Category: Uncategorized

  • International Women’s day – 8 march

    Women and men united
    to end violence against women and girls
    International Women’s day 2009

    Women and men united to end violence against women and girls
    “All of us – men and women, soldiers and peacekeepers, citizens and leaders – have a responsibility to help end violence against women. States must honour their commitments to prevent violence, bring perpetrators to justice and provide redress to victims. And each of us must speak out in our families, workplaces and communities, so that acts of violence against women cease.”  
    Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
    http://www.un.org/events/women/iwd/2009/
    http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=44706&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html

     

  • Women’s World Day of Prayer On Friday, March 6, 2009

    On March 6, 2009, the women of Papua New Guina invite us …
    “In Christ There Are Many Members, Yet One Body” (Rom 12)
    On March 6, 2009, the women of Papua New Guina invite us to have the confidence of Ruth, who left what was familiar to her and went with Naomi to another land. They call us to ponder the mystery of our oneness in Christ in their context and our own. Papua New Guinea has one of the most heterogeneous indigenous populations in the world. More than 800 languages are spoken. Their diversity is expressed in this saying, “For each village another culture.”

    Yet, the bilum, a traditional string bag is found nearly everywhere. Bilums come in many colors, sizes, shapes, and styles and often the creative designs identify where the bilums were made. Men usually prefer a long handle style that is worn over the shoulder. Women carry their babies and their market produce. Bilums are also used as a hanging cradle for a sleeping baby.
    We are also invited to reflect on the collaborative networks among women. In Exodus, the story of deliverance from bondage begins with women’s non-violent intervention. Their actions ignore the social forces that are rooted in the fallacy that one group is superior to the other and is entitled to exploit them. Together, the women overcome evil with good. So, too, in the context of Papua New Guinea, we are given examples of women’s intervention in Bougainville and in the Highlands. And we are called to identify women’s intervention in our own context.

    We thank you, God, for directing our lives. As women united as one in your body, with your love and your power in us, we pray that we would be your instruments for peace and reconciliation.

    http://www.worlddayofprayer.net/wdp09.html

     

  • News from South Africa

    Fr. John Finlayson, Fr. Danisa Khumalo, Srs. Bernadette Boulle and Joy Money joined many others, march in protest against the xenophobic attacks in Gauteng during which many of our foreigner brothers and sisters lost their lives and others their homes and possessions.
     Fr. John Finlayson, Fr. Danisa Khumalo, Srs. Bernadette Boulle and Joy Money joined many others, march in protest against the xenophobic attacks inGauteng during which many of our foreigner brothers and sisters lost their lives and others their homes and possessions. The march, organised by the Archdiocese of Johannesburg Justice and Peace commission, ended with a Mass in Christ the King Catholic Cathedral, concelebrated by Archbishop Buti Thalgali and Several priests.

     

     

    Sr. Ethel recently started a sewing project in St. Martin de Porres parish in Lavinstown,Cape. A lively group of ladies meets regularly to learn the art of sewing. As well as sewing, the ladies are forming relationships in which they are able to share their joys and sorrows, their concerns for their environment… and just have fun together! The ladies are very grateful to Sr. Ethel and the Holy Family Sisters for giving them this opportunity to develop their skills and to get to know each other.  

    Sr. Meryl Foley, seen here with the group of Lay Associates, started and accompanied by her inUganda, writes “The Lay Associates are expanding here in Buhara. The original members – 4 men – have been joined by ladies who responded well to their introduction to the Holy Family Association.”

