facebook

Working together for the community: Blessing the MSC Typhoon Odette Housing Project in the Philippines

At the end of May, the MSC community of Bayagnan Island in Surigao City came together to give their blessing to the new homes constructed by the MSC Typhoon Odette Housing Project, and to pray for the families who will live in them.

Hundreds of thousands of families were displaced from their homes last December, when Typhoon Odette hit the Philippines to devastating effect. The strongest storm of the year, the super-typhoon killed hundreds, injured many more, and laid waste to hundreds of thousands of homes, many of which were completely destroyed.

In March, the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart in the Philippines began distribution of housing materials to five districts across Bayagnan Island, and with true community spirit, everyone involved contributed to making the project a great success. The materials provided have allowed for the repair and construction of safe, secure residences for over 330 households who had been left homeless by the typhoon.

The end of May saw MSCs from the Surigao District, together with Msgr. Edito Alcala DCS, lead a beautiful blessing ceremony for all of the families involved in the housing project.

“This housing project was established to help the families who were greatly devastated by Typhoon Odette in 2021,” read a placard mounted at the blessing ceremony. “It is made possible through the support of MSC mission partners, friends, and Missionaries of the Sacred Heart (MSC) all over the world.”

Earlier in the year, Irish Provincial Superior Fr Carl Tranter MSC received a letter from Fr Richie Gomez MSC, community leader at the MSC Centre for the Poor in the Philippines, with deep gratitude for the support of our mission friends in the Irish Province at a time of real and urgent need. “I would like to thank you for your untiring support to the Philippine Province,” he wrote. “We are your extended arms, feet, mind, and heart in reaching the poor, and now with our typhoon survivors.”

Following weeks and months of grief and suffering, and an enormous struggle to rebuild lives that had been shattered by the effects of the typhoon, it is a true blessing to see the hope, joy, and spirit of togetherness and unity that shone through on this special day. We offer up our prayers with those of our MSC brothers in the Philippines, and we wish every blessing of the Sacred Heart upon them, and upon all of the families beginning a fresh new chapter in their new homes.

Images via the Facebook page for the MSC Mission Office Philippines, Inc.

Please click here to watch a video of the blessing of the MSC Typhoon Odette Housing Project,
via the MSC Mission Office Facebook page.

PLEASE SUPPORT OUR MSC MINISTRY IN THE PHILIPPINES

The MSC Centre for the Poor marks its first General Assembly

At the end of April, the MSC Centre for the Poor in the Philippines marked their first General Assembly, where 270 members of the co-operative committed themselves to the Centre, to its ethos, and to being “Food Security Frontliners” in the ongoing struggle to feed the hungry while protecting the earth and its natural resources.

At the MSC Centre for the Poor in Butuan, the MSC community use natural resources to give struggling families the chance to build a life of self-sufficiency and dignity, while protecting and nurturing the local ecosystem. Their core values focus on sustainable farming, environmental advocacy, zero-waste management, fair trade, and promoting a simple lifestyle, with emphasis on the value of sharing and spirituality of the heart.

The MSC Centre for the Poor Agriculture Cooperative (MSC-CEPAGCO) “is bound by the spirit of generosity and resilience, working towards a healthy, sustainable, and empowered society,” according to the centre’s vision and mission. “Together, we are building communities that care for the environment and look towards a better, more holistic growth of society as stewards of God’s creation.”

With current projects including a rainwater filtration system, their “Be a Food Security Frontliner” programme, livestock and vegetable farming, a Living Museum, their Farm to Table system, a scholarship programme for local youths, and several Typhoon Odette relief projects, the community at the Centre are going from strength to strength in their mission. Their most recent developmental plan encompasses several expansion programmes, incorporating the establishment of three greenhouses, an organic farm supplies store, an eco lab, a co-op office, a classroom for students, an organic fertilizer production scheme, and improved post-harvest facilities. Their current goals include:

  • Caring for the earth, as our common home.
  • Continuing in the development of farming systems that use sustainable practices.
  • Transforming and inspiring lives.
  • Encouraging participation through community engagement.

A total of 23 local youths are currently availing of the Centre’s scholarship programme, with studies in a wide variety of subjects including Accounting, Education, Environmental Science, Psychology, Business Administration & Marketing, Tourism Management, Computer Science, Civil Engineering, Information Technology, Agriculture, Mathematics, and Nursing. In addition, the Centre’s “Farm to Table” scheme is providing local employment and encouraging small businesses in the establishment of a fair-trade system based on an inclusive economy, whereby nobody will be left out through “farm to table connections” that bypass large commercial traders.

Established in 2018, our MSC community at the Centre for the Poor have since been working in harmony with nature to bring hope to vulnerable families and individuals living in areas rife with poverty and unemployment.

“As long as there are people who believe and trust us and regaining one’s relationship with the environment, this work will sustain,” reports Fr Richie Gomez, community leader at the MSC Centre for the Poor. “We are an emerging social enterprise that allows individuals to create regenerative livelihoods that nourish the soul and take care of the planet.”

