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MSC World Projects Appeal 2025: Guatemala

MSC World Projects Appeal 2025: Guatemala

Building blocks for the future in Guatemala

Centro Faustino Villanueva is an MSC-run school in the Alta Verapaz region of Guatemala, located in an extremely rural area six hours away from the country’s capital, Guatemala City. The school offers a lifeline for the local community, providing education and the foundation for a better future for the past 40 years. The community at Centro Faustino Villanueva aim to provide access to education for the local population, including the Q’eqchí ethnic group, equipping them with both academic and social skills, plus an increased cultural awareness. In doing so, the staff at the school aim to lay the groundwork for a more positive and productive society, with the necessary skills to build a better quality of life for all in the community.

The school also offers boarding facilities for those who cannot easily travel to get there every day, ensuring that nobody misses out. Courses and workshops offered at the school include a wide range of academic subjects, while the school community are highly active in creating a sustainable agricultural environment, with space for farming and livestock care.

PLEASE SUPPORT OUR MINISTRY IN GUATEMALA

Empowering students to learn and grow

“All of this is an effort that aims to enhance the skills and training of the students, as well as improving their food quality, which is in many cases deficient and harms their ability to learn and grow,” says Fr Jairo Uriel Sevilla Mendoza MSC, Director of Centro Faustino Villanueva.

“Year after year, we make every effort to obtain the funds we need to sustain our school, a situation that is complicated by global economic uncertainty,” explains Fr Jairo. “In recent years, the aid we receive has decreased, and this is a reality that worries us, since we are the only option for many young people in the area.”

It costs just under €5,000 per month to pay the staff at Centro Faustino Villanueva,
along with providing nourishing daily meals for the students.
The CFV team are working to raise €50,000 to pay for school costs for a total of 10 months,
helping as many young people as they can, and preparing to help more in 2026.

“Together, we will be able to help more people in need. We will never tire of thanking our generous supporters for everything they do for us – and we are always united in the heart of Christ.”
~ Fr Jairo Uriel Sevilla Mendoza MSC
Director of Centro Faustino Villanueva

CAN YOU HELP US TO CHANGE LIVES FOR THE BETTER IN GUATEMALA?

MSC World Projects Appeal 2025: Ecuador

MSC World Projects Appeal 2025: Ecuador

MSCs uniting a parish in Ecuador

MSCs in the parish of San José de Chilibulo, in Quito, Ecuador, work with a pastoral team and volunteers to minister to the ongoing needs of disadvantaged families in the region.

One of the most important ways in which our MSCs can help is to provide food to these vulnerable families, who often go hungry. Once a month, the pastoral team provide food baskets to 48 vulnerable families, including essential items such as rice, sugar, quinoa, oats, panela, wheat flour, lentils, oil, salt, tuna, cookies, peas, soap, and a chicken at Christmas time.

The cost per month is approximately €1,000, depending on the price and availability of items, and on additional food donations and funds that the parish team are able to collect. Special celebrations are also hosted for families in need on Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, and at Christmas, catering to 90 people at a cost of approximately €1,150 per event.

PLEASE SUPPORT HUNGRY FAMILIES IN ECUADOR

Last year, our mission friends here in the Irish Province helped us to raise funds to improve the kitchen and outdoor spaces at the church and pastoral centre in the parish of San José de Chilibulo.

This year, parish priest Fr Marcelo Campoverde Arcentales MSC is asking for our help once again as he and his team work to raise €14,500 to provide a lifeline of food baskets and essentials to 48 families in need, including young children and extremely vulnerable elderly people, for an entire year.

CAN YOU HELP US TO FEED VULNERABLE FAMILIES IN ECUADOR?

MSC World Projects Appeal 2025: Venezuela

MSC World Projects Appeal 2025: Venezuela

MSCs making a difference in Venezuela

From the provision of essential food and medical care to vital educational facilities, MSCs in Venezuela are working to improve the quality of life for vulnerable people living in areas of extreme hardship. Maracaibo and Caracas are just two of the regions that have benefitted greatly from the generosity of our mission friends in the Irish Province.

MSCs in Venezuela are dedicated to making positive changes in the barrios (urban neighbourhoods where the populations are very poor), where families are living in severely overcrowded conditions in tiny homes often located high in the hills. Poverty is rife and living conditions are extremely difficult. There are often seven or eight people to a family, living in “matchbox houses”. Many elderly people are living alone, in precarious positions up hills and mountains where it is very difficult to bring essential provisions and medical equipment. In Maracaibo, MSCs are running soup kitchens that can feed anything up to 200 families at each serving – and there is always a demand for more. People are making their homes using the most basic materials, and are taking what jobs they can find, but work is scarce. The jobs that are available pay very poorly, with even professional people such as teachers earning very little and having to work two jobs in order to simply survive. Many are resorting to desperate measures in order to feed their children, and so a daily meal received from one of our soup kitchens can make all the difference.