  • Week of Prayer for Christian Unity

    Between 18 and 25 January WEEK OF PRAYER FOR CHRISTIAN UNITY

    Between 18 and 25 JanuaryWEEK OF PRAYER FOR CHRISTIAN UNITY

    “That they may become one in your hand” Ezekiel 37: 17
    http://www.oikoumene.org/fileadmin/files/wcc-main/documents/p2/WOP2009_fre.pdf

    We propose to be united in the f ourth day prayer:
    click on the picture

    An article: Building inter-religious unity
    Society changes so quickly! Our community at Boomgaardstraat is surrounded by people who have come from distant lands to set up home here. They bring with them great richness in terms of cultures and religions and we see this in a very positive light.Recently I had the opportunity to attend a formation session organised by “United Religions”. The aim of the formation was to seek unity in the diversity of religions and so to help one another to build peace and understanding among diverse cultures and religions. Participants came from about twenty different countries and belonging to eight religions. In an atmosphere of mutual respect, we considered how each of us is invited to live the law of love. It was amazing to see how closely related the different texts were.
    Christianity: “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. We are all children ofthe same Father”Judaism: “Do not do to your neighbour what you would not like done unto you”Islam: “Do unto others what you would like them to do unto you”Buddhism: “Do not do to others what you would consider harmful to yourself”Taoism: “ Rejoice in the prosperity of your neighbour as you would rejoice in your own”Unitarianism: “Respect every living thing of which we are all a part”Sikhism: “Be friends with everyone”Hinduism: This is the greatest commandment: wish for others what you would wish for yourselves”
    There was much good will…the different religions together can be a source of peace for the future.This international movement is a union of all religions and cultures with the aim of helpingone another to put an end to violence by means of reflection based on religion.
    The following points are emphasised:- The need to build a society where it is possible to live in peace and justice- Build bridges between the different peoples and cultures- Respect the “holy wisdom” of each spiritual movement- Encourage the members to study more deeply the wisdom of their own religion- Listen and speak with respect- Build mutual understanding- Welcome difference as a gift- Practise non- violence, seek integration and reconciliation in cases of conflict- Encourage healthy ecologically friendly customs so as to protect the richness of Mother EarthIf you would like to know more about this subject, articles and photographs can be found at the following website: www.unitedreligions.
    Denise Van Der Laenen Community of Boomgaardstraat – Anvers

  • The World Day of Migrants and Refugees 2009

    We cannot be impervious to:The World Day of Migrants and Refugees on the 18th January 2009.There are more than 20 million refugees in the world. This is a drama that impacts on our countries, our families and our Sisters.

    We cannot be impervious to:

    The World Day of Migrants and Refugees
                  18th January 2009
     
     
     
     

    There are more than 20 million refugees in the world.  This is a drama that impacts on our countries, our families and our Sisters.

     

    An old rabbi once asked his disciples how one could discover when night ended and day began.
    – Is it when one is unable to distinguish at a distance the difference between a dog and a sheep?
    – No, said the rabbi.
    – Is it when one is unable to distinguish between a date palm and a fig tree?

    – No, said the rabbi.
    – Well then, asked the disciples, when is it? 
    – The rabbi answered: It is when you look at the face of someone and you recognise the face of your sister or brother.  Up till that moment, it is still night in your heart.

    Source:
     http://www.eglisemigrations.org/ressources/10508/96/dossier_animationjmmr2009.pdf
     

    St. Paul, migrant, “apostle of the people” is the theme proposed to the Pope by the Pontifical Council for the pastoral care of migrants and displaced peoples on the occasion of the World Day of Migrants and Refugees, which will take place on 18th January 2009. 
     

    Here is the Holy Father’s message on that occasion:

    http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/messages/migration/documents/hf_ben-xvi_mes_20080824_world-migrants-day_en.html
    Questions to facilitate further reflection:
    – What is displaced in me when I experience a meeting with migrants?
    – What changes take place in my perception of faith when I work alongside migrants?
    – What brings us together?
    – What difficulties do we meet in our efforts to build communion?

    Prayer for migrants and refugees. From Missionary Sisters of Our Lady ofAfrica.
    Click on the  photo:

  • A warm welcome

    A couple with a little child was fortunate to receive a gift of a little cottage. The family had been living in a thatched hut. It is worth sharing how their dream of a home became a reality.

       A warm welcome  
    A family received the gift of a cottage from the Holy Family students of Kurunagala in Sri Lanka – Colombo. The teachers in the school encouraged the development of a “Group Project” and the leaders Srs. Shriyani Rodrigo and Goretti Fernando present the work.
     
