Support Missio in your Parish

World Mission Sunday 2023 is a chance to pray and support our sisters and brothers in Christ who live in areas of poverty, conflict and oppression.

A special collection takes place this Sunday at all parishes in the Archdiocese.

Every penny, pound and prayer you give to Missio helps missionaries everywhere continue their work.

Setting hearts ablaze in Kenya

Kibera is the biggest urban ‘slum’ in Kenya, writes Missio Scotland. In fact, it is the biggest in Africa.

Rife with all the problems poverty brings – malnourishment, addiction, abuse – it is easy to see Kibera as a place of despair.

But missionary Sister Mary meets the challenges of life in Kibera with faith and friendship.

"Our charism is be one with the people, go where people are, she said.

"It’s from St Paul, but our foundress Sister Magdalene also took it from St Charles de Foucauld: to be there with them from the grassroots, discover what is happening, and together learn what to do."

That is why Sr Mary and her fellow Little Sisters of Jesus choose to live in the heart of Kibera, alongside the people they serve. That way, she can better understand the daily challenges, and reach all who are in need.

This is an example of how Missio spends the money you put in the plate at this Sunday's special collection in your parish. Missio is the Pope's charity for World Mission. Find out more at missioscotland.com

MISSIO: Faith triumphs after brutal 2019 suicide bombings

On Easter Sunday in 2019 death entered the lives of the parishioners attending Mass in St Sebastian’s Church in Katuwapitiya, Sri Lanka, writes Gerard Gough of Missio Scotland.

It also entered the lives of those present at the Shrine of St Anthony in Kotahena, the Zion Church in Battacloa, three hotels in Colombo and the Tropical Inn guest house in Dehiwala.

The suicide bombings resulted in the deaths of 269 people and injured at least 500 more.

Fr Basil Rohan Fernando, the National Director of PMS (Missio) Sri Lanka, above, was made aware of the terrorist attacks by a fellow priest over the phone as he was driving home from Mass.

Shocked and shaken, he made it home, but no sooner had he done so, he set off for St Sebastian’s to be with the people there.

The smell of flesh

“I have never experienced anything like it,” Fr Basil said. “The closer you got to the church, the more you could smell the (burnt) flesh of people.

"It was hard to get too close because of the smell and the fact that there were body parts everywhere.

"They tried to cover them, but they couldn’t. The whole church was like that, covered in blood.

“I couldn’t stay there for too long, so then I went to the hospital. There were injured people everywhere.

"When I was seated, some of the parents would say: ‘Father can you go and bless my child?” What those parents didn’t know was that their child was already dead.

"A husband asked me to bless his wife, but again, he didn’t know that she had passed away.

"In one instance only the mother survived, her three children and her husband had died. At that time, nobody knew who had survived and who had died. There were so many bodies.

"In another case, among the dead bodies, one lady raised her hand to signal that she was alive.

"Everyone that they presumed dead were sent to the mortuary and in there, this lady cried out: ‘I am alive!’.

"There were so many difficult interactions that most human beings won’t experience.”

Aftermath

Fr Basil explained to myself and my colleague Andrea during our recent mission trip to the country that the attacks have left an ‘open wound’ among many Sri Lankans.

This is not merely due to the lives lost, but because of the suspicion of the government’s involvement in and subsequent cover-up of the attacks that exists among the general populace, something which Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith of Colombo has himself alluded to.

However, the purpose of this feature is not to focus on potential black-ops and the nefariousness of politicians in Sri Lanka, there are those far more informed and qualified to write about that than myself.

Rather, given that the Missio Scotland team was taken to St Sebastian’s Church and the surrounding areas, I’d like to share with you some of the stories, both harrowing and uplifting from our visit there.

Sad stories

Upon arriving through the gates of St Sebastian’s, the church instantly comes into view and despite having been restored to its original splendour, my mind was cast back four years to the events of that day and the image of this largely destroyed Catholic place of worship.

Yet while restorations have taken place, parts of the church that were affected by the blast that day and have been left untouched to serve as a poignant and powerful memory of those who perished in the blast.

A glass panel on the floor marks the spot—literally—where the bomber struck, while one of the church’s columns contains the pockmarks left by the ball-bearings packed into the bomb.

Perhaps the most moving reminder, however—and one of the most unique, impactful depictions of Our Lord I have ever seen in my life—sits at the right-hand side of the altar, a statue of the Risen Jesus covered in blast marks and the blood of the victims.

As a family prayed near the statue, I couldn’t help but see this as anything other than a stark, visual image of those who were killed because of their Faith on the image of the Son of God who gave His life for us.

Outside of the church, Fr Basil gave us a far greater insight into the bombing and its aftermath.

He told us how the suicide-bomber exploded the bomb at the doorway, which actually saved lives, for had he made it to the centre of the church, many more people would have died.

