How Amor en Acción Changed My Life

Transcription

How Amor en Acción Changed My Life
Issue 2
Volume 1
June 2007
How Amor en Acción Changed My Life …
Sofia Cueto
Amor en Acción has become the vehicle through which I express
my Christian faith. I know I am young, but I have never found
something– be it an organization, community, group or ministry–
that so earnestly and comprehensively embraces the mission of
the Church, in its capacity to both envision and implement a plan
for building God’s kingdom here on Earth.
Amor en Acción works as the eyes and
hands of Jesus, choosing to see and touch
that and those whom the world ignores.
In this way, Amor en Acción works as the eyes and hands of
Jesus, choosing to see and touch that and those whom the world
ignores. I feel that Amor en Acción, in its ideology, theology and
spirituality fits my like like a glove and I am forever thankful to
those who laid the foundation of this organization with their
unique talents, tireless effort, devotion and love.
Sofia Cueto (black shirt and bandana) and other missionaries
at a summer camp in the Dominican Republic.
live the universality of our Catholic faith by participating and sharing in the lives of our brothers and sisters in developing countries
Immigration- a Missionary Perspective
Teresita González de la Masa • Amor en Acción • Archdiocese of Miami
truth to be told, nor that of countless
others. As members of one body in Christ,
our stories only make sense when linked
to the redemptive story of the suffering
and resurrection of Christ. Our stories
live best in kinship and solidarity with
others that also suffer. When we fail to
listen to others, we all lose.
We can be missionary in our time and
place. Some of the most missionary
people I have ever met have never left
town. The opportunity to walk in solidarity
with Christ has arrived, is arriving, and
will continue to arrive, regardless of
national security, border fences, and
airport inspections. The hungry will
continue to seek and the oppressed will
continue to run for their lives.
Haitians, like Cubans, risk their lives in search of a dignified future.
Amor en Acción was born in the midst
of the immigration struggle. The Cuban
exile experience propelled our founders
to channel their pain and loss onto a
path of seeking justice for others. Today’s
immigration struggle continues to move
people around the globe and into our
communities. We are called, as a community
of the Gospel, to see these arrivals as
opportunities for mission on our doorstep.
Mission is about crossing cultures and
boundaries, becoming vulnerable in order
to accompany the vulnerable, seeking
conversion, and proclaiming the truth.
We do not have to travel far to do this.
Here on our very shores unfolds the
drama of humanity seeking liberation
from oppression everyday.
we have been enriched by Haitian culture
and blessed by their enormous faith and
contagious perseverance. Theirs is a
difficult life, full of challenges, but full
of God. We know why they come, and
we also know that it is not an easy
decision to make. Many cultures share
this land in the United States and particularly in Southeastern Florida. Though
the details of our history of politics and
pain might differ, the anxiety of migration
under duress is quite the same. We have
shared the deserts, the skies, and the seas to
get here. We are now called to share in the
search for truth and life across this land.
This is an opportunity for mission in our
community, to bridge a divide of culture
and politics that does not allow the Haitian
Recently, human tragedy and triumph
once again knocked on our door when
Haitian migrants arrived here with barely
their lives. We may forget that, as God’s
children, they too have a mission among
us, they too are bearers of the Good
News, portadores de la Buena Nueva.
Who are we to refuse to meet them at
the shore? How much Good News has
drowned already in the Florida Straits?
How much has to desperately starve for
want of dignity as the world sleeps? How
much of that hope of a suffering Jesus is
suffocated upon arrival? The aspiration
and bittersweet victory of arriving alive
are muffled and their stories are never told.
Many of us in Amor en Acción are of
Ibero-American background, but over
the years, as a result of our work in Ayiti,
What will be our response? The guidance
of our Catholic Church and of our own
Archbishop John Clement Favalora has
served as a clear and powerful guide for
Some of the most
missionary people I
have ever met have
never left town.
us and as a prophetic voice for urging
unity. We can reclaim our Christian
mission in defense of the vulnerable by
calling our congressional representatives.
Tell them proudly who you are: Cuban,
Dominican, Colombian, American, or
hyphenated. Tell them that compassion
and justice for our brothers and sisters is
overdue. Let us listen to the immigrant
stories of others. Let us give them the
opportunity to be heard and to allow
their wounds to begin to heal. Look into
volunteering for our local church outreach
program (see below).
