Update from the Passionist Preaching Band

“Among the many Apostolates sanctioned by our Constitutions, the preaching of parish missions and spiritual exercises remains our special and central activity.” – Paragraph 70 of our Passionist Constitutions.

The Preaching Band is a small group of Passionist Priests and Brothers who are dedicated to the preaching of the Passion of Christ. Here is what they have accomplished during the time period of July 1, 2011 to December 31, 2011.

Missions – 27; Retreats – 16 (Laity), 3 (Priests), 2 (Sisters); Days of Recollection – 25 (Laity), 3 (Priests), 2 (Sisters), 2 (Deacons); Novenas – 5

“We ought to glory in nothing other than the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ. You are blessed and don’t know it. You have Jesus Crucified with you.” – St. Paul of the Cross

In his Passion,

Fr. Stephen, C.P.

Learn how you can arrange for a Passionist Mission or Retreat in your parish or spiritual center.

 

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Minding the Gap – A New Year’s Message from Fr. Rick Frechette, C.P.

Dear Friends,

It is with great satisfaction and gratitude, that in the first days of 2012 we will celebrate a quarter century of faith based work in Haiti, and so begin enthusiastically our 26th year of dedication.

Anyone who visits us in Haiti can see how much has been achieved by our twin programs, Nos Petits Freres et Soeurs, and the S.t Luke Mission. We have created jobs (1,600 people work in our programs). All these jobs are aimed at benefiting the marginalized poor, especially women and children. All of the programs have Haitian leaders. We work both on front lines of poverty (front line clinics, relief work, and front line schools), and yet we have also developed important institutions in Haiti that introduce new possibilities in healthcare, rehabilitation and education, and new kinds of jobs (neurosurgery, digital radiology, cancer care, to name a few).

We have developed production and training centers, which bring increasingly more income to our mission. We do extensive community work, including neighborhood development, and extensive relief work. We continue our huge work with orphans and vulnerable children. We reach for the stars, offering computer based learning to very poor students, and superior high school and university education. We invest our blood, sweat and tears, moving forward on a wing and a prayer.

For these many years I have kept you updated on our progress with reflections that are very human and also gospel based. They have included thanks for sharing in our work with your donations and sacrifices.

Because our works are so important, because we have come so far in 25 years and can go much further, and because of the financial crises in the developed world, I have become more forward in suggesting ways you can help. I hope you understand that I do this without the slightest doubt in the goodness and the power of Providence, and without in any way wanting to commercialize our work. We just don’t want to lose the lifesaving ground we have gained over many years.

Of the past 25 years, both 2010 and 2011 have been singularly years of bridge building. Haiti has been laid low by earthquake and cholera, and the persistence of grueling poverty. Thanks to your generous help and our strong Haitian team, we’ve been working day in and day to build bridges of light and hope, of friendship and solidarity, traversing deep valleys of sorrow and hardship.

Many years ago, when I visited London, I was amused by a recorded message played whenever the subway door opened. In order to help you step safely into the train, the voice said, “Mind the gap!”

I remember thinking to myself: in fact, I do mind the gap. I mind the gap between homelessness and having a home, between sickness and healing, between ignorance and enlightenment, between humiliation and dignity. I mind the gap between doubt and faith, between apathy and action. I mind the many gaps that perpetuate suffering.

And so a motto emerged. “If not me, who? If not now, when?”

Better said, “if not us, who? If not now, when?”

The immense team of the St. Luke Foundation sets out daily to fill gaps between need and hope. We have built 50 houses for those left homeless by the earthquake. We set up a field hospital that has cared for the victims of cholera when that disease was brought into Haiti, and spread like wildfire. (We have cared for 20,000 people there to date, patients who came from near and far, in pickup trucks and in wheelbarrows, fighting a disease that kills in a matter of hours; up to 50% of whom would have died without help.)

Our school system includes 28 schools, including a school for special needs children and a fabulous secondary school. There are 8,000 children who are able to study every day thanks to these schools.

On several occasions throughout the year, because of labor disputes at some hospitals, and the lack of facilities never rebuilt since the earthquake, we were obliged to receive scores of people with traumatic injuries and other desperate emergencies.  Unable to ignore this gaping suffering, we ramped up our services and created a state of the art ER and ICU, and two other field hospitals.  We have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on life saving surgeries. We built the St. Luke field hospital in Tabarre, to care for whole families.

