. As the old proverb says, “Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day. Teach him to fish and he will eat for the rest of his life.”

By supporting this project we will be helping the Church in Odienné to rely less on outside help.

If you wish to make a donation, please call us:  (514) 932-0552 or 1 (800) 585-6333

Serbia – Central heating for the Handmaids of the Blessed Virgin Mary

The following series of texts has an objective to introduce you to the many kinds of assistance needed by various organizations, parishes or Catholic communities throughout the world.  We invite you to travel with us to all the continents that you may see how very important your support is to them.

 

Enjoy the read !

 

By ACN International

Adapted by AB Griffin, ACN Canada

 

Since 1986, the Handmaids of the Blessed Virgin Mary have had their provincial house in Ruski Krstur in the Vojvodina region of northern Serbia. “Our provincial house is the centre and heart of our Province of Saint Joseph,” they say. Originally a spacious house, with plenty of room to hold meetings, conferences and other events, both for young girls and for women religious, but with time the duties of the sisters have become ever more extensive. Not very far from the Provincial house is a home for the elderly, which did not have many available places. As a result, more and more lonely elderly women came to the sisters seeking accommodation, companionship and care. Each year their numbers grew, making it necessary to build on additional rooms.

 

SERBIE-2At the same time the sisters’ own community was also growing. Though, of course this was in itself good news, it also presented the convent with problems since things had become increasingly cramped inside the house. So the building needed to be extended a second time.

 

Though there is now certainly more space available, the expansion has led to another problem in that the original heating system was only designed for the size of the original building, leaving the numerous new rooms unheated. The sisters have already tried several times to repair the existing heating system, which is in a terrible state.

 

There is no way they haven’t tried to amend the situation, the only solution left is to install a completely new heating system. “That is why we are seeking your financial help,” writes Sister Veronika Anna Graljuk, “and counting on your understanding and kindness, so that together with you we can provide support and dignified care to the elderly people under our roof and help them to prepare in peace for eternal life with God.”

 

We are hoping to be able to help with a contribution of $11,500.

 

 

 

If you wish to make a donation, please call us:  (514) 932-0552 or 1 (800) 585-6333

 

 

 

Jamaica – Formation for men and women of the Consecrated Life

The following series of texts has an objective to introduce you to the many kinds of assistance needed by various organizations, parishes or Catholic communities throughout the world.  We invite you to travel with us to all the continents that you may see how very important your support is to them.

 

Enjoy the read !

 

By ACN International

Adapted by AB Griffin, ACN Canada

What Richard Ho Lung had seen, had changed everything. The poverty and destitution, the violence and suffering present in Jamaica deeply moved Father Richard Ho Lung. In 1981, this Jesuit priest and university professor set aside his academic titles and duties. He had studied philosophy, English literature, theology, and had lectured at St. George’s College, at the University of the West Indies (UWI) in Jamaica as well as at Boston College in the United States. In 1971, Jamaican-born Richard Ho Lung was ordained to the priesthood. “I was preaching the Word of God, but not really living it,” recalled Father Richard.

JAMAIQUE-2He left the Jesuit order and went to live in slums and ghettos of Kingston, the Jamaican capital. “I got to know the poor and came to understand the Beatitudes of Christ as my mission,” says Father Richard, now aged 73, whose father and mother originated from Hong Kong.

At first, there was considerable astonishment among those he encountered, but very soon people came to admire this priest who had devoted himself to caring for the poor, the elderly and the sick. Drawn by his example, others soon joined him and very quickly a small community of four men, priests and laity, was formed. They called themselves the Brothers of the Poor, because they were indeed accepted within these circles as such.

 

Jamaica:  A young country

The Kingston’s bishop encouraged and supported this young community that had just come into being. Later, the brothers continued their service in the slums by establishing a home for the homeless. Soon after, they began helping prisoners. They drew strength for their growing task of ministering to the material and spiritual needs of the poorest of the poor, from their community life, rooted in faith and regular times for prayer, liturgy and discussion. The young community grew and later changed its name to the Missionaries of the Poor.

The Beatitudes became their guiding rule, while listening and helping became their daily routine. In order to help people find a way out of poverty and violence, the brothers encouraged those involved to adopt a new way of thinking, a fundamental conversion of spirit. Instead of resorting to violence and fighting one another, they were encouraged to embark on joint initiatives together. Father Richard reminded the brothers, “Whatever Christ said, did and suffered, we too must say, do and suffer.” The centres run by the brothers are places not only for meetings and social support but also for silence and prayer.

The concrete spiritual and material needs of society are seen by the community as a challenge. For Jamaica is a young country, the average age of its population being 2.8 million is under the age of 24. The Holy Innocents Crisis Centre was created to meet this challenge, a home and refuge for up to 200 at-risk mothers and their babies, or expectant mothers about to give birth.

The order, Missionaries of the Poor, has now spread worldwide and currently numbers over 500 brothers and priests, not only in Jamaica but also in Haiti, in India, Indonesia and Kenya, the Philippines, Uganda and the United States. They are supported in their work by part-time volunteers as well.

ACN has supported the Missionaries of the Poor in the past and this year we are supporting them once again in Jamaica, with a contribution of $ 27,000 for the formation of 106 brothers and 44 novices, to ensure the continuum of their ministry to the poor and spiritual lives built on solid foundations.

