This year, we’re celebrating the 60th anniversary of the MSC Missions Office on the Western Road, Cork, and as part of our anniversary commemorations, we’re looking back on old issues of our newsletter, the MSC Message, on a walk together down Memory Lane.
Nomafa’s Story
In the Summer 2011 edition of the MSC Message, we shared a letter from Nomafa Mabule, who was being cared for at Tshwaranang Hospice, located close to Ivory Park in South Africa. Nomafa’s words are particularly poignant, as she died just two weeks after writing this letter.
“They are like Florence Nightingale”

Hi people out there, I would like you to know something you don’t know. My name is Nomafa Eugenia Mabule, 57 years old. The doctor says I’m diagnosed with HIV & Kaposi’s Sarcoma Skin Cancer but to God everything is possible. When I came here to this Tshwaranang Hospice when people told me about it, I wanted myself here. I didn’t want me in my house. And every time I failed to get to the hospice here because of transport.
I was crying for a place I did not know, suddenly I came here stressed, did not eat well at home and not taking the medication well in time. When I came here after three days I was stress free and my family like it too.
This place is so cool and the Nurses sisters, Matron and all the staff are good, they all take good care of us. They are far better than the Nurses at the Hospitals; here they take good care of us.
They are really like the first Nurse I read about when I was schooling. Florence Nightingale; they are really volunteers of God, they serve God. To serve God is not only at church; even in places like this and people like them with their hearts.
At home our families are impatient with us especially because we mess ourselves up. We are here because people have dumped us. But when they come to visit us, they are glad that we are out of their hands, they really thank the staff of Tshwaranang, father Herman, the Matron, Sister, Caregivers, cleaners, and all who cook for us.
Thank you.
Yours faithfully
Nomafa Mabule
“Sadly Nomafa Mabule passed away on 11 December 2010, exactly two weeks after writing this note. Being HIV positive, she developed AIDS and Kaposi’s Sarcoma, a skin cancer typically associated with AIDS and always final. She spent two months at our hospice.”
Fr Herman van Dijk MSC
Project Manager Tshwaranang Hospice
Turning Sadness into Joy
Summer 2011 also gave us a lovely update from the Holy Family Care Centre in South Africa. Our mission friends will recognise the Holy Family community, and we still have a close friendship and support system with the Sisters in Ofcolaco 15 years later.

“Nestling under the majestic Drakensberg mountains lies Holy Family Care Centre; a little oasis for suffering and neglected children, run by the Sisters of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart.
In 2001 the OLSH Sisters took charge of the property and opened a Care Centre for people with HIV/AIDS and for orphans. Today there are over 70 children in residence. Many come here, little bundles of suffering and broken humanity, but with proper nourishment and care and lots of love a new life emerges.
One co-worker named the place ‘Paradise’ and so it is. In a loving and friendly environment the children blossom and the sound of weeping finally gives way to one of joy and gladness. People come from every continent and are bedazzled by the warm spirit and sense of family that prevails. The small children attend crèche on the property while the older children attend primary and secondary school in the local villages. The children keep in touch with their own language and culture through the teachers and the many workers who are employed at the Centre. In this way we try to offer them as near an ordinary life as possible.
Holy Family has become widely known and people come to help always leave with great praise for the children, the staff and the great family spirit here. More recently the Centre was honoured with the Mopane District ‘Platinum Award’ for excellence, shortly followed by the Limpopo Province ‘Platinum Award and Gold Cup’ also for excellence. This is an acknowledgement of the work and family spirit that characterises this great undertaking.
The most recent development is the construction of an all purpose hall that will shelter the children on very hot or very wet days. Many of the children need special protection from the elements for health reasons. The new building is named Chevalier Hall in honour and memory of the founder of the MSC Priests and Sisters who established and run the centre today.”
A Searcher’s Prayer
Finally, Winter 2011 gave us a beautiful prayer for those looking for guidance and courage in confusing or troubled times.

Jesus, light of the world,
Shine your truth into my
confused heart.
So many choices lie before me:
things I’d like to do and ways
I’d like to go.
Give me courage to follow
my dreams,
and the wisdom to be realistic.
As the years unfold,
I look to you
to guide my searching,
bless my working,
deepen my loving and keep me safe.
Amen.