Missionary Oblate Partners Present Capacity Building Workshops – Chennai, India
- At February 15, 2014
- By Admin
- In India, Mission Stories, News, Our Mission Work
0
For several years, one of the services of the Missionary Oblate Partnership has been “capacity-building,” teaching developing-world Oblates and their collaborators “how to fish,” providing workshops on grantwriting, financial development and leadership. During the week of January 20-25, the Partnership traveled to Chennai, INDIA and delivered 2 workshops to Oblate leadership from India, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka and an additional 2 workshops to local Oblate superiors of the India Province along with the women religious with whom they collaborate.
Read More»Our Lady’s Hospice gets new solar geysers for the wards
- At November 12, 2012
- By getchart
- In Africa, Communication, Mission Stories, News, Our Mission Work, Zambia
0
Our Lady’s Hospice was founded in 2001 in Kalingalinga, a neighborhood of Lusaka, Zambia, when caregivers were first trained for a Home-Based Care program for people suffering from HIV/ AIDS.
Kalingalinga is one of the poorest areas of Lusaka and has a population of around 200,000 – 250,000 people. The public hospitals are overflowing with terminally ill patients, and there is a need to house and care for these patients.
The Zambia Delegation of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate was one of the four religious congregations involved in building the Hospice that helps providing palliative end-of-life care for patients with HIV/AIDS.
The first inpatients were admitted in 2003. Free Anti-Retroviral drugs came in 2004 and revolutionized the care that the Hospice offers to HIV+ clients.
Today, the hospice runs an Outpatient Clinic, a Children’s Clinic, and offers inpatient services through 30 beds spread across wards – St Joseph (male ward), St Anne (female ward), St Clare (income generating high cost ward), St Jude (semi private), and Maluba House (Children’s ward).
St Joseph and St Anne are the general wards, and patients admitted to these wards are provided with clinical and nursing care, meals and drugs for a nominal fee that does not cover the cost of care. Also, a hostel has been built for volunteers to stay in.
The Oblate Partnership also ssisted the Hospice to obtain a grant for $5,000 to purchase and install geysers to provide hot water for showers in the male ward and the hostel, all other wards already had hot water.
The geysers are now installed and working well and the patients are benefiting tremendously from the availability of running hot water.
- St. Joseph Ward’s new geyser
Professional training for young women in Luanda, Angola
- At August 21, 2012
- By getchart
- In Africa, Communication, Mission Stories, News
0
The Oblate Santo André Oblate Parish is situated in one of the poorest neighborhoods of Luanda, the capital of Angola. Most of the 16,000 parishioners are former refugees of the country’s 27-year civil war.
Angola is now as a post conflict country and has begun its reconstruction.
During the period of civil war, many children and youth could not attend school for reasons, such as being orphans of both parents, poverty, being refugees, or for lack of functioning schools in the areas they lived. The result is a current high number of illiterate adults that are at disadvantage at finding employment.
Particularly vulnerable among these persons are young women and girls.
Many of them not only did not attend school but got pregnant very early in life either because they had married very young or because they were forced to live with men in order to survive the war.
Rather than completing secondary school, many of these young ladies want to get their lives back and to support their children as single mothers. Many times, professional formation is the only alternative they have.
The Missionary Oblate Partnership is supporting a project launched in 2011 with the assistance of two private foundations, to train these young women in three areas with good employment opportunities: interior decoration, culinary arts and pastry cooking, and hotel keeping and hospitality
The courses are offered in a center that belongs to the Santo André Oblate Parish and is under the authority of ProMAICa (Promoção da Mulher Angolana na Igreja Catolica.or Promotion of Angolan Women in the Catholic Church), a Catholic women organization. The center has a capacity to train 75 women and girls per year.
Many of the attendees pay full or partial tuition but many others need financial assistance. The local Oblates address this situation and the sustainability of the program through strategies such as catering for local events, selling what the students have prepared, and providing the students’ services.
June brings good news for mission’s Special Children in Tijuana: A new bus
- At July 17, 2012
- By getchart
- In Mission Stories, News, Our Mission Work, Tijuana
0
The month of June brought good news for the Special Children of Tijuana. In 2009, the San Eugenio Mission started a “Giving Hope to Special Kids” Program to provide services to children with special needs (i.e. autism, attention deficit disorders, Williams Syndrome, sight and hearing deficiencies, and others) that are left behind by the local public school system.
In June, the program received much needed help, a new bus to provide transportation to the center for these special children, and their families. The new bus purchase was only possible thanks to grants from an U.S. foundation and the Mexican government.
