Nov 13, 2017
The MSC Youth Team 2017-2018 have hit the ground running and have been doing some fantastic work around the community. They’ve been super busy but have even managed to venture across the water to the UK to share some joy and the message of the Sacred Heart over there. The team this year is made up of six bubbly and enthusiastic young adults who, between them, come from four different countries.

From left to right: Garrett Moore, Michael Mone, Keith Erchinger, Lucy Crispin, Felicia Joosten and Tammie Richardson.
Introducing this year’s MSC Youth Team (Cork NET), we have:
- Garrett Moore, 19, from Minnesota, USA
- Michael Mone, 18, Texas, USA
- Keith Erchinger, 18, Texas, USA
- Lucy Crispin, 19, Leeds, England.
- Felicia Joosten, 18, Alberta, Canada
- Tammie Richardson, 18, from Co. Meath
Lucy took some time out of her hectic schedule to write the following piece for us so as we can keep you up to speed with some of the great work they’ve done to date!
“Hello everybody!
It’s the MSC Youth Team here!
We are a team of six young people working in the Sacred Heart Parish in Cork City. As members of the MSC Youth Team (Cork NET) we help in the running of a young adults youth group, consisting mainly of students, who come together every week to talk, learn and grow deeper in their faith. We run a Parents and Toddlers group where parents can come and relax while their children run wild and have fun. Along with both of those we also hold a Children’s Mass every Sunday wherein the younger children can learn about the gospel in a fun and interactive way through arts and crafts, singing songs and even by playing games. They have so much fun learning about mass in this way and the smiles on their faces speak volumes!

Member’s of the Cork NET Team conducting their Children’s Mass
As well as all of this, the team this year has been working very hard in a number of secondary schools holding day retreats wherein the youth can learn about their faith. We do this through activities, talks, dramas, songs, and, as members of the MSC Youth Team, we are happy to share our own life stories with the groups.
We have also had the amazing opportunity to fly to England and work in the Parishes there! It was a lovely opportunity and we seized the chance to host interactive one hour sessions with over 300 students in Coventry and in St Alban’s. Overall, it has been an incredible start to our year and we are really looking forward to setting up two more youth groups to cater for both the older and younger years of secondary school students. We also have the pleasure of planning off site retreats such as surf, sand and sun retreats for all youth groups to come to and have fun while at the same time getting to know their faith!
We are excited to see what the rest of this year has in store for us!”

Tammie appreciating in the glorious views of Cologne
The globetrotter of the group, Tammie, recently travelled to Cologne to attend the International Nightfever Weekend which took place from the 20th-22nd October 2017. Nightfever 2017 brought over 130 young people from many different countries together to celebrate this very special event. Nightfever is an international initiative by young Christians intended to provide an experience of God’s love and mercy. During the Nightfever Evening events, young people approach passersby in the streets and public squares, offering them a candle and welcoming them to come into church for a while. In the church, multiple activities offer the opportunity to encounter God: lighting candles, picking a Bible verse, writing down prayer intentions, listening to the music, talking to a priest, receiving a blessing or the Sacrament of Reconciliation. In addition to the Nightfever Evening events, the initiative also includes Nightfever Weekends, faith courses / evangelistic courses, academies, etc. Nightfever was founded as an initiative by young Christians after the World Youth Day in Cologne and has meanwhile been established in 27 countries.

A group picture of all those in attendance at Nightfever 2017, Cologne
We look forward to hearing the stories and tales of adventure from the MSC Youth Cork NET team over the course of the next year.
You can keep an eye on the MSC Youth Team’s adventures via their Facebook page, just click here!
Nov 9, 2017
On Monday last, 06th November, we were delighted to welcome Sr Orla Treacy to the MSC Office to discuss the outstanding work she has been doing in Rumbek, South Sudan.

Fr Alan, Sr Orla and Fr Michael
Sr Orla Treacy is a Loreta Sister who was missioned to South Sudan in 2006. She is the Principal of Loreto Secondary School in Rumbek. As you will know the MSC dedicated our Summer 2017 Appeal to South Sudan with the aim of raising vital funds to support Sr Orla and the Loreto Sisters working tirelessly in the war-torn country.