     

    A couple with a little child was fortunate to receive a gift of a little cottage. The family had been living in a thatched hut. It is worth sharing how their dream of a home became a reality.

    The Grade 13 science students at Holy Family Convent, Kurunegala, took, as their group project, the challenging task of building a house for a poor family in the vicinity. 

    It was indeed brave to undertake such a massive task. The students were supported, encouraged and guided by the teachers particularly by sectional heads of the department Ms. Indrani Dias and Ms. Upamalika.  

    The project was successfully completed with the help and contribution of parents and teachers. The students were able to collect some money by selling stickers and cooked food.  They had also received building material and donations as well. The design of the little cottage consisted of two rooms, a kitchen and a toilet. The most striking aspect of the project was the physical work done by the students. This experience will surely have a long-lasting effect on their lives.

    It was not only the house that was donated to the family. The generosity of the tutorial staff of the college and past pupils enabled the family to furnish the house with all the requirement. The help, guidance, special concern, extended by the parish priest Rev. Fr. Jerome Perera needs mentioning. The little cottage was named after our dear founder ‘Bienvenu’, meaning ‘welcome’.

    Our prayers and firm hope is that this family will grow in the values that the Holy Family cherished here on earth.

     

     
     

  • Taizé: To build the Europe of trust

     
    Monday 29 December 2008 – Friday 2 January 2009
    40,000 young adults from across Europe and other continents gathered in Brussels at the call of the Taizé Community. After Geneva, Zagreb, Milan, Lisbon and Hamburg, the Brussels meeting is the 31st meeting of European youth led by Taizé.This new stage will follow a recent African meeting that brought together 7,000 young people from 15 African countries in Nairobi, Kenya, from the 26th to the 30th of November.The meeting in Brussels is  a new stage of the pilgrimage of trust launched 30 years ago by Brother Roger, founder of the Taizé Community. The same desire to build trust is reflected in the agenda of the meeting in Brussels and in the “Letter from Kenya.” “Everyone can take part in a civilization marked not by mistrust but by trust. At times, in the course of history, just a few people were enough to tip the balance towards peace. Let us dare to be creative even with what is not perfect. And we will find freedom,” writes Brother Alois in his letter, translated into thirty languages and given to the young people on their arrival in Brussels.
    To know more: http://www.taize.fr/en_article7749.html

