Comboni Lay Missionaries

Witnesses of a Common Journey

Marisa LMC

On August 7 of this year 2016 in Viseu, Vila Nova do Campo, we celebrated the missioning of the CLM Marisa Almeida with a Mass presided over by Bishop Ilídio Leandro in the parish church of Vila Nova do Campo.

José Tolentino Mendonça says: “With a friend at your side, no journey will be too long.” This journey made together with the CLM seems to have started yesterday. It feels like yesterday when I started it with Marisa, the CLM whom we gift with “all that we are.” To have known Marisa has been one of the greatest treasures that this journey has given me. Just like in this Sunday’s Gospel, Jesus came to repeat once more: “Do not be afraid.” He knows us. He knows our deepest fears, our anxieties, our obstacles and the wounds we need to heal. But, in the face of all this, he repeats: “Do not be afraid.” Often, so very often, we are fixated on our weakness, our fears and our insignificance. Many times we repeat by words and by the way we live” “Lord, I am so small, sinful, weak and helpless.” And he continues to repeat to us: “Do not be afraid.”

This is what happens to you. It happens to me and the same happens to Marisa. Many were the times when silently each one of us asked: “I? me? My God! With all the people who are daring and courageous, you pick me?!” Very often we have thought of not being up to it. But he does not choose the able ones, but enables those he chooses. It is to us, frail and sinful, that God gives the Kingdom of Heaven. This was the treasure I found in the CLM and that all of you are invited to follow and discover in life: Love. Love is what keeps us here. Love is what sends us out. And when we dare to follow, share and live this love, we are and we experience a bit of the Kingdom that the Father has prepared for us in Heaven. He puts us on his journey and for this we are here.

But I am not alone. None of us lives in solitude. Marisa does not exist for herself. We are together as I often say. And this being together is going with her, even though we are oceans apart.  It is because she experienced and felt this love that Marisa answers the call with a YES. She makes mistakes, like the rest of us. She falls, like us. She is afraid, like us. But in her heart she listens to Jesus who tells her: “Do not be afraid.” And she trusts in him enough to say YES with her life.

We go with her, stay with her and are missionaries with her. Mission is accomplished by the feet of those who go, the knees of those who pray and the hands of those who help. By doing this, we stay together. United we experience the love of God.

At this point, I thank the entire Comboni Family, present through the Comboni Missionaries of the Heart of Jesus, the Secular Comboni Missionaries, the Comboni Sisters and the Young in Mission, to the entire community and to all those who are close to her, physically and spiritually – you turned this moment an experience of love, a bit of heaven. Let us feel challenged, like her, to trust in God by answering YES to his invitation to love. “To think of a loving person is to pray for her,’ says St. Teresa of the Child Jesus. For this reason I invite each one of you to think of Marisa so that her mission may be rich and fruitful!

Do not be afraid, let us stay united!
Marisa LMC
Paula Sousa. Portugal

 

Accompanying the CLM community of Awassa

Comunidad LMC AwassaDuring these days I have had the opportunity to follow the CLM community of Awassa in the variety of their missionary service. I believe that the simplicity with which they perform it is outstanding and so is the degree of acceptance and the relationship they enjoy with the local people. Everywhere they go everyone greets everyone. They always move on foot or by bicycle and this makes it possible for them to be close to the people.

I will try to tell you something about each one. I will start with the newest arrival and move on to those who have been here longer.

Magda EtiopiaMagda Fiec has been here a little over two months. Her primary mission at this time is to learn Amharic. And, even though I don’t understand anything and I find it difficult to judge, I can at least see that she already communicates with people and, even though at times she has to look for words and expressions, considering the short time she has been here, she is not doing badly at all. (For those who do not know it, Amharic is a Semitic language that has no similarity with our Latin characters and I can assure you that, the first time you see it or hear it, you do not understand anything). On the other hand, she takes some moments to begin to help out in some little things. She helps the Comboni Sisters a little in the technical school and now she is preparing a youth gathering parallel to the one due to take place in Krakow with the Pope, but just for the youth of Awassa. This week she will be with a group of young people at Gethsemane, a retreat center at the lake shore, a very simple and beautiful place affording the possibility, especially to the laity, to find time for praying and being with God.

Madzia in Ethiopia

Madzia Plekan has been in Ethiopia for more than a year and a half. When she arrived, the idea was for her to work as a physiotherapist in the hospital of Bushulo, but for various reasons it was not possible. There was no problem in redirecting this service and make it itinerant. This way, each day she goes from one place to another to take care of her many patients, she cooperates with the home of the Sisters of Charity of Mother Teresa where she has many of them and with various orphanages. She takes care of people with special needs and especially the children. To see the tenderness with which she picks them up from their cribs and works with them is admirable. In an appropriate amount of time she gives them the rehabilitation session that each one needs, almost without their realizing it, and so, a little by little, she helps those who have been abandoned and who in this place would not have access to this specialized care. It is also a fact that at times she also takes care of passing missionaries since more than one come to her with their aches and pains. Beside all this, she cooperates in many other fields, always ready to go from one place to the other. In these days she is traveling with the youth delegation attending the meeting with Pope Francis in Krakow. Who better than a Polish guide to accompany them and teach them everything in Amharic? I think it is a privilege that she can accompany them. This means that for two weeks we will not see her, but we hope to meet her in Addis Ababa when she returns.