Sr Orla with her Monsignor Hugh O’Flaherty Humanitarian Award
On her recent trip back to Ireland to receive the Monsignor Hugh O’Flaherty Humanitarian Award, Sr Orla paid us a visit. Her enthusiasm and passion for her work is quite infectious and we could have sat and listened to her speaking of her work in Rumbek for hours on end. Sr Orla’s gratitude for the donation simply could not be measured. Sr Orla wants to extend her sincerest thanks to everyone who supported the MSC South Sudan Summer Appeal 2017. We were elated to hear that the funds raised through the Summer Appeal are already being put to great use. The money raised will be spent across three main areas: food, clinical services and education.
Graduate Housing
The majority of the finances will be spent on building housing for the female graduates. Having completed their government exams and before moving onto university, some of the graduates choose to take a year off to undertake an Internship Programme which was developed by the Loreto Sisters. This programme allows the graduates to work for one year in various positions such as nurse’s aides, teacher’s assistants, office secretaries and in financial roles within the compound in order to gain practical work experience before progressing to university.
“52% of girls in South Sudan are married by 18 and in most cases these are forced marriages.”
The Loreto Sisters developed the Internship Programme in order to challenge this troubling statistic. By introducing this programme and providing this housing, graduates are guaranteed secure accommodation and are provided with practical work experience for one year.
We are excited to announce that building of this housing has already begun. It will consist of 4 rooms which will house 16 prosperous young graduates.

Foundations for Graduate Housing
Loreto Primary & Secondary Schools
As well as aiding with the Internship Programme housing, the funds raised will also be spent on the further development of both the Loreto Primary and Secondary Schools in Rumbek. It costs approximately €1600 per pupil annually to attend the Loreto Secondary School in Rumbek which is a boarding school – a sum which the students cannot afford to pay in full. In the Western world we often associate boarding schools with the children of those more financially comfortable. This is not the case in South Sudan. Sr Orla commented that a “women’s refuge” would be a much more suitable term for their boarding school. The Loreto Girls Secondary School numbers are growing year on year and the Sisters are accepting 280 girls next year. The funds raised by the MSC will allow the Loreto Sisters to offer a number of scholarships to students and to subsidise the costs for others.

Sr Orla with her students
Presently, there are 900 children attending the Loreto Primary School at a cost of approximately €400 per child annually. Children attending the primary school are guaranteed a teacher every day – something which is not guaranteed if they attend a government school in South Sudan. Each child gets a meal every day – in many cases this is the only food the child will consume that day.
“10% of babies in South Sudan will die before reaching 3 months old and 14% of our children are dead by the age of 5”.
Children attending the Loreto Primary School have free access to medication which they would not receive outside of the school. The €400 cost covers a student’s meals, medication and education for the year.
What struck us most listening to Sr Orla speak about South Sudan was the fact that at no point did she dwell on the negative aspects of her work, of which there are many. The UN has called South Sudan the “most vulnerable country in the world” and Sr Orla expects conditions to get worse before they get better. However, this has not hindered Sr Orla and she is still as committed and driven towards educating the South Sudanese woman as she was when she arrived in the country 12 years ago.
We look forward to tracking the progress of the Graduate Housing project and it’s development over the coming months.
Nov 6, 2017
The 2017 Hugh O’Flaherty International Humanitarian Award was awarded to Sr Orla Treacy, a Loreto Sister working in South Sudan. Sr Orla, from Bray, Co Wicklow, was presented with the award by Cllr Niall Kelleher, Mayor of Killarney Municipal Authority on Saturday 04th November at an award ceremony which was held in the Killarney Avenue Hotel, Killarney.