He outlined how one entire family was wiped out by the attack and that their house has remained locked ever since.

He detailed the story of an artistic young girl, from a largely Muslim family, who would attend Mass with her Catholic grandmother and sadly lost her life that day.

Her mother shared with us a drawing that she did of Jesus, two days prior to the attack, with His arm around her, which also read: ‘Jesus takes us to His Kingdom.’

Many people now visit that girl’s family home to say a quite prayer in front of her photo.

And he spoke of the tragic tale of a baby, who lost its mother in the bombing, trying to latch onto her father to breastfeed from him.

Visiting the nearby cemetery was no less emotional.

Seeing the graves of whole families buried next to one another was tremendously sad, as was the grave of a little boy who didn’t manage to see his first birthday.

Sights like those really stop you in your tracks and move you to tears.

Coming together in Faith

It was at the cemetery, however, that Fr Basil also told of some of the uplifting stories that have arisen from the tragedy.

Missio Scotland and Missio England and Wales together provided the funds to build a memorial chapel in the cemetery, something that Cardinal Ranjith had stated that he wanted to see erected.

Opened on the first anniversary of the attacks, the Chapel of the Heroes of Faith was officially opened by the cardinal and provides a place of prayer and solace for the families visiting their loved ones’ graves.

“I’d like to thank Fr Vincent Lockhart of Missio Scotland and Fr Anthony Chantry of Missio England and Wales for their support,” Fr Basil said.

“As soon as they heard about the project, there was no need for any discussion, they helped out immediately.

"The chapel has now been built and we pray that in 2024—the fifth anniversary of the blast—the Holy Father will officially recognise the victims as martyrs and if he does, this chapel will be known as The Chapel of the Martyrs. I am very proud of how the PMS in Scotland and England and Wales supported its construction.”

The building of the chapel has proved pivotal in the Sri Lankan Church being able to support the victims in as wide a sense as possible.

The fact that Missio Scotland and Missio England and Wales had provided funds for the chapel meant that the Church in Sri Lanka could divert their attention and funds elsewhere, which they duly did. Scholarships were provided for children affected by the bombings.

The medical bills of those injured were paid for, including one woman who required 24-hour care and had a personal nurse.

New houses were built and provided free of charge for those families who were severely affected by the bombings—those who had lost their main breadwinner for example.

The Missio Scotland team and Fr Basil were treated to Sr Lanka’s national drink—tea—by a family who now inhabit one of these houses.

Now Scots love our tea, but these cuppas were particularly special and it wasn’t just the beverage that was heart-warming, but seeing the people living in these new houses and thriving once again was a beautiful sight.

As we left the new estate and headed back to the grounds of St Sebastian’s Church, many people had arrived in our absence, some to visit the memorial to their loved ones, some to pray silently in the restored church and some just to sit in the courtyard chatting with friends and family, watching their children run and play and relaxing in a balmy June evening.

This church in Katuwapitiya and the Church in Sri Lanka are full of life once again. Death may have interrupted the lives of Catholics in the country, but their Faith has seen them triumph over death, like the Risen Lord Himself.

To donate to Missio Scotland, visit: https://www.missioscotland.com/donate call us on: 01236 449774 or send donations to: Missio Scotland, St. Andrews, 4 Laird Street, Coatbridge ML5 3LJ. You can also now donate to us via text. Text MISSIOSCOT to 70085 to donate £3 or MISSIOSCOT with any number between 1-20 after it to donate your desired amount (For example MISSIOSCOT 10 will donate £10). Thank You. Archbishop Leo Cushley is Missio Scotland President.

Mission Month: Feeding his sheep in Peru

October is Mission Month. It's the time of year when the Church highlights the missions, missionaries and the work of Missio Scotland - the official mission aid agency of the Catholic Church.

We're asking you to pray and if possible donate to the special, annual collection on World Mission Sunday (18 October), or do it online here.

To demonstrate the work of the missions we're sharing stories from Missio throughout the month to show where your kind donations go...

Feeding his sheep in Peru

The words of Pope Francis, whether written or spoken, are often very passionate, emotional and impactful—like many of his predecessors in the role of Holy Father. One of the themes that is a constant in his writings and speeches, however, is a marked care for people on the margins.

In his 2019 message for the International Day of Persons with Disabilities, the Pope spoke of the lack of belonging felt by those with disabilities and stressed the need to ‘care for and accompany people with disabilities in every condition of life.’

“Many people with disabilities feel that they exist without belonging and without participating,” the Pope said. “We must make the world more human by removing everything that prevents them from full citizenship, the obstacles of prejudice and by promoting accessibility to places and a quality of life that take into account all the dimensions of the human.”

“I encourage all those who work with people with disabilities to continue this important service and commitment, which determines the civilisation of a nation,” the Holy Father added. “And I pray that each person may feel God’s paternal gaze, which affirms their full dignity and the unconditional value of their life.”

