Comboni Lay Missionaries

Meeting of the Councils of the Comboni Family in Rome 2023

Consejos Generales de la Familia Comboniana

As every year, the General Councils of the Comboni Family have met to continue to grow as a family. This year we were welcomed by the Comboni Missionary Sisters in Rome, where we felt at home. Thank you for your attention and that of the whole community.

During this year there have been many changes in the teams because the Comboni religious have celebrated their chapters and elected a new general council. Therefore, the first part of the meeting was dedicated to a time of personal presentation.

The rest of the afternoon we had the opportunity to deepen our understanding of the homily of Comboni in Khartoum. Starting from how it resonates in our hearts and at the same time how it challenges us as a missionary family. A nice moment to recognize how the charism continues to unite and encourage us together.

After dinner and some conversation we retired to rest to regain strength after the morning’s journey.

The next day we spent catching up on where we are in each of the branches of the family. A calm presentation with time for questions that helps us to get to know each other better and to enter into the current affairs of each one of us. Without a doubt, it was an important moment, especially for the new teams, and it helped us all to get to know and understand the realities that we are living.

The secular missionaries began by sharing with us the illusion of their first vows in Africa, of the road they have traveled until reaching them and of the illusion that these new vocations mean for all of us, even knowing that they are in a first stage. They also shared the evolution of their commitments after their assembly two years ago and how they are working in the different countries where they are present. Special mention should be made of the reflection they are having on missionary animation, the rethinking of it according to the new times is something that challenges us all as Comboni Family and that challenged us a lot.

Then it was the turn of the Comboni Lay Missionaries. During this time we focused on what the continental meetings of America in Lima-Peru and Africa in Cotonou-Benin have meant, the work done during those weeks and the progress of the different groups and missionary communities in the continents. It has been a time of strengthening, after the hardest years of the pandemic, to be able to meet again. It was very important for the new groups, which allowed them to contrast their way with that of the others, but also for the older ones, who continued to be enriched by the experiences that we developed in other countries, trying to give some clues of work within our own continent.

There was also time to present the objectives of the future European assembly in October, which will be held in Poland and to share the priorities that we as Central Committee have for next year before turning to the preparation of the future international CLM assembly at the end of 2024.

In the afternoon we listened to the Comboni Missionaries who shared with us about their chapter. Starting from a new methodology that they have followed in it, which encourages them to dream about where is their place and priorities for 2028. Also to define several main lines of work and on them to work on operational plans that allow them to develop them. This is a work that will have to be developed at all levels, starting from each mccj, passing through each of the communities and reaching the provincial level. All of this will confirm the six-year plan that will allow them to carry out the dreams set forth in the chapter.

The religious vows of 50 new Comboni Missionaries this year was also an important moment that encourages the Institute in its missionary journey.

Lastly, the Comboni Missionary Sisters shared with us their past chapter and what these months of setting everything in motion have entailed. It is worth mentioning the courage in their restructuration that will make them go from 19 to 7 circumscriptions; as well as the reconfiguration of the general direction with the support of four coordinations that will help to develop the chapter proposals.

All these changes are a great challenge and a courageous bet on their part to adapt the organization to the reality of the Institute and the needs of the mission, which continues to change and needs new answers.

Already on Sunday we entered into the making of certain decisions and began to think about the future. On the one hand, Brother Alberto Lamana helped us to compile the path taken by the ministerial commission, the proposals for future work and so on, and on our part we corroborated what had been said in previous meetings. The importance of the work done in these years and the example of collaboration that this work of ministeriality as a Comboni family implies makes us very happy.

We also reflected on the work done as a team of Comboni Family Councils and reinforced the idea that this is not because those present are more aware of it but it is something that we bet on from the different branches, so we set ourselves the task of developing a small directory to help us work better in these meetings. And it is something we will be working on in the coming year.

We also had some time to reflect on the journey as a family that shares the charism, sharing the experience of the meetings that are being held in Rome by different families, where religious men and women, secular institutes and lay movements that share the charism are beginning to meet and exchange experiences. We believe that listening to these experiences and sharing our own can help us to continue to grow. We also share the idea of identifying the different groups of lay people who are close to the Comboni family or to one of its branches. The importance of accompanying these lay people who want to share the charism in different ways, helping them to grow in this vocation, helping that these vocation proposals do not overlap with each other, so that in the future we can continue to help so many people who see in Comboni an inspiration for their lives.

We ended our meeting with the celebration of the Eucharist with the whole community of sisters. Undoubtedly the moments of prayer and this final Eucharist have helped us a lot during this meeting. They were significant moments of witnessing of Comboni lives and of searching for what the Lord is asking of us as Comboni Family.

We will meet again next June in Verona, but in the meantime and throughout the year we will keep in touch and work on the challenges we have set ourselves.

Greetings to all of you

Alberto de la Portilla, CLM Central Committee Coordinator.

25 years of presence of Comboni Lay Missionaries in Central Africa

RCA LMC

“To be with the people and for the people”.