CAN YOU HELP US TO FEED HUNGRY FAMILIES IN VENEZUELA?

Working together in hope and friendship

Irish MSCs Fr Tom O’Brien, Fr John Jennings, and Fr Tom Jordan minister across Maracaibo and Caracas, working with local communities to provide spiritual support to those in need, and bring food to nourish the sick and housebound. In addition to our MSC soup kitchens, centres have been set up to facilitate support systems such as Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, and to accommodate doctors, dentists, and psychologists to get local people the care they need. A school in Maracaibo, run by our OLSH Sisters, also helps more than 500 local children. Still, there is a great and urgent need for more. “There’s always something, always something more to do and something more to get,” says Fr Tom O’Brien.

IF YOU CAN, PLEASE SUPPORT OUR MINISTRY IN VENEZUELA

Thank you from Sr Nancy

Sr Nancy Contreras writes from Venezuela, where donations from our mission friends here in the Irish Province have been making a crucial difference to people suffering with the difficulties of extreme social and political unrest. The parish of AntĂ­mano is located in the hills of Caracas, with a population of approximately 168,422. Sr Nancy and her team have been able to help local families with school support, plus care packages of food and essential medication administered by a professional medical team. Many of these families are living with illness, disability, elderly and infirm relatives, and in conditions of severe overcrowding.

“We want to reduce the hunger, pain, and anguish that we see our brothers and sisters living in. We have the opportunity to enter their homes and see their reality more closely, some suffering with the effects of ongoing sicknesses such as diabetes and hypertension. We appreciate all your support and understanding on this shared mission in the Parish of Antímano.”
~ Sr Nancy Contreras

CAN YOU HELP VULNERABLE FAMILIES IN VENEZUELA?

Fr Alan in South Sudan: The Longest Journey Begins with 27,000,000 Steps

Fr Alan in South Sudan: The Longest Journey Begins with 27,000,000 Steps

The Catholic Church in South Sudan is at the forefront of pastoral ministry in both education and health. Our impact is easily quantifiable by the number of students taught or patients treated. However, one of its most important roles is perhaps the most difficult to measure, peacebuilding. Grounded in the teaching of Jesus, it is the call of Christians everywhere to be peacemakers, fostering reconciliation and healing in our communities, giving witness by our lives to a different way that is grounded in justice and mercy.

This ministry in South Sudan is complex, to say the least. Following five decades of fighting for freedom from Sudan, 2011’s independence was a time of optimism for a wounded society. However, the ensuing civil war in 2013 saw over 400,000 people being killed, millions become displaced, and countless men, women, and children left traumatised. According to the UN, over a million people have fled here from war-torn Sudan since April of last year. It is, in many ways, the making of a perfect storm. But violence is like that, destructive, loud, and indiscriminate. How could you possibly respond to something so big that it is almost an act of God, although it is definitely not! Well, you could go for a walk.

The Diocese of Rumbek Pilgrimage of Peace first started in February 2023. The idea came from Sr. Orla Treacy, a Loreto sister, who thought it would be a good idea for young people to walk from the centre of South Sudan to Juba to welcome Pope Francis during his first official visit to the country. Working with the youth team of the Diocese, it was an incredible success and captured the hearts of the people. The Pope even requested to meet the group personally when they arrived. Since, then it has continued to grow, with another pilgrimage in the west of the Diocese in 2024.

This year the pilgrimage was organised, not by the priests and religious of the Diocese, but by the youth themselves. Young men and women, veterans of last year’s pilgrimage, planned, organised, and implemented everything, from the beans we ate, to the route we took, to the places we slept. This gave us, as sisters, brothers, and priests, the opportunity to really journey with the youth, listening to their stories and sharing their hopes. On our first day we began with Mass in the Cathedral of Rumbek and were joined by the newly appointed Apostolic Nuncio to South Sudan, Archbishop SĂ©amus Horgan (from Co. Clare), and our own Bishop Christian Carlassare.

Our route would take us through the south of Lakes State and into Western Equatoria, from Rumbek to Malou, Wulu, Mvolo, Mapourdit, and finally to Aluakluak, covering a distance of over 125km. We slept each night in the simple classrooms of local schools, although many of us opted to spend the night camped out under the stars. Possibly the one advantage to only 8% of the population of South Sudan having electricity at home is that the night skies are awesome in the truest sense of the word.

Each day we would rise at 5:30am, take a few minutes for warming up, and then hit the road. In the course of our pilgrimage, we would stop and speak with those we met along the way. Such a large and exuberant group caused a lot of comment. What were we doing? Why were we walking, when you could drive? How does a pilgrimage really help to promote peace?

The last question really touches into the heart of what we were trying to do. Not so long ago, many of the roads and paths we walked were impassable due to insecurity. Violence, theft and shootings were commonplace. To be able to walk now, without weapons, police, or security signalled loudly more than words could express that something different, something new was happening.