Playing our part

Missio Scotland hopes to continue to play our part in supporting those with disabilities worldwide via one of our focus projects this year—a feeding programme for disabled children in the Sicuani Prelature in Southern Peru (above top). This is held in a comedor (kitchen) run by APAINE, an organisation sponsored by the Prelature that has cared for around 11,000 children with disabilities since its foundation nearly three decades ago.

To provide some context, approximately 300,000 people live in the Sicuani Prelature and, unfortunately, many of them in situations of poverty. The infant mortality rate in the prelature exceeds 51.7 per thousand, the chronic malnutrition rate affects 8.2 per cent of children under the age of six, only 32.7 per cent of households have water services through a public network at home and only 24.8 per cent of houses are electrified.

Moreover, the Coronavirus has severely affected everyday life in Peru, especially among the poor and marginalised, Bishop Prelate of Sicuani, Pedro Bustamante (top)—the man charged with overseeing our supported projects—explained to Missio Scotland.

“The pandemic is leaving great scars in Peru,” Bishop Bustamante said. “The coronavirus has spread throughout Peru and Latin America—especially in Brazil and Ecuador—and, given the situation of underdevelopment and the high level of poverty that exist in our countries, we must prepare ourselves to face a very important human catastrophe and—as in the rest of the world—a significant economic recession at the end of it all.

“The high number of infected people has collapsed the entire national hospital infrastructure, especially intensive care rooms, where its limited capacity causes the death of many patients due to lack of mechanical respirators.

“The poor and marginalised groups have been greatly affected. The poor represent more than 30 per cent of the total population, of which 10 per cent live in conditions of extreme poverty. The economic effects of the coronavirus will worsen this unfortunate situation. Millions of jobs will be lost and a severe economic recession is expected after the pandemic ends.

“However, in the midst of all this, the Sicuani Prelature has been working hard to look after the most vulnerable—women, children and the elderly, people with disabilities, marginalised people and those from remote areas—who have had to pay higher prices for basic food products. We have provided access to food aid through the distribution of food baskets to them, since they are the ones who face the worst of the crisis due to their scarce economic resources and are those who are at increased risk of devastating losses from Covid-19.”

Dedication

The fact that the prelature is there for its people during a time of crisis is not surprising. Despite working during trying times throughout its history and dealing with difficult situations, for the past 56 years it has been extremely dynamic in terms of its pastoral work and educational formation with those in rural communities. They are in charge of the Andean Pastoral Institute, Radio Sicuani and the Vicarage of Solidarity, dedicated to the defence of human rights.

It is also present in its service to the community through social teams such as the Association for the Comprehensive Care of Exceptional Children (APAINE), a non-profit charitable organisation with more than 27 years serving children with disabilities.

Its day-to-day work involves providing physical therapy, rehabilitation and education for children from the four high Andean provinces of the department of Cusco, who mostly come from very humble homes.

It has cared for more than 11,000 children with different disabilities, who have had and still have access to its rehabilitation services, specialised medical care, surgical interventions, orthopaedic aids and auxiliary treatment examinations for the development or improvement of the physical, mental and sensory functions of children.

Working with and within the prelature, it states that it aims to provide ‘food security as a cost-cutting development model to improve the health and nutrition of children with severe and multi-disabilities in the Sicuani Prelature.’

The Missio Scotland supported project will see APAINE deliver its feeding programme for disabled children (above) at the San Miguel Centro de Educación Básica Especial (St Michael’s Special Basic Education Centre) in Sicuani.

“The students, due to their state of poverty, mobilisation problems and chronic malnutrition, often do not arrive at the centre well-fed,” an APAINE spokesperson said. “That is why the association sees the need to provide these students with breakfasts and lunches to sustain themselves during the time they are in the centre and to be able to perform their rehabilitation and education therapies daily. In cases like this, it is very important that students enjoy good nutrition to carry out all the activities that are essential to their rehabilitation, treatment and education in an optimal and productive way to lessen the state of disability they suffer.”

So the funds provided by Missio Scotland, as a result of the generosity of our supporters, will help to provide—free of charge—130 students with breakfast and lunch and, in doing so, will help, in even a small way, to bridge the economic gap and tackle malnutrition.

Scottish-based support

Upon hearing of Missio Scotland’s support for this project, Fr Pat Hennessy of St Columbkille’s in Rutherglen (below)—who spent nearly 11 years living, working and serving in a mountain parish north of the Peruvian capital, Lima—gave his personal backing to it and spoke of the need for those of us who are part of the universal Church to continue to support those most in need throughout the world, especially at this time.

Comedores are a big thing in Peru,” he said. “They’re big kitchens and what the priest usually does is buy flour, cooking oil, soya and a stove and basic instruments and you’d hand it to the people and say look this is a kitchen and you can now set up a comedor and people will eat much better. That makes community and people’s conditions improve too.”

