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MSC World Projects 2026:Supporting a new generation of MSCs on their journey of faith and love

The MSC seminary in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, currently supports 15 MSC students in the initial stages on their formation path. This involves a wide and varied curriculum alongside a dedicated formation lifestyle, incorporating academic studies, spiritual and religious formation, studies in music, the arts, and languages, and additional psychological support programmes. 

Praying together in Brazil

 

It costs approximately €975 to support one trainee for a month, including their academic studies, healthcare, food, transport, additional classes, and trips for pastoral work and vocational studies. 

 

Music as part of formation

 

Studies in faith & theology

Can you help us to support these young trainees in their missionary journey? Your friendship will help them to fulfil their missionary purposes and join us in our ongoing work in helping God’s light shine, through faith, hope, and friendship, in some of the darkest corners of the world. 

MSC World Projects 2026:MSC ministry with indigenous communities in rural Ecuador

In the Chimborazo Province of Ecuador, two MSC priests, Fr Marcelo Campoverde and Fr Jose Baak, minister to families and communities across two mission areas. This includes over 13,500 people across 22 rural communities in the indigenous parish of San Francisco de Asís, plus a population of almost 18,000 people across 29 indigenous communities in the parish of San Juan Evangelista. 

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Faith in the community

The Missionaries of the Sacred Heart have been serving the region for almost 30 years, since 1998, and work from a parish house based in San Francisco de Asís. The challenges faced in the region are many and varied, including poverty, widespread malnutrition, particularly in children, lack of employment prospects, poor educational opportunities, and mobility issues due to harsh weather conditions and difficult desert terrain. With some communities a two-hour drive away by car, transport is extremely problematic, and these indigenous populations suffer greatly for lack of immediate care. 

 

Helping poor families

Caring for future generation

Helping in remote rural areas

“It’s a very poor diocese,” writes Fr Marcelo. “Alms for Masses raise less than €10. We hold four Masses a month, and we raise about €35 in this way.”

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MSC ministry with indigenous communities
in rural Ecuador

Youth ministry in action

“Most of our communities are of the indigenous culture Mestizo, and speak the Kichwa language. I, too, am an indigenous person, and I suffered greatly growing up. I was discriminated against at the university. Several times I was told that I wasn’t good for studying, that I was only good for taking care of pigs, and that I shouldn’t waste my time there. I am very grateful to my congregation of the MSC for the help they were able to give me to move forward, and that is why I always strive to continue forward in this beautiful mission they have entrusted to me.” 

MSC World Projects 2026:OLSH Global Outreach 2026

OLSH youth ministry deep in the Amazon region of Brazil

The Daughters of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart are hard at work in São Gabriel da Cachoeira, an extremely remote area of the Amazon region in Brazil. Their work here is challenging, not least because of the inaccessible location, but is essential in serving rural communities who would otherwise be highly isolated. 

This year, the Sisters are asking for our help in raising approximately €20,000 to buy a vehicle suited to the difficult Amazonian terrain and harsh conditions.

“This project aims to provide the sisters with reliable transportation to reach the parish communities,” Sr Renisa Augusta da Fonseca writes. “The vehicle would help Sisters with their social workwith disabled children, migrants and young indigenous people in this vast and under-served region.”

 

OLSH youth ministry deep in the Amazon region of Brazil

Rural Amazon 

“The community of São Gabriel da Cachoeira is situated in one of the most isolated and challenging areas of Brazil, deep in the Amazon region,” Sr Renisa explains. “The Sisters’ mission there involves pastoral work in the parish and surrounding villages, catechetical formation for children, youth, and adults, visiting families and offering accompaniment to the sick and elderly, community support programs, and cultural dialogue among diverse indigenous groups. Currently, the Sisters do not have adequate transportation, which limits their ability to serve these scattered communities effectively.” 

The purchase of the vehicle would greatly benefit the Sisters in their work with several groups, including local families and communities, indigenous families who need additional support, disabled children, and migrant families. It would allow the Sisters to travel safely and efficiently around the region, transporting essential items for education and pastoral and social aid, and would improve their ability to respond to urgent or emergency situations in remote spots. It would also encourage the “enhanced missionary presence of the Sisters, fostering hope, faith, and solidarity in the area”, says Sr Renisa. 

Working with nature at the OLSH Mission Garden in Nzhelele, South Africa

At the Nzhelele mission in South Africa, the Daughters of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart care for more than 130 orphans and vulnerable children by providing essential items such as food, shelter, clothing, school supplies and financial support, youth activities in drop-in centres, classes and workshops for children and their carers, regular care visits to the children’s homes, and working gardens to address food shortages and promote nutrition and healthy eating. 

Working with nature at the OLSH Mission Garden in Nzhelele, South Africa

Tending the plants

This year, Sr Rotee Uriam, director of the Nzhelele project, is asking for our help in funding the repair and refurbishment of their dedicated mission garden. Located in the grounds of the convent, the garden was originally established by an Irish OLSH Sister, Sr Mairead. For many years, the garden has provided food for the children in the care of the Sisters, and offers employment to several local people who would otherwise find it very difficult to find work in what is a very remote area. 

“The garden is a great teaching tool for the children to learn good agricultural practices and healthy eating practices,” writes Sr Rotee. “It has been in existence for many years – however, it now needs many repairs and updating.” 