Sr Orla with pupils at Loreto Secondary School Rumbek
Born in 1973, when she was two years old, her family moved to Tralee where her father Blaise Treacy took up the position of Kerry County Secretary.
She was educated initially at Presentation Convent Tralee until at the age of 6 when her family moved to Bray, Co.Wicklow, where she attended Loreto in Bray, completing her Leaving Cert in 1991. Having studied at the Mater Dei Institute she subsequently taught in Presentation College Cork, Loreto Letterkenny, St Muredach’s Ballina and Loreto Crumlin.
Having spent a summer in India with the Loreto sisters, at the age of 24 she decided to join the congregation. Based at the Loreto convent in Rathfarnham, she was professed as a Loreto nun in September 2005. A year later she headed to Sudan with four other Loreto nuns to establish a mission in a diocese the size of Italy with just two secondary schools.
She has spent the last 11 years in Sudan, experiencing the trauma of South Sudan becoming an autonomous independent state in 2011 which was followed by civil war in 2013. Today, South Sudan is widely considered one of the most fragile states in the world with continuing conflict and unrest. The violence has resulted in the displacement of thousands of people and has stunted the progress of this young country. Lakes State has become home to many displaced people.
Sr. Orla is the Principal of Loreto Secondary School in Rumbek in Lakes State which has 200 girl students who are boarders because it is too dangerous for them to travel long distances to and from the school. Adopting the missionary holistic approach, Sr. Orla and her team give responsibility to the girls, for example, tasks like looking after their class, equipment, the farm or animals, or looking after the young students in the primary school, or measuring the food or organising the dining room. The adjacent Loreto Primary School has 500 pupils but could have 1,000 if they had the accommodation.
Chairperson of the Hugh O’Flaherty Memorial Committee, Jerry O’Grady said: “Sr Orla possesses and displays the bravery and humanitarian commitment we have come to associate with the recipients of this award. At a young age and with a bright future ahead of her in Ireland, she decided instead to dedicate her life to those in need in what was already then a virtual war zone”
When told that she had been selected for the Hugh O’Flaherty Humanitarian Award, Sr Orla said: “The work of Mgr Hugh O’Flaherty has inspired so many in their fight against injustice and for the protection of vulnerable populations. I am genuinely very humbled to receive this award. On behalf of Loreto Sisters, our supporters, and all our staff at Loreto Rumbek South Sudan, I graciously accept this honour. The girls and young people we work with fill us with hope for a better future for this country.”
Congratulations Sr Orla on receipt of this prestigious award, truly well deserved!
What is the Hugh O’Flaherty International Humanitarian Award?

Monsignor Hugh O’Flaherty (1898 – 1963)
This year marks the tenth year of the memorial commemoration of the Monsignor which is organised to raise awareness of the humanitarian work carried he carried out during World War II. Together with his colleagues in the Rome Escape Line, he saved over 6,500 people from the clutches of the Nazis who had occupied Rome at the time. In October 2013 – the 50th anniversary of the Monsignor’s death – a permanent memorial to him was unveiled in Killarney town centre. The memorial is a life-size sculpture of him by Valentia based artist, Alan Ryan Hall. In May 2016, a plaque commemorating him was unveiled at the German College, Vatican City, Rome where he lived from 1938 until 1960 and from where he organised the Rome Escape Line.
Hugh O’Flaherty was awarded the highest honours including a CBE, the Congressional Medal of Freedom, and was the first Irish man named Notary of the Holy Office. When he died in 1963, his death was mourned throughout the world, including a personal tribute in the New York Times. The Gregory Peck film – The Scarlet and the Black – featured his life, as does the book – The Vatican Pimpernel – written by Brian Fleming.
The Hugh O’Flaherty Memorial Society
In 2008, the Hugh O’Flaherty Memorial Society was formed in his home town of Killarney. It was decided we should honour his memory by acknowledging his humanitarian works during the 1930’s in Haiti & San Domingo and the early 1940’s during World War II in Rome. He was posthumously awarded the inaugural Killarney International Humanitarian Award. It was presented to members of his extended family at a special ceremony in Killarney on 15 November 2008. At this ceremony, it was announced that from then on, the award would be known as the Hugh O’Flaherty International Humanitarian Award and would be presented annually to worthy recipients.
Information sourced from hughoflaherty.com and independentcatholicnews.com.
Photo courtesy of Paul Jeffrey/Loreto Sisters.
Nov 3, 2017
During, what was described by Irish Provincial Superior Fr Carl Tranter MSC as, “a very warm and informal Papal Audience”, our new Provincial Leader had the honor of personally meeting Pope Francis himself.

Irish Provincial Superior Fr Carl Tranter MSC with Pope Francis at the private MSC Audience in Rome, September 2017.
Fr Carl commented on how the MSC brotherhood were both encouraged and challenged by the Holy Fathers’ words, “Return to your first and only love. Keep your gaze fixed on Jesus Christ and learn from him how to love with a truly human heart, to care for the lost and hurting members of his flock, to work for justice and show solidarity with the weak and the poor. Learn from him to give hope and dignity to the destitute, and to go forth to all those places where people are in need of acceptance and assistance. This is the first Gospel that the Church entrusts to you by sending you out as missionaries to the world: to show by your lives and by your works the passionate and tender love of God fro the little ones, the underprivileged, the vulnerable and those who the world has disregarded.
May your common life be marked by the true fraternity, which welcomes diversity and values the gifts of all. Do not hesitate to continue and expand your communion with the lay persons who participate in your apostolate. Let them share in your ideals and projects, and in the rich spirituality arising from your institute’s charism. With them, and with the sisters of your female congregations, you will form an ever greater and stronger “charismatic family”, one that will better demonstrate the vitality and relevance of your founder’s charism.”
Fr Carl noted how Pope Francis’ words beautifully capture and crystallise the MSC mission to the world, the MSC brotherhood with each other, and their partnership within Chevalier Family: “to be on earth the heart of God”.
“This personal exhortation of Pope Francis to us as MSC, together with the orientations and priorities that have emerged from both our Provincial and General Chapters, offer a direction for our common journeying over the coming six years.” – Fr Carl Tranter, Irish Provincial Superior