Please help us to continue to support the universal Church, the communities within it and improve people’s lives in Peru and all over the world.

This story appears on the Missio website and was written by Gerard Gough. To learn more about the work of Missio Scotland you can visit: www.missioscotland.com,  Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/missioscotland, Twitter: @Missio_Scotland and Instagram: MissioScotland

You can also now donate to us via text. Text MISSIOSCOT to 70085 to donate £3 or MISSIOSCOT with any number between 1-20 after it to donate your desired amount (For example MISSIOSCOT10 will donate £10). Thank You.

Mission Month: The importance of a parish house

October is Mission Month. It's the time of year when the Church highlights the missions, missionaries and the work of Missio Scotland - the official mission aid agency of the Catholic Church.

We're asking you to pray and if possible donate to the special, annual collection on World Mission Sunday (18 October), or do it online here.

To demonstrate the work of the missions we're sharing stories from Missio throughout the month to show where your kind donations go...

Parish house will embolden evangelisation

It cannot be overstated just how vital the presence of a priest is in the parishes and dioceses in which they serve, but this is perhaps particularly salient with regards to those who serve in a missionary country or territory.

Earlier this year, the Vatican’s Congregation for the Clergy released a new document to help guide the reform of parish communities, entitled The pastoral conversion of the parish community in the service of the evangelising mission of the Church.

Within it was the apt description of the parish as a ‘house among houses,’ a permanent sign of the Risen One in the midst of His people as well as adding that ‘the missionary nature of the parish is fundamental for evangelisation.’

The instruction stressed the importance of a focus on spiritual dynamism and pastoral conversion based on the proclamation of the Word of God, the sacramental life and the witness of charity, in particular the witness of faith in charity and the importance of caring for the poor, which the parish evangelises.

Impact

With this in mind, Missio Scotland’s second project in the Sicuani Prelature of Peru—the construction of a parish house in San Sebastian de Llusco (above top)—is one that it is hoped will have a great evangelising impact upon the parish and its parishioners.

“Fr Urbano Quispe will be the resident parish priest in the house and will carry out pastoral work from there to the wider district,” Bishop Pedro Bustamante of the Sicuani Prelature explained (above). “A permanent resident for a priest allows him to pay closer attention to the parishioners and their spiritual and material needs. It will allow him to more easily reach the nearest communities. We hope that there will eventually be another priest living with him so that they can develop a joint priestly life.”

Care amid crises

The need to care for the spiritual and material needs of those who live in the District of Llusco is crucial given the tumult that they have had to live with in the past few years. On March 3, 2018 a State of Emergency was declared in the district for a period of two months due to mass displacement in the area as a result of intense rainfall (above).

Approximately 84.9 per cent of Llusco’s inhabitants live in rural areas and work in agriculture and some 54 families were affected as a result of the displacement. A medical outpost was destroyed, while irrigation and basic sanitation systems collapsed. The displacement also resulted in the loss of 26 hectares of crops and one kilometre of the Cusco-Apurímac highway was blocked off.

In Llusco, the incidence of total poverty is 85.1 per cent and extreme poverty is 56.4 per cent. There are high infant mortality rates in the wider region and 20 per cent malnutrition.

“The low economy facing the community of Llusco, added to the recent events of a geological fault in the district that caused the collapse of the town declaring itself in a state of emergency and the climate conditions of the area, make a difficult panorama visible for the parish priest and his parish action, but extremely necessary and urgent for a population that today more than ever needs to show the love of God through the spiritual strength that the Prelature can bring through its priests,” Bishop Bustamante said.

“The disaster and subsequent events takes its toll on the spirituality of a population that feels forgotten. This is the time when pastoral activity should be strengthened to help in the spiritual field and with humanitarian aid, so that people can face adversity, feeling that they have the accompaniment of the Church and the presence of God.

“The prelature wishes to keep alive and strengthen the faith of the people with the presence of pastoral work that shows God as the Father who accompanies them in their daily effort to get ahead despite the circumstances.”

“We believe that the construction of a small parish house that houses two priests and thus facilitates the dedication of more hours of pastoral presence and an increase in parish activity, is necessary,” Bishop Bustamante continued. “It will help to intensify pastoral care and promote community development in the district. Moreover, the permanent priest (Fr Urbano Quispe) does not have a residence that provides security in these times of disaster that the district has experienced.

“This parish house will be built so that it can withstand the rainy and cold seasons and will offer a stable residence that houses two priests from the area and can also welcome missionaries who can support us in evangelisation efforts.”

The residents of the district are humble, charitable and low-income people, who need all the material and spiritual support that can be provided. Thus, this parish house would act as the catalyst for an increase in pastoral work, welcoming those who work and sacrifice for the faithful and the friendly hand of the Church to spiritually strengthen this community in Llusco.