1 June 2023. Mongoumba Mission, Central Africa

On June 1, 1998, Teresa Monzon and Montserrat Benajes, CLM Lay Comboni Missionaries (CLM) from Spain, arrived at the mission of Mongoumba, Central Africa. They came to replace Italian laywomen Marisa Caira, who gave 21 years of generous service, and Lucia Belloti. Since then, more lay men and women, including a married couple, from Spain, Portugal, Italy and Poland have passed through this mission. And very soon a laywoman from Brazil will arrive.

At present there are three CLM who carry out their missionary work in Mongoumba: Marcelina (Poland), Cristina (Portugal) and Teresa (Spain). The latter is the same laywoman who started the CLM mission here 25 years ago, and this time she came to serve for a season.

The CLM group, who together with the Comboni Fathers make up the apostolic community of the mission, have been in charge of various tasks during this time, such as health care, physical rehabilitation, school education and the Aka (pygmy) people. They have also been accompanying pastoral groups of the parish. Their presence and missionary performance are intended to be a witness so that the faithful of the parish will be motivated to live their faith with greater enthusiasm and dedication.

The CLM have not lacked moments of trial, as when in the year 2000 they had to assist, together with Doctors Without Borders, numerous refugees coming from the Democratic Republic of Congo, where a village neighboring the mission of Mongoumba was suffering from bombings. Also when they had to take on pastoral work, since for two years they were left without a priest in the mission. And when, on the eve of the coup d’état of 2003, they had to live through the looting of the mission by Congolese soldiers who supported the president who was deposed. Not forgetting the following coup in 2013, where they witnessed the insecurity and desolation in which the population found itself.

However, these same trials, like so many other challenges, far from weakening their missionary spirit, have given them the courage and courage to resist and face a mission that is still in its infancy, with the firm hope that the Lord will make the seed they are now sowing bear fruit. A mission that the laywoman Cristina summarizes in these words: “Beyond the activities, the most important thing is to be with the people and to be for the people”.

Congratulations to CLM for its 25 years of presence in Central Africa.

Fr. Fernando Cortés Barbosa, Comboni Missionary

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The Pygmy people, guardians of the Common Home

Laudato Si
Laudato

Jesús Ruíz, Bishop of Mbaïki (Central African Republic) tells us how his communities of the Aka (Pygmies) people celebrated Laudato Si’ Week. Jesus, who inspired the CLM movement in Spain, is visiting Spain these days and we had the joy of sharing an afternoon with him, in which his love for his communities shines through.

The Congo Basin is the second lung of the planet, and sadly the scene of similar environmental crimes to those we usually hear about in the Amazon. Only fewer voices tell us about this scenario of massive destruction of the equatorial rainforest. Jesús Ruíz promotes the integral evangelization of the peoples, in which the Easter of the Lord translates into the Aka people standing up against centuries of discrimination not only from the colonizers but also from the rest of the majority peoples of Central Africa.

The Aka are used to taking blows and bowing their heads. That is why leading a march with the slogan We are the guardians of the forest is of great value. It is a clear sign of the Comboni charisma. Like the rest of the native peoples in America, Asia, Oceania… the Aka are aware that they have guarded the Common House for centuries, in invisibility, and now their testimony shines because their environment is at serious risk of disappearing. We are indebted to all these communities.

Comboni Sisters Lucia Font (Spanish) and Lucia Premoli (Brazilian) are currently working with Bishop Ruiz and the Aka peoples, the latter as the Episcopal leader of the Laudato Si’ Commission. The experience in Amazonia has prompted the latter to concretize in Africa all the work that has been developed in Latin America. In nearby Mongoumba, the CLM community has been accompanying this people for more than 20 years. Our CLM Tere Monzón, who participated in this mission for 10 years, returns to Spain on the 9th.

Laudato SI

The momentum of the encyclical Laudato Si’ is mobilizing around the world for a change of system, because the current development model respects neither people nor the rest of Creation. “We need organizations to help us document everything that is happening in our territory, so that it becomes known.” The level of mercury pollution in the rivers, the loss of native species, the savage enrichment of a few minorities thanks to the national resources of this “poor country”. This is the direct request that Monsignor Ruiz makes to us.

CLM Spain

Entrepreneurship and sharing CLM projects

emprender

Good morning and good week.

This past Saturday we had a new training at the level of the CLM of America. In this case, the theme was about economic sustainability and entrepreneurship.

It is clear that the economic funds are a fundamental tool to carry out a good missionary service.

We have to properly prepare our CLM to be able to send them to our missionary communities and from there to accompany the many needs of the people and to propose together with them projects that make possible a more dignified life.

To maintain these projects and our missionary communities that accompany them is something we do through prayer, formation and covering the basic needs. And for the latter and to be able to undertake, resources are needed.

This training is about all of this and about how to unite all people of good will to form a broad network to support the needs of the many peoples we try to accompany. The mission is not only the responsibility of the one who departs but also of the rest of the Christian community who are called to collaborate within their possibilities. To make this close collaboration grow is part of the keys that we discussed this past Saturday.

We leave you with the video (in Spanish) of this talk. We hope it will be very useful.

Best regards

Alberto de la Portilla. Coordinator of the CLM Central Committee.