A courageous journey has brought us all
together. We carry our courage and unfailing faith and hope to this country. Let not
race, ideology, or ruthless strategies stand
in the way of true understanding and compassion for one another. For we are people
of the road, and no one knows the road
better than those who have traveled it.
Most rural Haitians practice
subsistence farming because the
collapsed infrastructure does not
allow many agricultural exports.
Please do not hesitate to call Gloria Luna
at Catholic Charities’ Office of Social
Advocacy at 305.762.1338. For further
resources, log on to the USCCB website
at www.justiceforimmigrants.org.
participate in the missionary activity of the Church as a living community that supports and fosters the growth of each member
Sister Schools Corner: Epiphany School, a Grooming Ground for Vocations
Jennifer Hanlon
like they can help and that they are, in
a sense, being called to a vocation.”
Sister Carmel Regina, accompanied by
Olga Vieira & David Masters, eagerly
sets out to visit Dekostyè, Epiphany’s
AeA sister school, for the first time.
In the words of Sister Carmel Regina, the
Assistant Principal at Epiphany: “Amor
en Acción is an avenue that allows us to
help the children understand the concept
of mission. AeA affords us an opportunity
to broaden the minds of these wonderful
kids who want to make a difference. A
spirit grows within them, I guess you
could say. Although it is challenging for
them because of their age, they still feel
milk. “The kids put it all together by
examining the challenges before them,
by thinking of ways that they can benefit
people in need, and then by carrying out
their solutions,” declared the proud
mentor.
While the kids can’t actually visit Ayiti
themselves, they are offered the
opportunity to do so upon entering
Lourdes or Columbus.
Sister referred to Epiphany
as a “grooming ground”
where the students
receive a great foundation
that can be carried into
their high school years
and beyond. Epiphany
collects clothing, sneakers,
and back packs. They
organize drives and
raffles, all profits of which
go to their sister school
in Ayiti, Dekostye. With
this money, they support
the student nutrition
program and pay the
teachers’ salaries. Most
Epiphany students engage in hands-on activity of
recently, they collected
solidarity by packaging Three Kings Day gifts for
food - bags of rice and
beans, oil, and powdered their siblings in Haiti.
Saginaw Corner
Michigan Missioners Prepare for Summer Missions
Jennifer Watt- Saginaw, Michigan
of Cutupú and walk the vivacious streets
of San Pedro de Macorís.
Combined missionary group from
Saginaw, Michigan and Miami, FL.
Michigan Amor en Acción members are
busy preparing for our 2007 summer
mission trips to La Vega and San Pedro
de Macorís in la República Dominicana.
After gathering for meetings and retreats,
as well as collecting supplies and
fundraising since February, I recently
took out time to ready myself personally
for this challenging, yet rewarding
experience. Through spiritual readings
and quiet moments of prayer, I find that
I am once again ready to climb the hills
As I was reading Max Lucado’s
publication entitled You! God’s Brand
New Idea - Made to be Amazing, I was
interested in his comment that “God
gave you, not a knap sack, but a knack
sack” to provide you with the necessities
to become the person God created you
to be. In his heart-warming book, he
went on to remark that each of us has
been given gifts from God, talents
enabling us to accept the task that God
has called us to pursue. This brought to
mind the unique personalities that God
has assembled to form our summer
mission group. This year, he has blessed
us with college students, wives and
mothers, a young man serving our
country in the military, sons and
daughters. He has chosen some that
speak Spanish, some that don’t, a
musician, an actor, a chef, several that
make others laugh, and a few with the
strength and availability to stay committed
to AeA for more than one summer.
All are created with a love for God’s
children, a longing for social justice, and
the courage to allow God to lead them
where they might not otherwise have
gone. Each will bring a variety of gifts
that will help make this mission a life
altering experience. With seven returnees
and five new members, we have missioners traveling from as far west as Colorado and as far north as Wisconsin. We
have students from Central Michigan University in the middle of the mitten to the
University of Michigan in the south, as
well as many different colleges scattered
between Lake Michigan and Lake Huron.