A Celtic connection

When Fr Pat Hennessy (above) was informed of this second project being supported by Missio Scotland in his former missionary homeland of Peru, he was delighted and also explained his connection with Bishop Pedro Bustamante, the man charged with overseeing the project.

“Two years ago they were giving medals to these missionaries in Cork and when I went here was this bishop, Pedro Bustamante,” Fr Pat recalled. “He said ‘Patricio’ and I said ‘yes?’ He said ‘you visited our village when I was 14 years of age and you stayed for a couple of days and I’ve never forgotten you! ‘God,’ I said ‘that’s amazing!’’

“A parish house is important because of presence,” he said. “The reason why people built a house for me was because then they knew that I would stay with them. The fact that the priest has a residence will allow him to live among the people and that makes them feel so good it would break your heart. People might ask why you would build a house, but it’s a really good thing, it won’t just be a house for the priest, it will become bigger and it will probably have facilities like a hall and a pharmacy and so on and being able to share life with the people is a great thing.”

Please help us to aid those who are affected by poverty and environmental disasters in Peru and support evangelisation efforts in the country, especially those of Fr Quispe who wishes to share life more fully with his parishioners in Llusco.

This story appears on the Missio website and was written by Gerard Gough. To learn more about the work of Missio Scotland you can visit: www.missioscotland.com,  Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/missioscotland, Twitter: @Missio_Scotland and Instagram: MissioScotland

You can also now donate to us via text. Text MISSIOSCOT to 70085 to donate £3 or MISSIOSCOT with any number between 1-20 after it to donate your desired amount (For example MISSIOSCOT10 will donate £10). Thank You.

Mission Month: Fr Pat inspires passion for mission!

October is Mission Month. It's the time of year when the Church highlights the missions, missionaries and the work of Missio Scotland - the official mission aid agency of the Catholic Church.

We're asking you to pray and if possible donate to the special, annual collection on World Mission Sunday (18 October), or do it online here.

To demonstrate the work of the missions we will be sharing stories from Missio throughout the month to show where your kind donations go.

This week's story focuses on the experience of Fr Pat Hennessy and his work in Peru, work which continues today.

Padre Patricio inspires a passion for mission

PERU is one of the countries that have been hit hardest by the Coronavirus pandemic. Despite the government moving quickly to impose curfews and strict border controls, at the time of writing, there has been more than 600,000 cases and in excess of 28,000 deaths.

“The poorest people are suffering,” Fr Pat Hennessy said. “There are people in Peru who can’t get access to oxygen because it’s too expensive—it’s out of their reach. The price of everything related to Covid-19 has gone through the roof. The pandemic is really hurting them.

It should come as no surprise to anyone who has had the pleasure of sitting down and chatting with a priest or religious sister who has spent time on mission that they still have a great love and concern for the people they served and the country to which they were sent.

However, while Peru—especially its more rural parts—and its people still hold a very special place in the heart of Fr Pat (below) it was the countryside of the Emerald Isle where he discerned his vocation thanks, in no small part to the influences that surrounded him at the time. Born in Limerick in 1945, Fr Pat became extremely close to the grandfather he was named after and this relationship was to prove pivotal in his faith journey.

“He was a farmer,” Fr Pat said. “We were great pals, really big mates. We were an old fashioned family, we used to have a horse and buggy and we’d trot up to Mass with me holding the reins and him laughing and joking away, but when you went into Church he’d change completely. I thought to myself his faith makes a real difference to his life.”

Inspired by his grandfather’s example, imbued with an acute sense of right and wrong—or fair play to use his own words—and having a classmate of his decide to become a priest, Fr Pat began to consider the priesthood for himself.

“God calls you, no matter whether you’re a layperson or religious,” he said. “The brothers at the school I was at were keen to point that out. They’d tell us that God was calling each one of us to do different things. Three of us became priests, one of whom is in Nairobi, Kenya, and we maintain contact to this day and are good friends. I still love it and I’m really pleased that I decided to become a priest.”

Ordained and sent

Fr Pat was ordained in 1969. Despite having a desire to leave his homeland and go out on mission it was Lanarkshire—not the mountains around Lima—that was his first home away from home. After some sage advice from his granny, he quickly set about immersing himself in the life of his Scottish parish—and current residence—St Columbkille’s in Rutherglen.

“My granny said when I was ordained ‘so you’re a priest now, I suppose you think you’re a great fella? When you begin to believe that you’ll be in trouble!’ Good advice! When I came here I got very attached to the people. In those days you were never in the house, you were always out and about and you knew everybody.”

After spending five years in St Columbkille’s, Fr Pat moved on to St James, Coatbridge, with teaching posts at Langbank and Blairs Colleges and a few years spent in Our Lady’s and St Anne’s in Hamilton for good measure. However, his desire to serve God’s people further afield was always in his thinking. He had raised the matter with the late Bishop Francis Thomson first before eventually being granted the opportunity by the late Bishop Joseph Devine.