Many of the people who come to us for help become fast friends.  An example is Marie Ginie, a 16 year old girl who saved her brother’s life by protecting him as a cement wall was brought down by a storm.  These walls were weak, hastily rebuilt after the earthquake destroyed their home.  The resulting gap in Marie Ginie’s life was enormous.  She was paralyzed below the waist and needed orthopedic surgery. No one in Haiti could perform the surgery.  She had no house to go home to.  The Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, and our St. Luke crew stepped up to the plate and she had surgery and physical therapy at Mayo Clinic. With the help of some generous donors, we were also able to help build a house for her to return to.

And now, thanks to many donors, the St. Luke Team built a field hospital called St Mary, Star of the Sea. It is in Cite Soleil, infamous as being one of the worst “slums” on earth.  However after working there for years, St. Luke’s has the trust of the community, and knows that together we can help close the gap of poverty there.  St. Mary’s is almost finished and it’s needed now more than ever.  The trauma services at a nearby hospital, which previously served the sprawling shantytowns of Cite Soleil, closed permanently on the 15th of December.  The gap created by lack of access to healthcare was already enormous, now it’s grown even larger.  Challenge after challenge, the St Luke team courageously steps up to the plate and tries to make a difference, working to close the gap.

And so as we open St Mary’s to serve the people of Cite Soleil, we write to ask for your help. A donation will help us reach yet another important milestone, together with the people of Haiti.

If you can, please help us close the gap. If you can’t, maybe you can pass this message on to a friend. This way of requesting help makes it possible for the St. Luke Foundation to have no paid staff in the USA, so that 100% of donations go directly to Haiti to the mission.

It’s a challenge, but not an impossible task. We go forward in confidence, and hope.

I send this with best wishes for a happy new year, and pray for strength and blessing for you and your families!

Fr. Rick and Fr. Robert Joerger, C.P. at Cholera distribution center in Haiti

Fr. Rick Frechette, CP, DO
Port au Prince
December 29, 2011

Please consider a donation to help Fr. Rick in his ministry to the people of Haiti: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: AGardiner@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.

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A Christmas Message from Fr. Rick Frechette

It was a simple story.  Jesus was born in the simplest way, in the simplest place, of the simplest people.  He was born at the simplest time, without disturbance or noise.  No pomp, no ceremony, no titles, nothing of vanity. No place to be born within society. The onlookers were camels, donkeys, cattle and sheep. (And now you and I, onlookers from across the centuries, sadly sometimes resembling the first)

Hay for a blanket, stars for the canopy.

Humility, simplicity, gratitude, love, and faithfulness. These marked the moment.

This simplicity resonated in deep harmony with the heavens.  Heavenly favor was revealed by a playful star, by enchanting trumpets, by choirs of heaven voices, by profound peace on earth. Who could ask for more?

The depth of this witness brought simple kings to their knees on the floor of a manger, far from their splendid halls, (but it drove complexed kings into jealous rage, pacing fretfully on marble floors, planning the murder of children).

Would that the world were simple. Wonder if children were just children. Not poor or rich. Just children. All favored. Does anyone even notice the dancing star anymore?  Or are we weary, heavy, burdened, and trudging on with little hope?

Wonder if the way to help children, whose circumstance brings them far from their God given favor, were simple. No heavy bureaucracies that become self serving, no divided motivation, no demands for attention or fame or reward. Just simple.

Imagine committees, studies, projections and budgets giving way alternately to loving embrace, or passionate challenge, each in its season.

The call of Christmas, to you and to me, is the call to the simplicity of life that gives us freedom. It is call to free ourselves from complexity, and all the dangers that complexity brings. It is the call to serve humbly the God who is the beginning, the middle and the end of our journey. The God who especially loves children.

It’s a call to be simply, father, mother, daughter, friend, to the children who need us. The call to share hearts and values, time and treasures, and to share a journey together across the streets paved by our very limited days, toward our endless horizon.  No one too far ahead.  No one too far behind. No one left alone, no one left discouraged, no one lost.

A song for food, a laugh for drink, the joy of bread and wine.

As we continue to work together to help the children of Haiti, in season and out of season, in an ever more complex world, let us beg God to help us as we build with them, and for the children, a future.

Yes, we surely build homes and schools. We build clinics and hospitals. But we must build up lives and values. We must build up mercy and justice, dignity and peace, hope and trust. We must build the simple values proclaimed by the heavens, and fashion for ourselves and for the children simple lives. (Unless the Lord builds the house, in vain do the builders’ labor!)

Once again, we thank you for joining us in this noble cause. We carry you in our hearts and prayers. The New Year holds for us all many difficult challenges. We pray for you, in thanksgiving, that you will be blessed and strengthened by the One who is called Wonderful, Counselor, Almighty God, Everlasting Father, and Prince of Peace.