Michigan missioners are truly a diverse
group with three common goals: to build
strong lasting relationships with our
Dominican friends, to share our Catholic
faith through our actions if not our words,
and finally to introduce a new kind of
United States American, an American that
is stepping out of a self-centered materialistic society and viewing the world through
new eyes, eyes filled with love and compassion for our neighbors across the sea.
p r o m o t e J e s u s C h r i s t Õ s m i s s i o n a ry c a l l i n g a n d t h e k e y r o l e e a c h o f u s p l a y s i n b u i l d i n g t h e K i n g d o m o f G o d
SHEEP OF GOD: AMOR EN ACCIÓN, CATHOLIC SOCIAL TEACHING, AND SALVATION
César Baldelomar • STU Pax Romana Society President • Florida Catholic Correspondent
For centuries, Christians have struggled
to discern what type of community Jesus
desired on the eve of his arrest, when
he pleaded to God “that they [His disciples]
may be one just as we are one.” What is
clear from this is that to be a Christian
means to be in community. But should
Christians tend solely to the parish
community and the domestic sphere? Or
should Christians also engage in and
serve the larger community? Many of us
grapple with this question, but the answer
is clearly delineated in Scripture.
In Matthew 25:37-46, we find an
apocalyptic vision of the Parousia (second
coming of Christ) in which all nations
assemble before Jesus Christ to await
their judgment. Jesus separates the sheep
from the goat, placing the sheep to his
right and the goats to his left. Then, to
the ones on the right (the sheep), Jesus
says, Come, you are blessed by my Father.
Inherit the kingdom prepared for you
from the foundation of the world. For I
was hungry and you gave me food, I
was thirsty and you gave me drink, a
stranger and you welcomed me, naked
and you clothed me, ill and you cared
for me, in prison and you visited me.
The ones on the right immediately ask
Jesus when they did these things for him.
The answer from Jesus is, “Amen, I say
to you, whatever you did for one of these
least brothers of mine, you did for me.”
The ones on the left, on the other hand,
“fail Jesus by neglecting these brothers
and sisters.”
According to Clarke and David Cochran,
the message of this Scriptural passage is
clear: “…prayer…liturgy…loyalty to the
church. These are all vital to Catholicism.
But—do you really think that any of us
will make it into heaven without feeding
the hungry, clothing the naked,
ministering to the sick, visiting the
imprisoned? There is no way around
Jesus’ central teaching.” Thus, essential
to our salvation is engaging the world,
just as Jesus and his disciples did so long
ago. Serving as an invaluable tool in this
difficult endeavor is the rich tradition
and wisdom of Catholic social teaching
(CST).
Catholic Social Teaching
According to Marvin L. Krier Mich, “The
Roman Catholic church has a rich tradition
of social teachings. Some would claim it
is ‘our best kept secret.’” For Catholics
who are familiar with CST, they often
only mention Leo XIII’s encyclical Rerum
novarum and other papal encyclicals,
pastoral documents, or the achievements
of the Second Vatican Council. Yet,
“Catholic Social Teaching is both older
and broader than the papal encyclicals…”
It includes contributions from the “activists
and leaders who lived out that teaching
and, in the process, helped to forge that
living tradition.”
CST SEEKS TO:
1 Identify a social problem
2 Analyze it in light of biblical values
and the principles of Catholic social
teaching, and by exploring its
historical and structural
relationships
3 Plan and carry out actions aimed
at transforming the social structures
that contribute to suffering and
injustice.
The Haitians’ daily struggle for survival is exacerbated by political corruption & short-sighted environmental mismanagement.
s h a r e
w i t h
o t h e r s
t h e
m i s s i o n a r y
e x p e r i e n c e
o f
o u r
m e m b e r s
Our History
AMOR EN ACCION
Citizens of Pòdepè unite in order to incarnate Bishop Paulo’s vision.
Although tentative, Clarke and David
Cochran claim that “eight headings
conveniently summarize Catholic social
teaching: the dignity and social nature of
the person; subsidiartiy and the proper
role of government; the common good;
stewardship and property; social justice;
solidarity; religious freedom; and the
preferential option for the poor.” Although
there is no space here to describe the
principles, we shall now see how Amor
en Acción embodies them.