“I had read a bit about Pope John XXIII and how he’d said that he’d like to send priests to Latin America, as they didn’t have many priests there—70 per cent of the world’s Catholics lived there and were served by 11 per cent of the world’s priests. I had said to the Bishop [Devine] would there be the possibility of me going there and he said ‘yes.’ However, he asked if I would go to Our Lady and St Anne’s first. After a couple of years I asked him again and he told me to contact the St James Society in Boston. So I had an interview over there and they said ‘yes you’d fit in quickly and have some use down there.’ So on Christmas Day, 1988, I left the parish and said I’d be away for a while. Two weeks later I was in Ecuador.”

Despite thinking he was going to become a priest in the Altiplano near Lake Titicaca, his countryside background in Ireland saw him posted to a mountain parish north of Lima, where he was to spend his 10 and a half years in Peru and where he was made Episcopal Vicar of the Countryside by his bishop! As he reflected on those early days on mission, Fr Pat spoke of the qualities that a missionary had to possess to ensure that their ministry was a success.

“A missionary has to place great importance on prayer and to be happy—and the two are connected,” he said. “One of the older sisters said to me ‘Paddy if you didn’t pray before you came here, when you go up into the mountains you will because you won’t be able to tell anyone else how you feel but God will know and you’ll know that He knows. If that happens to you then you’ll just become a happy person.’

“It’s important to note too that a missionary isn’t necessarily there to bring God to the people. God is already there. You have to discover that they already experience God and help bring that out. You need to spend a great deal of time with them, show solidarity with them and enjoy it all too.

“I think everyone is a missionary. You’re a missionary of what is going on in your heart. You live from the inside out—I’ve always liked that expression. If you’re a friend of God, you’ll see things through His eyes. I would tell people that God loves them and when they get that into their heads and hearts they’ll take care of one another.”

Testing times

Yet despite his optimistic outlook on mission, he is honest enough to admit that there were times he felt scared. Shortly after his arrival in the country, the Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path) paramilitary group—whose aim was to overthrow the government—killed two Polish Franciscan priests and one Italian missionary priest. Michał Tomaszek and Zbigniew Adam Strzałkowski were murdered on August 9, 1991 and Alessandro Dordi was killed shortly after on August 25 of the same year. Pope Francis gave approval on February 3, 2015 for their Beatification after affirming their martyrdom and Cardinal Angelo Amato celebrated their Beatification in Peru on December 5, 2015. They are known as the Blessed Martyrs of Chimbote and a picture of the trio (above) sits on the mantelpiece in Fr Pat’s living room to serve as a reminder of the sacrifice made by his fellow missionaries while serving the faithful in Peru.

“I was sacred all right and fear can paralyse you,” he said. “We were always told that if things became traumatic for us, we’d have to come home, but I think you have to try and conquer fear.

“One of the things the government used to do to frighten people was to come into a town, block off the streets and take maybe 10 young fellas out into the country and shoot them. One of my fellow priests said to me one day, ‘Paddy you have this jeep don’t you?’ I said ‘yeah.’ He said ‘look 10 of my young people have been taken away by the army. I think I know where they’re buried, will you come with me to trawl the desert?’ I said ‘yeah ok, but you do know that if we discover them, we’ll be put in beside them!’ So we drove around and couldn’t find them. Then a couple of years later he called me and said ‘I know where they are.’ Their garments had appeared above the sand and we discovered that they were there, beside the road. So that was kind of scary stuff, but you couldn’t not do things.

“Sendero Luminoso had said they that they would kill more foreign priests and I was practically living next door to them. People used to say to me ‘you know you could get bumped off?’ One lady asked me ‘Paddy, those bad people are around, why didn’t they kill you?’ I said, ‘Señora, I think I was too tall! And she said ‘did you hear that? The Padre says he’s too tall!’ And the people began to laugh. I remember reading somewhere recently that it’s good to have a healthy disregard of yourself, without making a fool of yourself. I got a great kick out of it.

“Never mind that though, some of the roads were deadly and fierce too. Several times I was nearly killed. I was nearly killed one night when I was on a horse. I was walking along this path one night and it was dark—the sun falls out of the sky in Peru within five or ten minutes and it becomes pitch dark. So we’re walking along this path and there’s a river below and the next thing the horse stops in its tracks. What had happened was that the path has just been wiped away and had the horse went another three or four steps it would have gone down into the river and I’d have gone with him. So I got off and the next thing I see is that the road’s gone. Eventually the people came to me and said ‘we were waiting for you.’ And I said ‘yeah but look what happened!’”

The power of people

In spite of some of these somewhat extreme hazards of missionary priesthood, Fr Pat, drew inspiration from Pope John XIII and Hélder Câmara—with the latter, at one point, known as the bishop who was in charge of the poorest diocese in the world. The Peruvian people themselves were also crucial in helping to fortify himself while on mission.