In addition, our group was made up of young people from around the Diocese, drawing from groups that have been traditionally hostile to one another. Their ability to walk together and work for peace re-enforced our message of hope. As the sun set, we were joined by the local people as we celebrated Mass and shared a simple meal of rice and beans together.

By the end of the week, we were blistered and, in my case, a little sunburnt, but happy. One of the group calculated that, between all of us, we had walked 27,000,000 million steps. New friendships had formed that would have been quite impossible before. We made our way home, with perhaps a renewed appreciation for running water and corrugated metal roofs. Above all, our time together and with the people we met was a quiet, but joyful witness of what could be, peace for a people weary of war and ready for a new beginning. It just takes a step.

Nhialic ke yin,
Fr. Alan

Read more from Fr Alan’s missionary journey in South Sudan:

A bright new year at the Holy Family Care Centre

A bright new year at the Holy Family Care Centre

What a wonderful way to begin the new year, with a very welcome update from our friends at the Holy Family Care Centre!

The Holy Family Care Centre is located in Ofcolaco, in the Limpopo Province of South Africa, where it provides residential care for up to 80 orphans, and sick and vulnerable children. Many of these children are living with chronic illnesses such as HIV/AIDs, TB, and other critical conditions. The children are mostly orphaned, and all are extremely vulnerable, so the Holy Family centre truly is a life-saving refuge for them. We at home in the Irish Province have long enjoyed an enduring friendship with Sr Sally and the Holy Family team, and our mission friends and extended Sacred Heart family here at home have provided invaluable support to the OLSH Sisters in Ofcolaco throughout the years.

Back at the beginning of 2024, we asked our mission friends here at home to help the Holy Family community to raise funds to improve the dormitory facilities at the centre, and to build a new toilet block for the toddlers and younger children in their care.

Prior to this, the boys’ dormitory was home to 23 children and two staff members, with beds packed together side-by-side to fit everybody in. The Sisters were hoping to replace the 15-year-old bedding, and buy sets of bunk beds to create more space in the dormitory. Thanks to the generosity of our mission friends here in the Irish Province, the dormitory renovation has been a success, and the boys now have a far more comfortable space for rest.

 

The Sisters also wished to raise funds to build a toilet block for the 25 younger children in the crĂšche facility, with smaller, junior-sized toilets to help the toddlers with toilet training. The new toilet block has now been constructed, and is a great success with the younger members of the Holy Family community!

 

“Most sincere thanks to everyone who contributed to the 2024 World Projects Appeal,” writes Sr Jenny Christie FDNSC, International Development Officer for the Daughters of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart. “What a difference your support has made!”

We join Sr Jenny in thanking you, wholeheartedly, for your continued friendship and support, and we wish all at Holy Family a very happy, healthy, and peaceful 2025!

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“A Moment to Remember”: MSC Share a Christmas Basket Project in the Philippines

“A Moment to Remember”: MSC Share a Christmas Basket Project in the Philippines

As we neared the end of December, the MSC Mission Office in the Philippines once again carried out its annual tradition of Christmas unity, sharing, and togetherness, with its Share a Christmas Basket programme.

Just before Christmas, a tremendous group of local volunteers worked together to pack hundreds of baskets of groceries and Christmas provisions in preparation for the programme, which benefitted a total of 750 families this year. Each donation for a basket was marked at a value of 549 Philippine pesos, which meant that an entire family’s Christmas could be transformed for a little under €10 per household.

The MSC Mission Office in the Philippines posted their gratitude to all of their donors on their Facebook page, heading their post “A Moment to Remember”.

“The Missionaries of the Sacred Heart, through the MSC Mission Office, would like to express our deepest gratitude to the following donors for their generous support of our ‘Paskong Handog: A Christmas Noche Buena Basket Project’,” they wrote.

“Thanks to [our donors’] passion and generosity in helping the needy, the project was a resounding success!  With their unwavering support, we were able to distribute 750 Noche Buena baskets to families in need in the following areas: Bataan, Triala, Nueva Ecija, San Anton Mission Station, Butuan, Cebu, Libis Caloocan, and various areas served by TFUC.
We are deeply grateful for your partnership in bringing joy and hope to so many families this Christmas season.
Merry Christmas & a Prosperous New Year to Everyone!!
From your MSC Family”

Well done to all involved in this wonderful project, which gave the priceless gift of a happy Christmas to hundreds of families in the Philippines. With the spirit of Christmas goodwill still in our hearts, we send every blessing to our MSC brothers in the Philippines and the communities they serve there.

“Wishing you a Happy New Year filled with joy, laughter, and endless possibilities.
May this year bring you peace, prosperity, and all the good things you deserve.
Cheers to a fantastic new year!!!”
~ MSC Mission Office Philippines, Inc. on Facebook

Images via MSC Mission Office Philippines, Inc. on Facebook
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