PLEASE SUPPORT OUR MSC MINISTRY IN THE PHILIPPINES

The MSC Message: Summer 2022

Welcome to the Summer 2022 edition of the MSC Message!

• Read a special greeting from Fr John Fitzgerald MSC, Director of the MSC Missions Office.

• Find out more about the visit of our MSC Superior General, Fr Absalón Alvarado MSC, to the Irish Province.

• Catch up on the latest news from the mission fields, including updates from our MSC brothers in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Mozambique, and our OLSH Sisters in Brazil and Papua New Guinea.

• Read more about the latest updates from our global COVID-19 relief ministry, with a report from the Pacific Islands.

• Discover the ways in which our MSC community in the Philippines is helping survivors of Typhoon Odette.

• Fr Alan Neville MSC writes from South Sudan, where he is currently ministering with the Loreto team in Rumbek.

• Read all about recent celebrations in the Venezuelan Region, where two members of the Irish Province of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart have marked milestone steps on their missionary journeys.

 

Read the Summer 2022 edition of the MSC Message
*

Hope springs with a new rainwater filtration system in the Philippines

The community at the MSC Centre for the Poor, located in Butuan, in the Philippines, continues in its ongoing ministry to help survivors of Typhoon Odette, which struck in December of last year and left hundreds of thousands of people displaced from their homes.

As well as working towards the repair and construction of new houses for families whose homes were left badly damaged or destroyed by the typhoon, MSCs in the Philippines are also working on the provision of a rainwater filtration system for affected communities, to ensure a safe supply of water for drinking. “The Centre for the Poor Cooperative designed a water filtration machine that processes or treats rainwater for safe consumption,” reports Fr Richie Gomez MSC, community leader at the MSC Centre for the Poor.

“The Potable Water System Programme was established as one of the most important components to consider in our developing farms,” continues Fr Richie. “After the onslaught of Super Typhoon Odette, which devastated Surigao City and caused further damage in Butuan City, people were distressed because there was no food or water. The Centre for the Poor in Butuan were able to supply potable water because of its water filtration facility and MSC-CEPAGCO (MSC Centre for the Poor Agricultural Cooperative) was able to supply food because of its farm.”

“As we continue to reflect on the ordeal of the most vulnerable people, the Centre for the Poor has established the Potable Rainwater Filtration System Programme,” Fr Richie says. “We plan to set up water filtration centres in strategic places to ensure a clean water source for communities in need through rainwater collection.”

One water filtration unit costs 100,000 Philippine pesos – just over €1,800 – and will provide an invaluable supply of clean, safe drinking water for people who have found themselves in extraordinarily difficult circumstances. In addition, each unit provides an ongoing, renewable supply, as it takes rainwater at the source and renders it safe for consumption.

 

As relief efforts continue in the rebuilding of communities and society in the wake of Typhoon Odette, Fr Richie and his team persevere in their endeavours to help those most in need, in keeping with the ethos of the MSC-CEPAGCO and thus “bound by the spirit of generosity and resilience [as we work] towards a healthy, sustainable, and empowered society.”

PLEASE SUPPORT OUR MSC MINISTRY IN THE PHILIPPINES

Rebuilding communities in Surigao in the wake of Typhoon Odette

The Missionaries of the Sacred Heart in the Philippines have begun work on the housing project which will help families whose homes were destroyed by Typhoon Odette, a devastating storm that struck in December 2021, killing over 400 people and leaving hundreds of thousands displaced from their homes.

This month, MSCs in the Philippines have begun distribution of housing materials to five communities across Bayagnan Island in Surigao City. The materials provided will allow for the repair and construction of homes for over 330 households, where houses have been severely damaged, often completely destroyed, by the typhoon.

Recalling the impact of Typhoon Odette, which struck on December 16th 2021, the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart – Social Initiative and Collaborative Action Project said, “When it made landfall, winds of up to 210 km per hour were uprooting coconut trees, ripping down electricity poles, and hurling slabs of corrugated tin and wood through the air.” The MSC-SICAP group, working in conjunction with the MSC Centre for the Poor, are currently carrying out a strategic disaster response plan, with several recovery stages in place to aid in the restoration of communities across Surigao.

       

The Facebook page for the MSC Missions Office in the Philippines has shared photos and updates of the housing project as it progresses, describing the successful beginning of this stage: “The MSC Task Force Odette distributed the housing materials to the first batch of totally affected families in Bayagnan Island, Surigao City. It was a great moment for the community to show bayanihan spirit and help one another to make the activity a successful one.”

As we journey together through the Lenten season, we continue to offer our prayers and our support to our MSC brothers in the Philippines and the communities they serve there as they work to rebuild affected communities in the wake of Typhoon Odette.

Images via the MSC Mission Office Philippines, Inc. Facebook page.
*