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Chirstmas greetings from Fr Alan in South Sudan

Gardens in Rumbeck

These are some of the kadua and sukumwiki that the local women grow to feed their families.

I don’t know how your morning is going, but I spent mine hunting down a jailbreaking duck. Born and raised in Cork City, I’m an absolute novice when it comes to anything to do with rearing animals or growing crops. I’m used to getting my eggs in cartons and my milk in convenient two litre plastic containers from Centra, so life here has presented some exciting new challenges. One thing is certain though, I’m not taking my food for granted any more.

Lorteo Rumbek does its best to make use of the land around the school to provide some of the food it needs for its students and staff. Each year for several months they grow groundnuts, a nutritious local staple. They also keep goats and pigs. In fact, just last week our community grew with the arrival of eight new piglets. And then there are the ducks, the newest members of my flock. Certainly not God’s smartest creation, but clever enough to give me a run for my money. After a quick Google search to confirm you can’t get rabies if they nip you (one was especially enthusiastic for his food two weeks ago), we’re getting on surprisingly well.

The food security that we take for granted at home, is wildly aspirational in South Sudan. Self-sufficiency and resilience are very much part of daily life. Localised fighting, an infrastructure severely damaged by flooding, and insufficient irrigation systems, mean many families live hand to mouth. Whatever meagre crops they grow must be watered long before dawn and late after sunset, to avoid the intense heat of the day. It involves long hours of backbreaking work, but the women who look after their small plots work miracles with the dry, sandy soil. In the villages around the school, Loreto has drilled several wells and set up hand pumps that provide much needed access to water. The people cultivate kadua and sukumawiki, both similar to cabbage, which they use to feed their families or, if they are fortunate enough to have a surplus, sell in the market.

Last night after Mass with the students, we were discussing the miracle of the Nativity and the simplicity of the stable for Jesus’ birth. For us, this experience of abject poverty shows usthe humility of God entering into our world in the form of a small, vulnerable child. However, it was explained to me that this is how children are born here in South Sudan all the time. Each home is made up of a number of tukuls or mud brick huts with grass roofs that house the families and any animals they have, sometimes sharing the same space for added security. This echo of the Nativity reminds me of how close Jesus was to those living at the very margins of society. There is no Christmas shopping here really and even if there was,there wouldn’t be the money to spend on such luxuries. Instead, the focus is on being together, to sharing the little they have, and being grateful for whatever blessings they have received.

While I’m intrigued by people living in such close proximity to their animals, I still haven’t entirely embraced the local way of life. My ducks and I need our own space. In the end it took the best part of twenty minutes for me to shepherd my errant duck back to his coop. It may have been my imagination, but I did get the sense that the rest of his flock welcomed him home with an awed sense of respect for his daring escapades. If I was being absolutely honest with myself, I think he probably deserved it.

Fr Alan enjoying a mandazi

After the Sunday Masses, there’s always time to enjoy a coffee and a mandazi, a local South Sudanese cake.

We’re only three days away from Christmas, so from everyone here in Loreto Rumbek, we hope you have a joyful time as you celebrate the birth of our Saviour and a peaceful New Year.

God bless,

Fr. Alan

HELP US TO TRANSFORM LIVES IN SOUTH SUDAN

 

 

 

Christmas Message from Fr Michael 2020

Christmas blessing
Dear Friends,

This year is drawing to a close, and truly this has been a year like no other. We have all faced unimaginable challenges in a world that has become unrecognisable in so many ways. We have now begun to take the first tentative steps into establishing a new way of living safely, and around the world in towns and villages that have been ravaged by this deadly disease, our MSC’s are helping vulnerable families do the same.

As we planned our mission projects for 2020, we could never have dreamed that instead we would face such a struggle for survival. Each year we make every effort to run the MSC Mission Office as cost effectively as possible, with every donation we receive put to the best possible use. The progressively rising cost of necessities means that this becomes more of a challenge with every passing year and this year the impact of COVID-19 has resulted in a devastating hit to our fundraising abilities. Now more than ever, we are trying our best to do more with less..

Pope Francis recently reminded us, “To emerge from this crisis, we have to do so together; together and not alone.” I thank you with all my heart, for remaining united with us in faith and hope and for lending your support, which is quite literally a lifeline to many. I pray that you and your loved ones will have a peaceful Christmas and that the New Year will bring God’s grace in abundance.

MSC Missions, Missionaries of the Sacred Heart, Christmas blessing, Christmas 2019, Christmas prayer, Fr Michael O’Connell MSC, Fr Michael O’Connell, Fr Michael O’Connell CorkWishing you and yours a happy and holy Christmas,

Fr Michael O’Connell MSC

Click here to view the winners of our 2020 Christmas Raffle

Congratulations to the winners of the 2020 MSC Christmas Raffle!

MSC Christmas Raffle 2020

 Christmas Raffle Prize Winners:

MSC Missions, Missionaries of the Sacred Heart, MSC Christmas draw, MSC Christmas raffle, Christmas draw, Christmas raffle, Christmas 2020

1st Prize: Shopping voucher to the value of €1,000

J. Walsh

Newbridge, Co. Kildare.

2nd Prize: Festive Feast Hamper value €500

J O’Brien

Westport, Co Mayo.

3rd Prize: Supreme Christmas Hamper value €400

E O’Neill

Booterstown, Co. Dublin.

4th Prize: Festive Celebration Christmas Hamper value €350

R Grace,

Ballymitty, Co. Wexford.

5th Prize: Christmas Pantry Hamper value €250

R Lynch,

Boyle, Co. Roscommon.