Amor en Acción: Catholic Social
Teaching in Action
The living tradition of CST “is…carried
forward by believers who join…groups
working for justice…” The extraordinary
missionaries of Amor en Acción are leaders
who are with their deeds continually
contributing to and embodying the rich
tradition of CST. The missionaries identify
a problem, analyze it, and then act to fix
it. The fruits of Amor en Acción’s social
and theological analyzes are several
projects that benefit the poorest of the
poor in Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
From funding the education of poor
children, to nutrition programs, to
constructing schools and chapels, to
providing medicine, to housing projects,
to an evangelization program, to
reforestation and water management
projects, the “sheep” of Amor en Acción
have contributed to the edification of the
kingdom of God on earth.
Through their countless projects at home
(sister school program, visiting schools
and organizations, holding regular
reflection meetings) and abroad to assuage
human suffering, Amor en Acción
incessantly promotes the CST principles
of the dignity of the human person, the
common good, social justice, solidarity,
and the preferential option for the poor.
They have demonstrated their love for
the poor and oppressed and, in so doing,
have strongly identified with Jesus’ ministry
of tending to the least of God’s children.
Amor en Acción has also shown us the
path to eternal salvation, where we will
be seated—like the sheep of Mathew 25—
at the right hand of the Father.
See John 17:11. Also see Michael J. Schuck, That They
Be One: The Social Teachings of the Papal Encyclicals
1740-1989 (Washington, DC: Georgetown University
Press, 1991), ix.
Matthew 25:34-36.
Clarke E. Cochran and David Carroll Cochran, Catholics,
Politics, & Public Policy: Beyond Left and Right
(Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 2003), 1.
Ibid.,
Marvin L. Krier Mich, Catholic Social Teaching and
Movements (Mystic, CT: Twenty-Third Publications,
2004), 1.
John A. Coleman, S.J., “Making the Connections:
Globalization and Catholic Social Thought,”
Globalization and Catholic Social Thought: Present
Crisis, Future Hope (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 2005), 15.
Ibid.,
Office for Social Justice, Archdiocese of St. Paul and
Minneapolis, Refection/Action Process (no date), 3.
Cochran, Catholic, Politics, and Public Policy, 7.
Ibid, 6.
Amor en Acción, a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization, is a missionary
community recognized as such by
the Archdiocese of Miami. The
community was founded as a result
of the individual missionary
experiences of two of its members,
Adriano Garcia and Alicia Marill.
In 1976, both participated in
separate Catholic missions in the
Dominican Republic. Upon their
return to Miami, both felt a special
call to dedicate their lives to lay
missionary work, serving the poor
in the Caribbean and Latin America.
Ms. Marill and Mr. Garcia founded
Amor en Acción (Love in Action)
on the principle that “faith without
works is dead” (James 2:14).
From the community’s earliest
stages, Amor en Acción’s members
dedicated themselves to promoting
the Catholic faith in the missionary
dimension of the Church. In 1978,
the late Archbishop Edward
McCarthy gave the missionary
group his blessings and
sponsorship, enthusiastically
supporting Amor en Acción’s vision
of living out the universality of the
Catholic Church.
Since its founding, Amor en Acción
has touched thousands of lives in
other countries and here at home.
Today, with the continued blessings
and guidance of Archbishop
John C. Favalora, we collaborate
as the missionary arm of the
Archdiocese of Miami in its Sister
Diocese of Port de Paix in Haiti,
and also work with the bishops
and pastoral agents in five areas
of the Dominican Republic. As we
work to meet the urgent needs of
the poor, the very people we serve
continue to evangelize us in Gospel
values. This is referred to as
“mission in reverse”. Thus, together,
we work toward building the
Kingdom of God.