    Letter from Kenya
    Brother Alois 2009
    http://www.taize.fr/en_article7803.html
    All over the world, society and the ways people behave are changing rapidly. While unprecedented possibilities of development are multiplying, instability is growing too and worries about the future are becoming more pronounced. [1]
    For technical and economic progress to go hand in hand with greater humanity, it is indispensable to search for a deeper meaning to existence. In the face of the weariness and helplessness that many people feel, the question arises: what is the source from which we draw life?
    Already centuries before Christ, the prophet Isaiah indicated a source when he wrote: “Those who hope in the Lord renew their strength; they run and are not exhausted; they walk and do not grow weary.” [2]
    Many more people than in the past are unable to find this source. Even the name of God is fraught with misunderstandings or else is completely forgotten. Could there be a link between the disappearance of faith and the loss of a zest for life?How can we clear away whatever it is that obstructs the source? Surely by being attentive to the presence of God. There we can draw hope and joy. Then the source begins to flow once more and our life becomes meaningful. We become able to take responsibility for our life—to receive it as a gift and to give it in our turn for those entrusted to us.
    Even if we have very little faith, a reversal takes place whereby we no longer live centered on ourselves. By opening the gates of our own heart to God, we prepare the way for God to come for many others, too.
    Taking responsibility for our life
    Yes, God is present in every person, whether they are believers or not. From its very first page, the Bible describes in a beautiful and poetic way the gift that God makes of his breath of life to every human being. [3]
    By his life on earth, Jesus revealed God’s infinite love for each person. In giving himself to the very end, he allowed God’s yes to pervade the depths of our human condition. [4] Ever since the resurrection of Christ, we can no longer despair of the world or of ourselves.
    From that time on, God’s breath, the Holy Spirit, has been given to us for ever. [5] By his Spirit who dwells in our hearts, God says yes to what we are. We never tire of hearing these words of the prophet Isaiah: “The Lord will take pleasure in you, and your land will be married.” [6]
    So let us consent to what we are or what we are not; let us even take responsibility for all we have not chosen but which makes us who we are. [7] Let us dare to be creative even with what is not perfect. And we will find freedom. Even when overburdened, we will receive our life as a gift and each day as God’s today. [8]
    Led beyond ourselves
    If God is in us, he also goes ahead of us. [9] He takes us as we are, but he also draws us beyond ourselves. At times he comes to unsettle our life, overturning our plans and our projects. [10] Jesus’ life helps us to enter into this way of looking at things.Jesus let the Holy Spirit lead him onward. He never stopped referring to the invisible presence of God his Father. That was the basis of his freedom, which led him to give his life for love. In Jesus, a relationship with God and freedom were not mutually exclusive but rather reinforced one another. [11]
    In all of us there is the desire for an absolute; we aspire to it with our whole being—body, soul and mind. A thirst for love burns in each person, from infants to the elderly. Even the greatest human intimacy cannot completely satisfy it.We often experience these aspirations as a lack or as emptiness. They can sometimes cause us to lose focus. But far from being an anomaly, they are part of our being. They are a gift; already they contain within them God’s call to open ourselves.So each person is invited to ask themselves: what steps forward am I asked to take now? It is not necessarily a matter of “doing more”. What we are called to is to love more. And since love requires our entire being to express itself, it is up to us to find ways of being attentive to our neighbor, and to do so without waiting a moment longer.
    What little we can do, we must do
    Helping one another to deepen our faith:
    Too many young people feel alone on their inner journey. Two or three persons can already assist one another, sharing and praying together, even with those who affirm that they are closer to doubt than to faith. [12]
    This type of sharing is greatly reinforced when it is integrated into the local Church. [13] It is the community of communities, where all the generations gather and where people do not choose one another. The Church is God’s family, that communion which draws us out of isolation. There we are welcomed; there God’s yes to our existence becomes a reality; there we find God’s indispensable consolation. [14]If parishes and youth groups were first of all places of heartfelt kindness and of trust, places of hospitality where we are attentive to the weakest!
    Going beyond the compartmentalization of our societies:
    If we are to take part in building a more united human family, is not one of the urgent tasks to look at the world “from below” ? [15] That way of looking entails a great simplicity of life.
    Communication is becoming easier and easier and yet at the same time societies remain highly compartmentalized. The risk of mutual indifference continues to grow. Let us move beyond all that keeps us apart! Let us go towards those who suffer! Let us visit those who are neglected and mistreated! Let us think of the immigrants, so close to us and yet often so far away! [16] Where suffering intensifies, practical projects which are that many signs of hope are frequently seen to be on the increase.To struggle against injustice and the threat of conflicts, and to encourage a sharing of material goods, it is essential to acquire skills. Persevering in one’s studies or in professional training can also be a service rendered to others. If there are scandalous forms of poverty and injustice that are plain to see, there are other kinds of poverty that are less visible. Loneliness is one of them. [17]