6th Prize: Deck the Halls Hamper value €150

A Scully

Birr Co. Offaly

7th Prize: Deck the Halls Hamper value €150

O Lawrence

Dundalk, Co. Louth.

8th Prize: Deck the Halls Hamper value €150

L Finnegan

Athlone, Co. Westmeath.

9th Prize: Deck the Halls Hamper value €150

B Poniard

Athenry, Co. Galway.

10th Prize: Deck the Halls Hamper value €150

A Kennedy

Dundrum, Dublin 14.

Special Seller’s Prize: Christmas Pantry Hamper value €250

C Sheridan

Dundalk, Co. Louth

This year’s Christmas Draw took place on Thursday, December 18th 2020.

We would like to extend a sincere thank you to everyone for taking part. 

Click here to read a special Christmas message from Fr Michael

 

Building a Better Future in South Sudan. Fr Alan reports…

Mud huts in South Sudan with Fr Alan.

The mud hut behind us is a typical South Sudanese home in the countryside. Most of our students would come from places like these.

“It is coming up to a month since I first stepped off the plane at Rumbek Airport. Since my arrival, it has been a whirlwind of new experiences. The first thing you notice, in fact you can’t miss it, is the heat. I went from winter in Ireland to an average daily temperature of 37C and I was reliably informed that this was the coolest part of the year. I am fascinated that each morning there are people out and about with coats and a few wool hats. They in turn are mystified how I’m surviving sporting shorts and a t-shirt!

I am still settling into life at Loreto Rumbek and it has been a special privilege. It originally began as a school in 2008 under a tree in a scrub field five kilometres outside of the town, that was gifted to the sisters by a local chief. Its purpose was to educate young girls, a challenge in an environment where schooling was almost exclusively restricted to boys. South Sudan is still ranked as the world’s most difficult nation in the world for girls to receive an education, with only three out of a hundred having the opportunity to go to secondary school. Just over half of all girls are married before they are eighteen years old and almost one in five are married before they are fifteen.

When the Loreto Sisters began their work in Rumbek, they were told they were wasting their time. It was obvious to everyone that students wouldn’t come. They came. Then they were told the girls wouldn’t go on to secondary school. They persevered. Then they were told they wouldn’t graduate. Apparently, no one told the girls because they graduated anyway. To stand against the weight of cultural expectations requires a school that sees the very best in each student and a student with a courage of conviction that would be beyond most adults.

Over the last twelve years the project has grown from a few chairs under a tree and now includes a primary school with 1,200 children, a secondary with 300 girls, an agricultural project, and the newly opened primary health care clinic. It hasn’t always been plain sailing and 2020 has been especially difficult. The pandemic has caused widespread disruption around the world and South Sudan is no exception. However, Loreto has had their final classes of primary and secondary school back since autumn because they will still sit state exams in spring. We will need to keep them in our prayers.

Last Saturday we had a small, but significant celebration in the community. Five of the young women finished their two-year intern programme, where they had worked after their graduation in the school and the clinic as support staff. Now they were heading to university in Juba or Nairobi to continue their education, funded by Loreto. It is impossible to overestimate how extraordinary and important this is right now.

Over the years, graduates have gone on to study nursing, computing, teaching, business, logistics, and law. They are the pioneers who will blaze the trail for their younger sisters, making the impossible seem attainable. They are the firm rebuke to the people who say that it is a waste of time and money to educate girls at all. They are the entrepreneurs, the healers, the teachers, the leaders who will build a better South Sudan tomorrow, starting today.”

God bless or Bi Nhialic arrer kek yin as they say here.

Fr. Alan

HELP US TO TRANSFORM LIVES IN SOUTH SUDAN

Christmas Mass times at Sacred Heart Church

Christmas Mass times at the Sacred Heart Church

 

Weekday Mass:  Mon to Fri 8am & 10am

Saturday 12th December : Mass 12noon & 6.30pm

Sunday 13th December: Mass 8.00am,10am,12 noon

Weekday Mass : Mon to Fri 8am & 10am

Thurs 17th Dec : Penitential Service 8pm

Saturday 19th Dec : Mass 12 noon & 6.30pm

Sunday 20th Dec : Mass 8.00am, 10am,12 noon

Monday 21st Dec : Christmas Triduum 10.00 am Mass

Tuesday 22nd Dec : Christmas Triduum 10.00 am Mass

Wed 23rd Dec: Christmas Triduum 10.00 am Mass

Thurs 24th Christmas Eve Mass : 8am, 10am,2pm, 4pm, 7pm & 9pm

Fri. 25th Christmas Day Mass : 8.00am, 10.00am, 12 noon

Sat 26th St. Stephen’s Day Mass : 10.00am, 12 noon,6.30pm

Sunday 27th Mass 8.00am, 10am. 12 noon

 

All masses are streamed live here

Wishing all our friends and benefactors a Peaceful and Happy Christmas

 
    

Light Up a Memory Mass 2020

This year’s Light Up A Memory Mass took place on 28th November and was like a ceremony like no other. We couldn’t attend in person but at least we could join together virtually and stream it online. And how beautiful did our church look for the occasion, with hundreds of candles lit up to represent our loved ones who have passed away. It really was a unique and special occasion.

Now in its seventh year, the first Light Up a Memory Mass took place in 2014 and it has since become a much-beloved tradition for local parishioners in Cork, and for mission friends located far and wide, all over the world.

We would like to extend our heartfelt thanks to all who took part in this year’s Light Up a Memory celebrations, both in the Sacred Heart Church and around the world. Once again, it was a very poignant and truly special evening of prayer, reflection, and fond remembrance for everyone involved.

You can watch the full service here