 

 

If you wish to make a donation, please call us:  (514) 932-0552 or 1 (800) 585-6333

 

 

 

Pakistan – A chapel for a new Christian village for liberated slaves

 

The following series of texts has an objective to introduce you to the many kinds of assistance needed by various organizations, parishes or Catholic communities throughout the world.  We invite you to travel with us to all the continents that you may see how very important your support is to them.

 

Enjoy the read !

 

 By ACN International

Adapted by AB Griffin, ACN Canada

 

The parish of Saint-Paul resting approximately 25 km south-west of Faisalabad, conveys an atmosphere of peace. The school’s students have painted an outside enclosure wall within which stand a church, a presbytery and school, with colourful images depicting a peaceful world. One of these depicts a lamb, snuggling up trustingly against a lion. The priest has planted fruit trees, and inside the inner courtyard canaries twitter and pigeons coo, while the children play football.

This parish, which was only recently established in February 2010, serves 30 different villages. The parish priest, Father Emmanuel Parvez, certainly has his hands full. “In many villages the people do know that they are Catholics, but they have never seen a priest before,” he writes. “The catechists are a great help to me. They go into the villages, invite the people to pray and come to Holy Mass, visit the sick and prepare the faithful for the reception of the Sacraments. But we urgently need to have a second priest here.”

ACN has already helped with the construction of a new presbytery, since the old one only had one room which served the priest as a bedroom, a dining room, a sitting room and a workroom combined and was already too small, even for one priest.

Improving living conditions

Father Emmanuel has many plans. Above all, he wants to improve the living conditions of all the locals. Even the children have to work in one of the 25 local brickworks that are scattered all along the roadside in this area. The children make the bricks with their bare hands and leave them to dry in the sun. If it rains before the clay bricks have been fired in the kilns, whose tall chimneys dot the countryside, then all their work is wasted. The factory owner simply says, “How can I help the fact that it has started to rain?” And he refuses to pay them.

The people are trapped in near-slavery conditions and live with their families in unhygienic environments in near-destitution. They can lose their jobs from one day to the next, and then  forced to wander seeking shelter somewhere. Worst of all, if they must borrow money from the factory owner, for example, in the case of someone in the family falling ill who needs medical treatment – this can result in the family becoming still more indebted and dependent on the employer. It takes generations to obtain freedom from this kind of slavery debt, because they can never manage to pay back the initial loan at the horrendous interest rates which have been tacked on to the initial loan.

Now Father Emmanuel Parvez is assisting families like these to escape slavery. He wants to build a small settlement, and begin sheltering  families, initially 80 or son. Each will have their own little house, and there will be a school, a small medical aid post and a chapel. Father Pavez requested help from ACN for the construction of this little chapel.

 

A special gift

In fact, he has already been given a rather special gift for this chapel – a 2-foot-high statue of the Infant Jesus of Prague. This copy of the miraculous replica came directly from the famous shrine in Prague. It is sure to be a source of consolation and of blessings for these Christians in Pakistan. For weeks, hundreds of children awaited the Child Jesus’ arrival to their village and prepared themselves for it through prayer. When the statue finally arrived, they welcomed it with a celebration of song and dance.

PAKISTAN-3These children, who have experienced poverty and slavery since their earliest years, are overjoyed that the Child Jesus himself has come to them. He will be given a place of honour in the chapel of the new village, where these former wage slaves are now able to live a life of genuine human dignity for the first time. He will be invoked above all for the protection of the children, who are so terribly threatened in Pakistan, and will also be a great attraction for Catholics from other parishes. Very soon a Holy Mass will be celebrated in Pansara in honour of the Child Jesus, and priests and faithful from the entire diocese of Faisalabad will be invited, as this replica of the renowned image of Prague is carried in solemn procession to its place of honour in the chapel.

Father Emmanuel is particularly concerned for the children who face many and continuing threats here in Pakistan, from the likes of poverty, child labour, terrorism and violence. He would like to help them enjoy a better future and protect them from harm. He has set up numerous different activities for children that are open to Muslim children as well. By playing and reflecting together, he believes they will come to a good and peaceful understanding in life. He is loved by many Muslim families as well, because he helps them too.

Family ties with Shahbaz Bhatti

Not only is Father Emmanuel tirelessly active in his own parish, but he also lectures at the seminary in Faisalabad – for he is a biblical scholar too. He also writes books for children and young people, based on the parables and miracles of Jesus. The students can perform these stories as plays, for example, and so come to appreciate them more deeply. He has written many other books besides, aimed at deepening faith.

PAKISTAN-1Aged 62, he is in fact a cousin of the Minorities’ Minister Shahbaz Bhatti, who was brutally gunned down by machine guns by extremists in March 2011, for having opposed Pakistan’s iniquitous blasphemy laws. Just three weeks after Bhatti’s murder, the Pakistani Bishops’ Conference made an official request to the Vatican to have his name included in the list of Martyrs of the Universal Church. Already in his last interview, the Catholic minister had described his commitment as a “witness for Christ.” Several of Shahbaz Bhatti’s family members have since left Pakistan because they fear for their lives. Father Emmanuel himself has also received threatening phone calls. But he is staying, for he says, “It is better to be a martyr than a refugee.” There are many others who need his priestly ministry, his help and his intrepid witness.There is still a great deal that he wants to do for the people in Pansara.

Father Emmanuel Parvez has asked our help to build a chapel in his village of former slaves. We would like to support his project with a contribution of $17,650.

Will you help us?

 

 

If you wish to make a donation, please call us:  (514) 932-0552 or 1 800 585 6333