    Prejudices and misunderstandings are sometimes passed on from one generation to the next and can lead to acts of violence. There are also forms of violence that seem harmless, but which in fact do great damage and which humiliate others. Mockery is one of these. [18]
    Wherever we are, and whether we are alone or with a few others, let us search for practical things we can do in situations of distress. In this way we will discover the presence of Christ even in places where we would not have expected to find him. Risen from the dead, he is present in the midst of human beings. He goes before us along the roads of compassion. And already now, through the Holy Spirit, he is renewing the face of the earth.
    [1] In many countries, despite the growth of the world economy and hopes for development, slums are becoming larger instead of smaller and unemployment is devastating for many people, particularly the young. In Africa, rapid technical progress threatens to stifle the sense of gradual maturation so fruitful in traditional life. Moreover, solidarity among members of families and ethnic groups is growing weaker. How can this value be brought to life again and be extended beyond the limits of families and ethnic groups? That would help to limit the departure of so many young people attracted by countries with a higher standard of living without always being able to weigh the consequences of such a decision.[2] Isaiah 40:31. When these words were spoken, weariness was already a reality. “I said: I have labored in vain; I have spent my strength for nothing at all” (Isaiah 49:4). And again: “Even youths grow tired and weary; young men stumble and fall” (Isaiah 40:30). But the prophet reawakens hope: “The Lord is the everlasting God. He gives strength to the weary” (Isaiah 40:28-29).[3] It is true that many obstacles risk stifling life: injustice in all its forms, violence around us and in us, the spirit of competition, our mistakes, fear of—or becoming closed to—what is different, lack of self-esteem….[4] In vast regions of Africa, for example among the Masai Christians, Christ is seen as the elder brother. That corresponds to the expression of the early Christians: Christ is “the eldest of many brothers and sisters” (Romans 8:29). By his death and resurrection, Jesus goes beyond family and ethnic solidarities (see Colossians 1:18-20).[5] In the biblical languages, “breath” and “spirit” are the same word. The prophets announced that, through the Holy Spirit, God would dwell within human beings himself (Ezekiel 36:26-27). Through the coming of Christ, by his death and resurrection, the Holy Spirit is given “without measure” (John 3:34). From then on God’s Breath has been constantly at work within humanity, so that one day it may form a single Body in Christ.[6] Isaiah 62:1-4.[7] Taking responsibility for present realities does not mean accepting everything or submitting passively to events. We may be led to resist an unjust situation or to denounce it.[8] One of Brother Roger’s earliest books bore the title Living in God’s Today (1958). Brother Roger was convinced of the importance of believers being fully present to contemporary society rather than taking refuge in nostalgia for the past or fleeing towards an illusory future. It is only in the present moment that we can encounter God and root our lives in him.[9] An African Christian, Saint Augustine, wrote this prayer in the fourth century: “You were more inward to me than my most inward part; and higher than my highest” (Confessions, Book III, 6, 11).[10] “My ways are not your ways”, says the Lord (Isaiah 55:8). The Virgin Mary also consented to looking beyond present events, even the incomprehensible death of her son, while still believing that God was faithful to his promise of life.[11] During the Synod of Bishops in Rome in October 2008, Cardinal Danneels, the archbishop of Malines-Brussels, declared, “The force of the Word implies the freedom of the hearer’s response. This is precisely the power proper to the Word of God. It does not eliminate the freedom of the hearer, but is the foundation of it.”[12] Jesus said, “When two or three meet together in my name, I am in their midst” (Matthew 18:20).[13] The first Christians “devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer” (Acts 2:42). In Africa, as in Latin America and in some Asian countries, Christians meet not only in parishes but also by district, by village, in small church communities. They pray together and offer each other mutual support. There is human warmth and a personal commitment by each individual that helps make the Church an authentic place of communion.[14] In Africa, the Church is often seen as God’s family and God as a mother who comforts. Already the prophet Isaiah had written: “God says: As a mother comforts her child, so will I comfort you” (Isaiah 66:13). See also Isaiah 49:13-15. Looking at the Church in this way compels us to strive for its unity. We cannot resign ourselves passively to God’s family remaining split into a host of different denominations.[15] The German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer belonged to a rather privileged social class but, during the Second World War, his involvement in the resistance cast him into a precarious situation, and then led him to prison and to death. In 1943 he wrote: “An experience of incomparable value remains, that we have learnt to see the great events of world history from below, from the perspective of the excluded, those under suspicion, the mistreated, the powerless, the oppressed and despised, in short, of those who suffer.”[16] Although efforts are fortunately being made today to keep alive cultures threatened with extinction, it is true that no culture develops in a vacuum. In the age of globalization, the mixing of cultures is not only inevitable; it is an advantage for our societies.[17] A Kenyan proverb reminds us of this: “There is no man who cannot become an orphan.”[18] In the Rule of Taizé (1954), Brother Roger wrote, “Mockery, that poison of a common life, is treacherous because under its cover are flung the so-called truths one dares not say face to face. It is cowardly, because it ruins the character of a brother before the others.”