Staffed by a team that includes a psychologist, a social worker, a special education teacher, a language therapist, and a coordinator, the program gives these children a chance to be diagnosed and treated, as well as to learn.
More that 140 young people have already been receiving these services for some time, but many more in some of the most remote areas of the mission were limited in their ability to travel to the community center where the services take place.
To reach out to these latter children and their families, who do not have the ability to travel to the community center, and transport these children to the center and back everyday, last June the San Eugenio Mission was able to purchased a new bus.
The purchase was made possible by a grant from an American private foundation and one from the Mexican government.
Bangladesh
- At April 10, 2012
- By getchart
- In Asia
0
The Oblate Delegation in Bangladesh was started in 1973. Today, it has 33 members spread in four Dioceses: Dhaka, Sylhet, Chittagong, and Rajshahi. Oblate ministries include several parishes and schools, a cultural center, a medical clinic, and a religious vocation program. In addition, the Oblates work closely with the many tribal communities, to promote the love of God and defend the rights of the indigenous (native) people.
The Partnership is supporting the Oblate Delegation of Bangladesh to obtain funds to build a Delegation House, combined with Office, meeting facilities, and rooms for elderly Fathers.
La Morita Mission, So close. Yet… So Far!
- At March 01, 2012
- By Oblate Partnership
- In Mission Stories, News, Tijuana
0
By Patricio Espinoza, OblateMissions.org
La Morita is a community south of the California, Mexico border. Here Oblate Missionaries serve more than 250,000 people.
In 2010 Partners visited La Morita Mission, as part of a field trip to the site during the Missionary Oblate Partnership Meeting and Retreat in San Diego California.
La Morita is only minutes south of the Tijuana-San Diego border. Four Oblates and one brother manage Casa San Eugenio, several chapels , a clinic, a community center and more. The streets are only dirt roads that turn into thick layers of mud during the rainy winter months.
And life? Life is not easy here, most families survive doing odd jobs, many are elderly, and the young are unemployed. Often a family’s weekly income barely covers their basic needs like groceries.
Oblate Missionaries in La Morita bring as much comfort as their resources and donations allow. Their medical center helps children and the elderly, there is also help and education for children with special needs, and on a weekly basis many of the families receive their “despensa”, a groceries bag with basic foods including milk, rice, beans, oil.
OBLATE SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY
- At January 24, 2012
- By getchart
- In USA
0
The Oblate School of Theology is a graduate and professional school founded in 1903 by the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate to educate young men to serve as Oblate priests and brothers in the United States and foreign missions.
At present, it educates a diverse population of students including those in priestly formation, lay students who will serve as lay ecclesial ministers and others who simply want to deepen their knowledge of theology.
Example of the School’s programs, besides those leading to priesthood are:
The Ministry to Ministers Program started in 1981 and that provides intensive spiritual and theological sabbatical experience for priests and religious men and women who have been in ministry for a number of years;
The Lay Ministry Institute that opened its doors in 1982; and
The Instituto de Formación Pastoral that was started in 1985.
These last two programs prepare candidates theologically and spiritually in certificate programs for pastoral lay ministry.
In 1992, the Oblate School of Theology assumed the responsibility for the Oblate Renewal Center that offers a variety of programs and retreats to respond to the needs of the local church.
Oblate Media
- At January 24, 2012
- By getchart
- In USA
0
Oblate Media and Communication is a media ministry of the United States Province of Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. Founded in 1982, its purpose is to evangelize through electronic media and to
“… bear witness to the message announced by Jesus and handed on by the Catholic Church” (OMCC Mission Statement).
Oblate Media produces a variety of programs including: catechetical programs aimed at teaching and strengthening faith in audiences ranging from pre-school through adulthood and documentary programs that focus on issues of peace and justice in addition to faith.
Sri Lanka
- At January 23, 2012
- By getchart
- In Asia
0
The Oblates have been missionaries in Sri Lanka for over 160 years. After having trained the local clergy to take over the various ministries, 30 years ago they began to concentrate on other missions and ministries both in the country and overseas (India, Pakistan and Bangladesh). Today there are two Oblate provinces in Sri Lanka, Jaffna in the North and Colombo in the South.
The Oblates act as parish priests, intermediary school teachers, youth ministers, lecturers in the major seminaries, inter-religious dialogue, justice and peace, preaching and healing ministries and particularly helping the poor.
One project launched by the Sri Lankan Oblates is an immersion program on English and Life Education to as many as 50 young girls each year. This training will give these young women better chances for future employment and a more plentiful life. The Partnership is providing support to write grants for this project.