Maggie LMC EtiopiaMaggie has been in Awassa six years and will return to Canada in a week. She is the community manager, in charge of organizing meals and other necessities. Now, having three children takes a good amount of time. However, she has been able to integrate it in her service. She continues helping in several orphanages taking care of the little children. She takes her own along so they can play with the others while she is there. In a different direction she holds handicraft classes for the neighborhood children and is teaching them lots of things (and she host countless birthday parties in their home because they all want to have it there, perhaps because of the cookies and the balloons they contribute to the feast). She is also part of an ecumenical prayer group. And we cannot forget the community sports activities consisting of the two weekly games of Frisbee to keep in shape and to share with a group of foreigners and of Ethiopians this love for sports. To be noted that, no matter where you go, there is always someone she knows and with whom to converse. After six years, she is the one member of the community who is most known and appreciated.

Mark LMC EtiopiaAnd finally I will speak of Mark. Just like Maggie, his six years in this place have made him a point of reference. On top of that, Mark has been at the service of the diocese during these six years supporting it in its administration and organization. He has been a pillar of strength in the development and reorganization of the diocese. In particular he has been involved with Ethiopian priests and sisters in developing various projects and supporting the search for financial help. As he says, the spirit of Comboni moves us to help especially the Africans, support various initiatives, mediate with foundations (at times very demanding with their forms) so that projects supporting the schools, the hospitals, the orphanages, the leprosy centers, the churches, the wells and other initiatives will keep moving forward. Without any doubt, the work of these six years has turned him into a point of reference in the diocese, and whenever a missionary, a local priest or religious meets him o comes to say good-bye, they thank him for his work and will miss him. This is also an especially intense period of time with the arrival of a new bishop. He is holding many meetings to bring him up to date on the diocese, on the already approved six year plan and also making sure that the work already done will keep moving forward in the hands of the people who will follow from now on. During his free time, besides spending time with his three children, he also attends an ecumenical bible study group that has helped him deepen the understanding of the various expressions of Christianity in Ethiopia and his own faith, as he himself acknowledges. It is an opportunity to grow as Church in Awassa.

For Mark, Maggie, Emebet, Isayas and Teive their time in Awassa is coming to an end. At the end of the month they will move on to Washington, DC where Mark will pursue a master on family pastoral, in which he wants to specialize in order to continue his missionary service. It is a time of good-byes, of placing themselves in God’s hands in order to face this new challenge.

We wish them the very best in this new venture as a family.

Familia Comboniana AwassaGreetings from Ethiopia.

Easter mission field.

Campo mision MexicoWe confirm that God is tenderness and mercy and that young people are very committed to the suffering people.

The CLM group of Guadalajara attended the invitation of the fathers Gustavo Covarrubias and David Tena, to attend the 2016 mission field in Tala Jalisco. We joined the “exodus” youth group. The preparation was carried out a few weeks earlier through readings and a spiritual retreat during which we agreed with the youth and the fathers the work program. We recognize the good logistics because we gave us schedules, materials and rosaries blessed to be offered to the sick; as well as instructions in case anyone wanted to confess, receive communion and extreme unction.

During Holy Week, during the mornings we attend individually to a catechetical center to support catechists in exposing the central theme of the week that was Mercy, we make dynamics and tasks with children. By midmorning, we split into teams of 6 or 7 people to go to the hospital, nursing home or prison respectively.

We visited patients in bed in the hospital, we prayed and sang. Sick appreciated our presence, some shared with us about their illness and the relationship with their family. At first, the enthusiastic young wanted to do acts of magic and clowns dressed but it could not be, still made it feel a very lively atmosphere. We spent even more than an hour with a patient who did not want to let us go. We took letters of encouragement to the sick and congratulations to the moms who had just had her baby.

Campo mision MexicoIn the asylum, similarly, we greeted everybody, meet the elders, we prayed with them, and make dynamics to meet each other, read the Bible, or played board games like the lottery. People had a lot of openness and trust to share their sorrows, their joys and what they were experiencing. The help of the Holy Spirit to enlighten us with words of love and peace was always noticed.

In the prison, they only authorized us to visit a group of prisoners. With them, we made dynamics and reflections on scripture passages like the prodigal son, the crucifixion and death of Jesus. An activity was to read the letter that the dam from Cd. Juarez addressed to Pope Francis. Some received the sacrament of confession and Father David celebrated the Eucharist. After the visit, we ate something with them to promote coexistence. You could tell that our presence cheered them, gave them hope and desire to move forward.

Campo mision Mexico

In the evenings, families of people greeted us at home to feed us, always giving us the best they had. After lunch, we moved to the chapel corresponding us in groups of three or four to give talks to young people and adults about the Easter Triduum and the Mercy of God, during which there was very good participation.

Each of us participated in the activities of the Easter Triduum in the different chapels; just a few met on Friday while participating in the way of the Cross at the parish center.

This experience was very nice, to known healthy young people with supportive ideas and expressing great tenderness. We also believe that they were happy to share with us and with all the work we did. We adapt to teamwork and we could see their responsibility in the way they work, they were very active and attentive, shared their joy, dancing, singing and shouting. We keep the sweetness of knowing that if they persevered with that dedication and love, will get very far in the love of God and his brothers.

Campo mision MexicoAdri, Oli and Mire. CLM Mexico