m o d e l f o r o t h e r s a n e w, e c c l e s i a l - b r i d g e - b u i l d i n g , m i s s i o n - i n - r e v e r s e a p p r o a c h t o m i s s i o n a r y w o r k
Programa de Becas Pere Bo
Teresita González de la Masa • Translated by Marta Carbonell
Fredeline Cadet
Fils aime
Anne Charilia
Ducasse
Widline
Ocgenor
Ruth-Stephanie
Ocgenor
Moise Chery
Socrate
Sylvetre
Ilner Fenelus
Jean Baptiste
Deuve
La semana pasada, Olga Vieira y
yo realizamos un corto viaje a
República Dominicana. Tuvimos la
oportunidad de visitar a viejos
amigos, y conocer nuevas ideas y
varios proyectos. Algo muy
importante para mí fue la reunión
con un grupo de estudiantes
haitianos que acaban de comenzar
sus estudios en la Universidad
Católica Madre y Maestra en
Santiago con la esperanza de
completar su educación y regresar
a Haití para servir a su pueblo. Su
compromiso ha renovado mi
convicción en el poder
multiplicador de la solidaridad
cristiana.
En esa reunión tuvimos la suerte
de contar con la compañía de dos
amigos dominicanos: Leo y Julio.
Leo es un médico que también
estudió en esta universidad y Julio
es un arquitecto que ha colaborado
durante muchos años en proyectos
misioneros en la República
Dominicana. Juntos pudimos
comprender mejor la situación
actual de los estudiantes y diseñar
un plan de acción.
Los estudiantes, procedentes de
diferentes áreas de Port-de-Paix,
en Haití, diócesis hermana de la
Arquidiócesis de Miami, fueron
seleccionados y llevados a
República Dominicana por su
maestro y mentor, P. Boniface Fils
Aime, conocido como Père Bo.
Recientemente, Pere Bo, quien tiene
ahora 82 años y durante muchos
ha sido guía y mentor de Amor en
Acción, nos habló del proyecto y
nos hizo sentir la urgencia de
colaborar en todo lo que
pudiéramos.
¡Hay que ver lo que tienen que
luchar!. Son ocho en total: cuatro
muchachas y cuatro muchachos.
Siete van a estudiar medicina y uno
ingeniería mecánica. Su situación
financiera es precaria ya que sólo
cuentan con lo poco que le pueden
enviar sus familiares y las
donaciones que se esfuerza por
conseguir Pere Bo, a quien también
le agradecen haber obtenido un
crédito especial de la Universidad
para su matrícula. Los ocho
comparten con otros dos, ajenos
al grupo, un pequeño apartamento
Lift up your eyes! Your
Heavenly Father awaits to
bless you in inconceivable
ways and to make your life
what you never dreamed
it could be.
Pè Boniface champions remote
rural education & evangelization
via the diocesan radio station.
de 3 dormitorios. Las 4 muchachas
comparten una reducida habitación
y dos de los jóvenes duermen en
el suelo en la sala. Un apartamento
más grande sería incosteable y
además difícil de conseguir a causa
de la discriminación contra los
haitianos. No pueden gastar dinero
en libros ni en materiales escolares
básicos. Todos han hecho grandes
esfuerzos por aprender el idioma
español y ya hay cuatro que lo
hablan con fluidez. Además de los
retos propios de la vida estudiantil,
deben enfrentarse diariamente a la
pobreza y el aislamiento en una
gran ciudad extraña.
Con todo, a pesar de la ansiedad,
porque saben que enfrentan un
gran desafío, ésta no es una historia
de derrotas, sino más bien de
energía juvenil y de esperanza.
Ellos saben que sus profesiones
son vitales para incontables seres
que sufren en Haití y están
dispuestos a llevar sobre sus
hombres la responsabilidad. Y en
medio de todo, consideran que es
un sueño hecho realidad, porque
una educación universitaria es
prácticamente inalcanzable en Haití.
Leve zye w! Papa ki nan syèl
la ap tann pou beni w
e rann lavi w pi bèl ke ou
pa ta janm ka kwe oubyen
janm reve
¡Levanta tus ojos! Tu padre
del cielo espera para
bendecirte de manera
inconcevible, ¡para hacer de
tu vida lo que nunca soñaste!
But my God shall supply
all your needs, according
to His riches in glory by
Jesus Christ.
PHILIPPIANS 4:19
Men Bondye mwen pral
ranpli tout bezwen w avèk
richès li geyen nan glwa Jezi
Kris la.
FILIPEYEN
4:19
Por lo tanto, mi Dios les dará
a ustedes todo lo que les falte,
conforme a las gloriosas
riquezas que tiene en Cristo
Jesús.