The OLSH Sisters in Nzhelele are working to raise a total of €15,000 to complete the repairs to the garden, and continue with this wonderful resource for the provision of nutritious food, local employment, and life skills. This will include repairs to fences and pipes, and the provision of water tanks and watering apparatus for the garden. “With a grateful heart, we thank you for all you are doing to help,” Sr Rotee says.  

MSC World Projects 2026:Sowing Seeds for the future in Cameroon

The MSC community in Cameroon is growing steadily, with a postnotiviate programme training MSCs in their theological studies and preparing them for missionary life. In this academic year, the programme is hosting 27 students and their three formators, which includes 10 new postnovices.  

 

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MSC Post-Novitiate students in Cameroon

The MSC Jules Chevalier Post-Novitiate Programme is located at the Catholic University of Central Africa in Yaoundé, Cameroon. Each year, the programme welcomes students who have progressed from the Novitiate Programme and who are committed to continuing on their missionary journey. In previous years, our mission friends and benefactors here at the Irish Province of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart have helped to provide funding for laptops and essential equipment for the students.

“We really are grateful for this support,” writes Fr Bonaventure. “We thank you from the bottom of our hearts for all the help we received so far.” 

 

This year, the post-novitiate community are asking for our help once again in providing laptops for their new students, and they also have an exciting addition that needs our support. The community in Yaoundé are working on an agricultural programme to promote food supply and self-sufficiency for the students and their formators. In addition to their academic studies, the students are raising and caring for livestock such as pigs, chickens, ducks, rabbits, and fish, creating a sustainable source of food for their community while also teaching and promoting valuable life skills that will have enormous benefit in their future missionary work. 

Tending the soil

Care for Livestock

This year, the MSC community in Yaoundé are asking for our help in raising a total of €10,500. As well as providing laptops for new students, this will help the group to purchase and maintain essential equipment for their farming and agricultural programme, buying necessities such as protective work clothing and boots, farming tools such as shovels, hoes, buckets, cutting implements, and wheelbarrows, grain and seed, cleaning materials, and fuel. 

From academic studies to agriculture, your support can help MSC students in Cameroon as their continue on their dedicated missionary journey to be on earth the heart of God.

MSC World Projects 2026:Empowering young students In Indonesia

The Entrepreneurship Chevalier Anasai (ECA) High School is run by MSCs in Indonesia to help the young people of the Papua District, which covers missions in the Archdiocese of Merauke and Diocese of Jayapura. 

The ECA High School is a special school for indigenous Papuan youth, who come from difficult backgrounds such as broken homes, families who suffer greatly from poverty, the loss of one or both parents, or problematic or inaccessible living situations. The school has been running for six years now, and now offers education and a chance of hope to 106 students in total. 

 

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Basic facilities for essential tasks

The school does not charge fees to the students, due to the severity of their circumstances, but this makes funding extremely challenging. This year, we’re helping the ECA High School community to raise funds to continue in their vital work of educating and empowering young indigenous Papuans, giving them a chance for a future beyond their current challenges and limitations. 

The ECA High School community are looking to raise a total of €32,000 in total, with half going to the tuition and accommodation of 106 students for one year, and the other half going towards the construction of a comfortable and safe kitchen and dining area for the young people at the school, who currently cook in an unsustainable temporary kitchen structure, and eat meals in their study room.  

Tending the garden

The temporary kitchen

“The purpose of this school is to help these indigenous Papuan youths to gain better skills, to reach a higher academic level, and to achieve a better future,” writes the ECA team. 

These young students are working to break the boundaries of cultural expectations and progress towards something bigger, to gain academic education and vital life skills that will carry them beyond their personal and social limitations and allow them to contribute to their families and communities in the future, laying the groundwork for generations to come. Can you help? 

MSC World Projects 2026:Supporting recovery in Honduras

In Honduras, MSCs are working to help survivors of addiction at a dedicated recovery house, La Esperanza 2. Helping vulnerable people from greatly disadvantaged backgrounds who are suffering from addiction to alcohol and other drugs, the programme operates both residential and outpatient schemes, adapting to participants’ personal circumstances and individual needs in an area struggling with severe poverty and hardship .

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Community coming together

The centre provides specialised treatment including psychological and occupational therapy, support sessions with Alcoholics Anonymous, spiritual development, preventative work with local youth groups, and recreational and sporting activities to promote both physical and mental health. 

“The aim is to restore dignity, rebuild family relationships, and promote a process of integral healing, strengthening spiritual and social reintegration” writes Fr Marvin Sotelo MSC, director of the centre. 

This year, we are working to support the team at La Esperanza 2 by raising funds to help the community at the centre, including 15-20 monthly residents who receive accommodation, daily meals, the necessary therapy, and pastoral care. The team here are working to raise €14,000 to cover food supplies for residents, and the work of the centre’s project coordinator, for two years. 

 

Residential bedrooms

The kitchen area

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Residential area

“This assistance would ensure the stability and sustainability of the programme, allowing the centre to continue offering a holistic recovery process for individuals struggling with alcohol and drug addictions,” writes Fr Marvin. “It will help our residents, while their families and the wider parish community also benefit, as the initiative promotes peace, social cohesion, and hope among people deeply affected by addiction.” 

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A special space for prayer

La Esperanza 2

Together, we’re working to foster dignity and hope for recovering addicts in a region of real need – can you help?Â