“The organisation I was with only dealt with the poorest parishes or places that couldn’t sustain a priest, or pay him anything or feed him,” he said. “I was up in the mountains with the poorest of people and some of them in the villages hadn’t seen a priest since the 1950s. When I was there, the niño phenomenon blew away all the bridges and all the roads and people had absolutely nothing. I just felt that that was a great place to be. I just said to myself hey this is great. I used to set out my little bag and all I’d have was the good book, the implements to celebrate Mass and that was it. I was totally dependent on the people.”

After witnessing first-hand, how a missionary priest or sister needed to be aware of the cultural sensibilities of the people they were serving—a riot nearly ensued for one priest who told the people not to spend money on a new dress for Our Lady before the bishop arrived to calm things down—Fr Pat wondered why one of his churches was often empty, but was able to remedy this by conversing with the people and ‘seeing the world through different eyes,’ as he puts it.

“I discovered in the villages that you have to find the person who is the head of the community— usually it’s a woman, the Mamacha,” he said. “One day I was talking to one of the fishermen and I said ‘why is it that so few people come to Mass? He said to me ‘Padre, you don’t know that there’s a Señora who’s the grandmother or great grandmother of half the fishermen in this village and you haven’t gone to see her to ask for her blessing.’ So I went in to see her and after I’d done that and been given her blessing I went away home on holiday and when I came back the church was filled!”

After his initial struggles with language, he settled in and became beloved by the people. They built him his parish houses in the mountains and invited him to their own houses (like the girl pictured above), showing that he had gained their trust and respect, which was epitomised during an encounter with a government official.

“I was sitting in the chapel and the next thing this fella arrives—all dressed up—and I look at him and I look behind him and he had five bodyguards. He was the Minister of the Interior. I said ‘Dr Álvaro.’ ‘Si’ he said. I said ‘it’s lovely that you’ve come to see your people.’ He said to me ‘see all those statues and that I don’t believe any of it.’ I said ‘that’s alright, you’re a very powerful man and if you were twice as powerful again you couldn’t believe it because believing is a gift.’ So he went away and three or four days later I met him on top of the mountain and he says to me ‘Padre I’ve been praying for the gift.’ I said ‘that’s great, but look at the way your poor people are living, that’s not right, all their canals are broken and they can’t grow sufficient food to keep them alive for the rest of the year.’ Shortly after that encounter he gave us $200,000 but he said ‘would you be around? I don’t want that money going to build public monuments.’ I promised I’d make sure of that. So every cent of it went to repair the canals.”

The importance of presence

It cannot be overstated just how important the presence of a priest is in the missionary country or territory in which he serves, so when Fr Pat was informed that one of the two projects supported by Missio Scotland in Peru would involve the construction of a parish house in San Sebastian de Llusco in the Sicuani Prelature, he was delighted and also explained his connection with Bishop Pedro Bustamante (above), the man charged with overseeing both projects.

“Two years ago they were giving medals to these missionaries in Cork and when I went here was this bishop, Pedro Bustamante,” Fr Pat recalled. “He said ‘Patricio’ and I said ‘yes?’ He said ‘you visited our village when I was 14 years of age and you stayed for a couple of days and I’ve never forgotten you! ‘God,’ I said ‘that’s amazing!’’

“A parish house is important because of presence,” he said. “The reason why people built a house for me was because then they knew that I would stay with them. The fact that the priest has a residence will allow him to live among the people and that makes them feel so good it would break your heart. People might ask why you would build a house, but it’s a really good thing, it won’t just be a house for the priest, it will become bigger and it will probably have facilities like a hall and a pharmacy and so on and being able to share life with the people is a great thing.”

Meeting needs

Fr Pat was similarly enthusiastic about Missio Scotland’s second project—a feeding programme for disabled children (above), also in the Sicuani Prelature—and spoke of the need for those of us who are part of the universal Church to continue to support the world’s poorest peoples, especially at this time.

Comedores are a big thing in Peru,” he said “They’re big kitchens and what the priest usually does is buy flour, cooking oil, soya and a stove and basic instruments and you’d hand it to the people and say look this is a kitchen and you can now set up a comedor and people will eat much better. That makes community and people’s conditions improve too.”

“With the Covid-19 and the whole situation, unfortunately you have people saying we have to look after ourselves now, cut aid to everything. Governments have also spoken about cutting aid and that we can’t get too involved now, we have to recover first, but we give out of need,” he said. “If you go back in history, this church was built in the hungry 30s when people had nothing but they gave to God. As long as you do it to the least of my brothers you do it to me. So would you forget the Lord in his poverty?

“God loves everyone, but He loves poor people and children especially. That’s the Gospel. If you begin to think small then you’ll start to forget about the poor, the disabled and those in need. So you have to have a big heart—to be a missionary you have to have a big heart. That’s maybe the message that Missio Scotland is trying to convey, that we really can’t forget about the poor people on the planet.

