CANADA-UNITED STATES
Omi Lacombe - Returning to Spirit
Fr. François
PARADIS is very clear that his involvement in the Returning to Spirit is very
much the work of an Oblate. His involvement flows from the forty years of
ministry with First Nation Peoples in Western Canada. There is a very natural
connection between his ministry within First Nations communities and his
training and education work within Returning to Spirit.
“This is my work
to reach out to the marginalized and the poor.” Within in Canada, “the
residential schools have made people very poor.” This was not the original
intention in the establishment of the schools but “the Gospel got twisted in
the process. This ministry is repairing the damage that has been done even by
very well intentioned people.
“As a priest I
share the ministry of Jesus Christ. His ministry is all about reconciliation. I
see my ministry as bringing faith to the healing process. It is to help people
see the beauty of who they truly are. Returning to Spirit is a whole process
that gets us into reconciliation. This is the healing that Jesus wants. Some of
these people may return to Church but that is not the first purpose of
Returning to Spirit. Its first purpose is healing and reconciliation. Through
the process some people have rediscovered God.”
There is a
framing of his explanation. “Some people have always gone to Church but they
are full of hurt and anger. This process is very much in line with de Mazenod.
This is to return them to their dignity. It is to help them live in the dignity
in which they were created.”
François summed
up the entire ministry and the process of Returning to Spirit. “It is returning
to the spirit of who they actually are as a human being.”
François first
became acquainted with Returning to Spirit when he made his first workshop in
February of 2004. By January of 2006 he had received his training to be a
trainer of others for this process. In July 2007 he joined the Return to Spirit
team full time.
The process
begins with a five day workshop that directly seeks to empower three parts of
the participant’s life: empowering you to yourself, you to others and you to
your own life. The first three days seek to identify what is in front of your
spirit that prevents the person from being fully alive. What prevents this
person from embracing their own life? What keeps them stuck into their own
past? How do the negatives of the past keep showing up in the present?
The process of
this five day workshop asks where have they given up their personal power? What
keeps them from having personal power? How can they have personal power within
their own life?
The entire week
is very experiential. There are homework assignments for each evening that ask
the participants to apply to their own personal situation what they have learnt
during the day. The goal is to reach the point where they no longer have any
stuff that remains in the space between their relationships. What are the
angers, the resentments that block their relationships?
Each step of the
process builds on the preceding step. It is all inter-linked with one piece
building on the others pieces. The direction is to learn how to shift from
enduring life and just reacting to situations to a strength where they are
creating their own life. It means to move into an appreciation for their own
identity and live with authentic self-expression. It from within the spirit of
each person that the empowerment arises.
François is very
clear that there have been wonderful changes in peoples’ lives. “There have
been times of physical healing. Some people explain this as mere coincidence
but this is definitely a gift from God. It is God who brings about the
reconciliation that we talk about during the week. So many of these people
reach a completion to their lives that was unthinkable before the process
began.”
His work with
Returning to Spirit comprises training with non-aboriginal peoples (priests,
sisters, religious workers, lay people, social workers and educators). The
other team within Returning to Spirit focuses on aboriginal peoples. Once the
first workshop has been completed, the two groups (aboriginals and Church
people) join together for a more intense five days of working towards
reconciliation.
As he moves into
the future François plans to be involved in this ministry “As long as Returning
to Spirit lasts.” This was spoken with affirmation. (By Nestor GREGOIRE in www.omilacombe.ca)
United States - An Oblate Strategy at WorkIn the past, when
the world was much less organized, outlooks, values and attitudes could be communicated
only individually or face of face in very small groups. Today, values are communicated
more through the public system of universal education and the media. This challenges
the traditional values of the local community; not incidentally Africa’s best known
novel is entitled: “Things Fall Apart,” the center cannot hold. Obviously this calls
for a whole new strategy of value communication.
For this, the Council
for Research in Values and Philosophy (RVP) founded by Fr. George MCLEAN, has developed
a new strategy, which echoes that of the Jesuit missionary, Matteo Ricci. It is
to work with thinkers at the key thought centers of the various cultures to explore
their value horizons and how these can be enriched and adapted to the present lives
of their people. Fifteen such conferences will be held in the next six months up
the East coast of Africa and China, across India and Russia, to Moscow, Poland,
Romania, etc. Each will be joined by a number of RVP scholars from other nations,
as did Fr. James LOIACONO, last year in China.
In turn, as these
centers set the horizons for the educational system of their entire country, what
is developed in these conferences is diffused through every city and village by
the schools of their public education and administration structures. Moreover, as
the RVP publishes these deliberations (270 volumes thus far) in print and on the
web, the many peoples and cultures enrich one another on a global scale (see www.crvp.org).
Omi Lacombe - Honorary doctorate for Oblate missionary in Peru
The University
of Waterloo in Ontario has approved the St. Jerome University’s nomination of
Dr. Maurice SCHROEDER, to receive
an Honorary Doctor of Laws degree. The degree was conferred during the Faculty
of Arts convocation on June 14, 2012. St. Jerome’s is one of the founding
universities of the University of Waterloo.
Its president is Fr. David PERRIN, an Oblate
Dr. Schroeder is
a priest and the Oblate superior of the Delegation of Peru. The degree is to
honor him for his work at the Centro de
Salud Santa Clotilde, as explained in this announcement of the conferral:
The Centro de
Salud Santa Clotilde is a mission hospital in the Amazon Basin of northeastern Peru.
The hospital has 30 beds, an outpatient clinic, a pharmacy and public health
programs. Since 1986, it has been run by two medical doctors who are also Roman
Catholic priests. Father Maurice Schroeder is one of them. Under the active
leadership of Maurice Schroeder, the hospital has served more than 20,000
indigenous people who have little or no access to healthcare. The hospital
serves an area of 100 villages along the Napo River where the people are very
poor. The hospital’s annual operating budget is approximately $180, 000 US
funded one-third by the Peruvian government, two-thirds from the church and
private donors. In winter of 2008, Father Maurice Schroeder was asked to become
Superior of the Peruvian delegation, to which he has brought his wealth of
experience and talent.
Dr. Schroeder
exemplifies the commitment to global citizenship of St. Jerome’s University and
the University’s Centre for Responsible Citizenship (Beyond Borders).
Quantifying Dr. Schroeder’s connection (number of students affected, potential
for continuing relationship) to the Beyond Borders program is difficult. As
noted in the supporting letter from the Director of the Beyond Borders program
which accompanied the original submission, Dr. Schroeder was instrumental in
establishing partnerships in Peru, something that is expected to continue and,
perhaps, be expanded. Even without the Beyond Borders connection, Dr.
Schroeder’s significant and long-standing humanitarian aid efforts make him an
ideal candidate. His work in bringing in temporary doctors to provide medical
care in very difficult circumstances, make him a wonderful role model and
mentor not only to SJU and UW students, but to other Canadian doctors and to
society in general. Dr. Schroeder is a shining example of good global
citizenship and a model of leadership that we are proud to recognize.(www.omilacombe.ca)