MSC Private Audience with Pope Francis, September 2017.
Nov 2, 2017
The following piece was written by Sathish Clement Raj A, a 28 year old MSC from Bangalore, India. In his own words, Sathish tells of his family life, education, his journey with the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart and what being a member of the MSC community means to him.

Sathish Clement Raj A
I, Sathish Clement Raj A, come from Arch-Diocese of Bangalore. I was born on 27–01–1989 at Madurampattu in Thiruvannamalai in the diocese of Vellore. My father is Anthony Dass, a cook and my mother is Mary Stella, a helping staff in a school. I also have two younger brothers.
I joined the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart on 30th June 2007 having completed my PUC studies. After two years of Probation, I entered the Novitiate on 1st June 2009 and I made my First Profession a year and a day later on 2nd June 2010. I completed my Philosophical studies in Dharmaram Vidya Kshetram and I graduated my BSc Visual Communication in St. Joseph’s College of Arts and Science, Bangalore. I was also awarded a gold medal for scoring the highest mark in the language, Tamil.
I am, at present, in my second year of Theology in Dharamaram Vidya Kshetram, Bangalore. I also go for my weekend ministry to the parishes and the experience is so meaningful and profound. I enjoy my ministry by giving communion in the Eucharistic celebrations, teaching Catechism to the students, going for House Blessings, giving Communion to the sick, etc… My interests are; singing, listening to music and I am a sportsman. I also enjoy writing articles, designing, photography etc. and I am very much interested in charismatic preaching, attending retreats and other social work and mission activities.

Sathish taking part in an MSC service
Having renewed my vows after six years, I made my Perpetual Profession on 28th May 2016. I am truly inspired by the charism and mission of the congregation especially by our founder’s conviction that the remedies of the ill of the world are found in the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus. And also, to love and to spread the love of God which is poured out in the Heart of Christ, thus, I dedicate and commit my whole life to the congregation.
It may seem to be so simple but it’s been a wonderful experience for me living my religious life as an MSC. I have learnt to love my community and accept them all. I have developed a great love for my community and all the members in my community; this is because, I accept them as “they are” and not “as I want them to be”. I feel at home and I have a family atmosphere with my fellow MSC brothers as one Chevalier family. Though many years have passed, the love we share with one another and the care we have for each other remains evergreen and ever vibrant. They always stand by me and help me to grow in all the areas of my life and as a result, they are instrumental in making me joyful and cheerful in living my life as an MSC. I have learnt to love the Heart of Jesus, which is pierced, more by carrying patiently the suffering, pain, and difficulties of my daily living.
And thus, I am happy in my MSC way of life as well as preparing myself to “be on earth the Heart of God”. At the same time, I am also proud to say that we, the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart love God’s people with the Heart of Jesus who loved us with a Human Heart. May the Sacred heart of Jesus be loved everywhere.

Sathish amongst the congregation
Nov 1, 2017
DON’T JUST TALK THE TALK
Do as they say, not as they do. That is what Jesus said about the religious leaders of his time. Could he say that about leaders in the Church today? Could he say that about Christians today?
Speaking as a cleric, a religious brother and a leader in God’s family, today’s reading always gives me pause. “Call no one father for you have only one Father who is in Heaven.” Does Jesus actually mean that? If so, then why do we call priests father?
The heart of what Jesus is saying I think is that in the family of God, no one is better than anyone else. We are all a mixture of saint and sinner. We are all equally loved by God our Father, our Abba.
At the time of Jesus many religious leaders used to lord it over the people. They demanded taxes from the people without a thought for whether this would push people into poverty or homelessness. In medieval times many bishops and priests saw themselves as aristocrats.
This is not Jesus’ vision of the Kingdom or of the Church. Jesus reminds us that we are all brothers and sisters. He tells us that we have one teacher or rabbi, His Spirit.
Sure we have different roles. Some are chosen for leadership but in the Church leadership is a service. It is a service of listening, of empowering, of involving and of raising up. It is trying to serve as Jesus served.