“And we might ask, what is the Church? Well the Church is the heart of God and the Church is meant to portray God to the world—a God who loves everyone. The Church is just one big family and what happens in a good family? Everyone is loved, but if anyone is struggling or sick, then the mother and father have a special love for them until they get up and walk with the rest. So we have to help people to get up and walk with the rest of us and participate, I think that’s it. You might also ask why am I giving £20 to Missio Scotland? The answer is because you’re giving it to God and good people will use it in God’s name to help people. That’s what God wants. That’s what His Church wants.”

While Fr Pat returned to Scotland in 1999 and retired in June of this year, his passion for mission—and in particular his former parishioners in Peru—has never diminished and nor should our own.

Article by Gerard Gough. Please help Missio meet the spiritual and material needs of peoples and churches worldwide, during Mission Month and throughout the year. Donate here. Like Missio on social media: Facebook, Twitter: @Missio_Scotland; Instagram: MissioScotland. Donations can also be made by emailing admin@missioscotland.com or send donations to: Missio Scotland, St Andrews, 4 Laird Street, Coatbridge ML5 3LJ.

Mission Month: Get inspired to help our missionaries

October is Mission Month. It's the time of year when the Church highlights the missions, missionaries and the work of Missio Scotland - the official mission aid agency of the Catholic Church.

We're asking you to pray and if possible donate to the special, annual collection on World Mission Sunday (18 October), or do it online here.

To demonstrate the work of the missions we will be sharing stories throughout the month to show where your kind donations go.

Fr Paul Lee, of St Agatha's in Methil, is Missio Director for the Archdiocese. He said: “These stories get to the heart of the work that Missio Scotland does across the world. I hope they will inspire people across our Archdiocese to both pray for Missions and to donate what they can during this Mission month.”

Love amidst despair - making mission count

On the Feast of St Thérèse of Lisieux on (01 October) Archbishop Protase Rugambwa of Tanzania, (Secretary of the Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples), emphasised the importance of our missionaries and the need to show God’s love to all during these most trying of times.

“The missionaries are there, alongside all of those who suffer, and are all the more important especially due to the impact of the global crisis,” he said. “This is a favourable moment for mission. We are called today to announce and show the love of God, above all, where there is suffering, misery and despair.”

Archbishop Rugambwa, quoting from Pope Francis’ message—'Here I am, send me' (Isaiah 6:8)—for World Mission Sunday, recalled that: “In a context profoundly marked by the Covid-19 pandemic, we must not be discouraged because mission is not the fruit of human capacity, but rather belongs to God—the Holy Spirit is the protagonist. The Lord takes the initiative, He sent His Son, Jesus Christ, and today He sends every Baptised person.”

Generous donations

Despite the difficulties faced by the various Pontifical Mission Societies worldwide, there has been no let up with regards to people’s generosity, with many having donated to the special emergency fund set up by the Holy Father earlier this year to help communities most affected by Covid-19.

Throughout the world, including here in Scotland, the PMS have endeavoured to continue to raise awareness of our work and it is hoped that the generosity shown in the midst of the pandemic will continue with the special collection that is taken up in parishes in every continent on World Mission Sunday.

This year, Missio Scotland’s campaign focuses on projects in Peru, namely a feeding programme for disabled children and a new parish house in Llusco, both in the Sicuani Prelature served by Bishop Pedro Bustamante—a man who has a close link to our own Fr Pat Hennessy in St Columbkille’s in Rutherglen. More information about the projects and Fr Pat’s time in Peru can be found in the news and features section of the Missio website.

Schools can also avail of resources including Mission Month Prayer Calendars, Mission Month Prayer Services and St Thérèse of Lisieux and Mission Rosary materials, all available on the website.

Importance of prayer

Pope Francis recently re-emphasised the importance of prayer, reflection and material help during Mission Month and beyond, in a message delivered via the Congregation for the Evangelisation of the Peoples.

“The celebration of World Mission Sunday is also an occasion for reaffirming how prayer, reflection and the material help of your offerings provide so many opportunities to participate actively in the mission of Jesus in His Church,” the Holy Father said.

“The charity expressed in the collections that take place during the Liturgical celebrations of the third Sunday of October is aimed at supporting the missionary work carries out in my name by the Pontifical Mission Societies, in order to meet the spiritual and material needs of peoples and Churches throughout the world, for the salvation of all.”

Please help Missio meet the spiritual and material needs of peoples and churches worldwide, during Mission Month and throughout the year. Donate here. Like Missio on social media: Facebook, Twitter: @Missio_Scotland; Instagram: MissioScotland. Donations can also be made by emailing admin@missioscotland.com or send donations to: Missio Scotland, St Andrews, 4 Laird Street, Coatbridge ML5 3LJ.