FILIPENSES
4:19
Y allí estábamos…doce de nosotros,
con diferentes experiencias. Y
comprendí que nuestra reunión era
muy especial. De un modo u otro
todos estábamos conectados por
la amistad y el cariño de Pere Bo,
por su celo misionero y por la obra
de Amor en Acción. Allí estábamos
con nuestros escasos panes y peces,
algo inseguros y temerosos de
nuestra flaqueza, pero con la certeza
de que el Señor moverá los
corazones de cuantos conozcan la
historia de estos jóvenes para que
se animen a compartir sus bienes
en una obra de amor. Es lo que
llamamos Amor en Acción.
collaborate in projects which respond to urgent or established, long-term needs
CAMINOS
Misioneros
SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 29
2007
Contact Information
5th
Publisher & Adriano García
Photo Editor [email protected]
S HERATON M IAMI M ART H OTEL
Chief Editor David Masters
[email protected]
60
Saginaw Editor Jennifer Watt
[email protected]
Kreyol Editor Kathy Lynn Pierre
[email protected]
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For More Information Please Call:
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I have been working the J.S. Paluch
Company for 12 years. I’m very proud to
be part of this company which is dedicated
to serving the Catholic Church and
promoting vocations since 1913. J.S. Paluch
is a family owned company that is very
involved in the Catholic Church. We are
happy to be able to help Amor en Acción
and are proud supporters of ANSH and
other Catholic Hispanic organizations.
Cristy Guzmán
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CONTRIBUTORS TO
Jennifer
Hanlon
Journalist-inTraining
CAMINOS
Misioneros
César
Baldelomar
Pax Romana
Society President
at St. Thomas
University
Kathy Lynn
Pierre
Amor en Acción
Member and
Newsletter Kreyol
Editor
Jennifer Watt
Amor en Acción
Newsletter
Saginaw Editor
Mercy Valero
Amor en Acción
Database
Coordinator
Teresita
González de la
Maza
Amor en Acción
Director
David Masters
Amor en Acción
Chief Newsletter
Editor
Daniel
González
Graphic Designer,
Amor en Acción
Member
m o d e l f o r o t h e r s a n e w, e c c l e s i a l - b r i d g e - b u i l d i n g , m i s s i o n - i n - r e v e r s e a p p r o a c h t o m i s s i o n a r y w o r k
Amor En Acción
PO BOX 141523
AMOR EN ACCION
Coral Gables, Fl 33114
We’re Counting on You
Anna Figueroa
Our time in mission binds us together in a most
sacred way... to each other and to those who touch
us so deeply on our trips. It is a bond that lives on
inside us for our whole lives as an unbreakable
connection through our Lord. We, more than anyone
else, have witnessed the importance and urgency of
the people and programs that Amor en Acción supports
and administers in Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
Many of us can call some of the children who benefit
from these programs by name. It is in the name of
all of these children that we exhort our members,
old and young, new to Amor en Acción or founders,
to please commit to a small sum as a monthly donation.
I would like you to close your eyes and recall someone
you met during a mission who changed your life
profoundly. Realize that your small sacrifice will help
transform someone else’s life just as yours was
changed. Just $25.00 a month (or more) from every
member would make an enormous difference in our
ability to feed and to care for more children. For the
price of something as trivial as a trip to the movies,
we can all make a meaningful difference in the lives
of those to whom we owe so much.
We are a spiritual family. Let us revive a neglected
tradition within our missionary community. Let us
now own up to our responsibilities and commit to
doing our part each and every month.
Please do it now. Your sacrificial gift will save our
siblings’ lives and deliver hope to innumerable
members of our family.
Financial Contributions
Name:
FIRST
LAST
Address:
City:
State:
Zip:
Home Phone:
Work Phone:
Mobile Phone:
E-Mail:
I want to make a
monthly pledge of:
$15
$25
$50
$100
Other $_____
In addition to monetary contributions, businesses can donate construction
equipment, office or school supplies, medical supplies, or other donations.
Make check payable to Amor En Acción and mail to address below.
Credit Card donations can be made online by visiting:
http://AmorEnAccion.com/donations.php
Amor En Acción :: PO BOX 141523
Coral Gables, Fl 33114 phone :: 305.762.1226
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