(But, be blessed and strengthened by all of us, too!)

Merry Christmas, and Happy New Year!

Fr. Rick Frechette
Port au Prince, Haiti
December, 2011

Please consider a donation to help Fr. Rick in his ministry to the people of Haiti: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: AGardiner@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.

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Fr. Rick Frechette – Children’s champion – FT.com

The American priest has spent 25 years building orphanages, hospitals and schools in Haiti’s slums

Father Rick Frechette, an American priest with 25 years’ experience in Haiti, has just built 30 houses. They have sparkling Caribbean views, open porches and come in pink, lime-green and blue. Each house costs just $7,000, and they may soon have solar power. But these are not holiday villas, they are houses for the very poor – replacement shelters for the shaky shacks and trash-strewn rubble in Cité Soleil, the notorious slum at the edges of Port-au-Prince.

By Annie Maccoby Berglof
Read more via Children’s champion – FT.com.

Please consider a donation to help Fr. Rick in his ministry to the people of Haiti: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: AGardiner@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.

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Feast of Saint Inocencio Canoura-Arnau of Mary Immaculate

Today the Passionist Congregation honors one of its Martyr Saints, Manuel Canoura-Arnau, who in religion was known as Inocencio de la Inmaculada (1887-1934).  This religious is known as the priest protomartyr of the Spanish Civil War (1934-1938).  He entered the Passionists in 1904 and was ordained a priest in 1913.  Because of a speech impediment he rarely gave missions and retreats.  He was, however, an exceptional teacher.  He was original, organized and clear in his presentations.  Besides lecturing in Spanish Literature, he also taught Logic, Cosmology and metaphysical philosophy.  He always found great joy in interacting with the Passionist seminarians.

Ironically, this propensity for the classroom coupled him with the nine De La Salle (Christian) Brothers and their ministry of education at Turon in Northern Spain.  He was fond of offering himself to his rector to undertake assignments in parishes and convents for Masses and confessions.  On October 4, 1934 he was sent to celebrate the Sacrament of Reconciliation with the students at the religious academy run by the Brothers.  The following day he was to celebrate the First Friday Mass in honor of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

It was actually known then that a regional revolution was brewing in this northern province of Spain, but no one expected that it would come to the doors of monasteries and convents.  Unbeknownst to him, after he had departed from his own monastery at Mieres for Turon, terrorist threats and actions were leveled there.  Perplexed, the rector could not send after Father Inocencio and finally decided he would be safe with the Christian Brothers.  He encouraged the rest of the Community to disguise themselves and flee.  Two of the scholastics fled into the mountains, but not together.  Each was stalked by brigands, hunted down and shot to death.  All of the others found safety.

Once he arrived at the convent of the Brothers, Inocencio heard the confessions of all.  Brother Cyril, the Superior reported outbursts of violence and urged the Passionist to stay overnight.  As tension was mounting, darkness quickly fell upon the little company of ten.  It was decided that Father Inocencio would celebrate Mass soon after Midnight.  These decisions became their death sentence.  They were arrested by the provisional government while Mass was still being celebrated.  The Brothers had been deprived of their habits a year before by the regional educational authority.  They were therefore marched out in civilian clothes.  Once taken to the sheriff’s office Inocencio was stripped of his habit and left only in his monastic underwear.  He covered himself for both modesty and warmth with a large blue bandana.

Also arrested that night were the executives of the large mining company which provided employment in the territory as well as all the Diocesan priests who served the parishes in and around Turon.  After a day or so, the parish priests were let go through the popular intervention of the laity.

The Chief Executive of the mining company, Don Rafael del Riego was detained and eventually shot.  It then became clear that the hatred was actually aimed at the religious.  They were all earmarked for death and executed on October 9, 1934.  One by one, they were shot and fell into a common grave.  Their crime was the teaching of catechism and the furthering of Catholic culture and subculture.

It is to Saint Inocencio’s glory that he would risk any danger to hear confessions and to celebrate the sacraments.  Inocencio was personally embarrassed by two characteristics, his inability to clearly enunciate his own Spanish language and his obvious baldness.  In fact, he is always photographed with a hat on his head.  He thought of himself as one of the “little ones.”  However, he became the epitome of the goals of the Passionist Congregation and one of its glories.  He is the first Passionist priest after Saint Paul of the Cross to be canonized.  The group of Christian Brothers and Father Inocencio are known as “The Martyrs of Turon.”

- Fr. Jerome Vereb, C.P.

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