    Next European meeting in Poznan, Poland, from 28 December 2009 to 1 January 2010.
    Asian Meeting in Manila, Philippines, from 3 to 7 February 2010.
    © Ateliers & Presses de Taizé, Communauté de Taizé, 71250 Taizé, France
     

  • Mother of God

    As it was with Mary, we begin the New Year with grace, blessings and hope. Like her, we receive the same blessings that Yahweh bestowed on His people, Israel, as spoken to Moses.
    Mary, Mother of God
     

    As it was with Mary, we begin the New Year with grace, blessings and hope. Like her, we receive the same blessings that Yahweh bestowed on His people, Israel, as spoken to Moses. Through her we are adopted as God’s children. Today, with Mary, let us ponder upon these blessings and learn to nurture them. And like the shepherds, let us return to God all glory and praise for the wondrous things we have heard and seen.

    This year, Mary inspires us to live a life full of gratitude, generosity, compassion and hope, so that we may return to God, with interest, all the gifts He has given us. There is no doubt that devotion to Mary provides the key both to sanctity and to salvation. There is no better way to advance quickly in holiness, no better way to please God, and no better way to guarantee one’s eternal salvation than through true devotion to Mary. Beloved by countless souls, Mary sums up the entire Christian life, showing a way of holiness that was the way of life, chosen by Christ Himself!

    2009 Daily Gospel
     

     
     
     

  • Feast of the Holy Family

    Mary and Joseph obeyed the orders of the Emperor, however painful they were, without complaining or seeking to be exempt.
    Reflection of the Holy Family

     
    Mary and Joseph obeyed the orders of the Emperor, however painful they were, without complaining or seeking to be exempt. They accepted with the same submission the contempt which their poverty attracted and withdrew into a humble stable without the least murmur.

    Jesus, our Saviour, was born in a stable, let himself be wrapped in swaddling clothes and laid in a manger. For us sinners, what a subject for reflection!
    Let us ask Jesus, through the intercession of Mary and St. Joseph, to grant us the spirit of submission to the orders of Providence, to make us love and practise poverty and to detach us from the glory and vain honours of the world.

    Pierre Bienvenu Noailles – Holy Family Pilgrinage

    The cribs inVatican (St. Peter)

     
     
     
     

  • Celebrate…

    Christmas is one of the most important times of the year. For many of us it is a time to reflect on whatever their Christian faith means to them and for others it is simply a good opportunity to relax with friends and family.
    Celebrate…
     

    Christmas is one of the most important times of the year. For many of us it is a time to reflect on whatever their Christian faith means to them and for others it is simply a good opportunity to relax with friends and family. 

    Christmas is also a time for communities to come together, to give and to share and to be at peace, a time to build the kind of respect for each other, that helps us to be stronger. Ronald Rolheiser said that Christmas is like a diamond turning in the sun, it gives off many sparkles. Christmas is about the monumental challenge to reform our lives, our adult lives, and become women and men of justice; but it is also about a baby being born, innocent and powerless in the straw, whose vulnerability is God’s invitation and judgement.
    Seeing is baby Jesus as white, olive-skinned, dark skinned or black, reminds us that Jesus was born like all of us, and for all of us. If we believe this, our prejudices will fall away along with all that weakens, breaks, and destroys the union of wills that can make peace a reality.
    Hope for 2009 is that the goodwill and respect that we all enjoy at Christmas will last all year round.

     

     
    God is Love

    Christmas is all about love

    Christmas is thus about God and Love

    Love is the key to peace among all humanity

    Love is the key to peace and happiness within all creation

    Love needs to be practiced – love needs to flow – love needs to make happy

    Love starts with you, children and family and expands to all world

    God bless all humankind.