photos by Lolín Menéndez
Pilar Crespo rscj, Lucila Cerrillo rscj, Ana Pérez rscj
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Ana and Ramón
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Only
a week in Nicaragua… What could one see, do, understand, in such a
quick visit? Yes, the time was short, but I was able to glimpse the
richness of a people, the beauty of the country, the commitment of my
sisters. The visit also enabled me to join the rscj community in
celebrating 25 years of our presence in Nicaragua. I could listen to
and share stories, anecdotes and memories with the community in
Managua: Anita Pérez and Lucila Cerrillo, both from Mexico, and Pilar
Crespo, from Spain. Two other members of the community, Christian and
Myriam, were in Mexico following the Junirorate program. They are the
first Nicaraguan rscj missioned to their own country. (Three Nicaraguan
women who entered before the rscj came to the country lived in other
provinces.)
I tried to recapture the essence of the
visit during the return flight to Miami. Three words leapt immediately
to my mind and heart as a summary of what I had lived and seen lived:
Reflection – Education - Healing.
I also experienced the community as one presence, lived in three
ministries. I sensed a common mission: accompanying and supporting
those with and for whom they worked, in relationships that are sisterly
and mutual, in action that seeks to transform so that lives becomes
more human, just, and peaceful…. not just words from Chapter 2000, but
a life being lived.
Reflection: Pili’s
work at the Universidad Centroamericana (UCA) is a ministry carried out
in the context of human development. Pilar heads a program of
continuing education that confers a Diploma in Religious Sciences. This
course, designed especially for pastoral workers, young religious in
formation, and Christians who seek to deepen their faith, is built on a
process of dialogue and reflection. Participants will eventually
“assume a creative and constructive role in a pluralistic society,
faith community and family - a role deeply based on Gospel values”, so
as to enable others also to engage in the process of transformation.
Pili describes her commitment with conviction: “I do not work with the poor, but everything I do is for the poor.”
Education:
Lucila is based at the John XXIII Center at UCA, where she is pursuing
an M.A. in education. At the same time, she supports and works closely
with the facilitators of literacy programs in isolated communities. In
this way she is able to bring together what she learns from experience
and reflection with the task of preparing tools that are useful and
relevant for workers in the field.
We made a visit to
some communities located deep in the interior of the country, away from
the main road and reachable only by driving on stones. But what joy
Lucila and I shared as we listened to adults speak with pleasure of
what they are learning, and saw the pride of knowing how to handle pen
and paper reflected in many faces. One small instance, yes, but it
bears witness to a process that goes beyond the acquisition of skills
of literacy and numeracy and enables persons to tap their inner riches.
I
was very impressed by a group of teenagers who give time in the
afternoons to coach younger children in an after-school program… kids
who in other circumstances would complain of boredom or be glued to TV.
The facilitators for the literacy program are also young adults. One of
the crucial problems in these communities is that children drop out of
school early, as young as 10-12, because they have to help at home and
in the fields. So there is little interest in learning for the sake of
the future, and few role models to encourage children to complete their
education … the cycle of poverty not only perpetuates itself but holds
the community in a stronger grip. In one of the places we visited, we
saw women going down the hill to where there is water, two kilometers
away. And the bucket has to be carried back on the head, two long
kilometers that certainly seem longer because the retun trip is uphill.
I
had a sense of people who are beginning to “drink form our own wells”.
As Lucila said, “Yes, there are many stones. But one can begin to see
the green sprouting between them”.
Healing:
“The glory of God is women and men fully alive”, said Ireneus centuries
ago - words always in the background as I talked with Anita about the
projects of natural medicine in which she is involved. I was impressed
by the efforts made to make healing available and affordable by using
the wisdom and material offered by nature: bioenergy, microdosis, sea
water, herbs, roots… I visited two clinics where I saw many delicate
gestures that transmitted love and understanding to each person being
treated in a very personal way – in conversation, in gentle touch, in
evident respect for the person in front. Those who came looking for
relief from pain and illness certainly went away with much more: peace
in their hearts as well as with bags of remedies.
During
part of my stay Ana was involved in a workshop at the Center of
Cantera, a beautiful tropical “oasis of peace” on the outskirts of
Managua, the Center on whose behalf Mickey McKay worked so tirelessly.
I accompanied Ana to one of the morning sessions and, again, what
struck me most was not just the joy the group had in exploring new
media and making personal discoveries, but the energy generated by
discussions and planning on how to share the contents of the workshop
with colleagues.
We had many conversations about the
history of Nicaragua, we remembered the first days of the Society and
took a memory walk to the mountains of Jalapa in the time of the
people’s struggle for an ideal… The community told me how this ideal
gradually became” ours” and how their life as a community gradually
intertwined with the life of the larger community of Jalapa. But a
week later and back in Boston I realize that this celebration of 25
years of the presence of rscj in Nicaragua is not just a memorial
celebration of the past, nor a nostalgic yearning for yesterday. It is rejoicing today because “we have to look for new ways of being present in Nicaragua” in view of a tomorrow
that is very near. The stories of the beginnings, the ties forged
through war, the remembrances of the recent celebration in Jalapa, all
the conversations underlined this search for how to love and to
minister in Nicaragua. Seeds that were sowed in these 25 years have taken root, roots that reach deep into the earth
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