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A new Rector at Notre-Dame d’Afrique in Algiers

Born in Ireland in 1964, Father Michael O’Sullivan attended a Trappist Fathers boarding school in Tipperary County and entered the White Fathers in 1983. Attracted by the call to be a missionary in the Arabian-Muslim environment, he did an internship (stage) for two years at Ghardaïa, before continuing his theological studies in Toulouse. Ordained priest in 1991, he spent a year in Adrar before being sent to Rome for studies.

Then he is asked to leave for Sudan where he spends seven years in Khartoum. Knowing the Melchite rite, he spent a sabbatical year in 2001 at the Orthodox monastery of Balamand in Lebanon, where he attended oriental liturgy classes in Arabic. He is also several times a vicar priest in the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Yemen.

In 2003 back in Rome, he defended a thesis in Islamology. He is then sent to Jerusalem. During his ten years in the Holy City, he was appointed director of the House of Abraham and representative of Catholic Relief in the Holy Land. Then for four years in Dubai, in the Vicariate of Southern Arabia, he was the diocesan treasurer in this vast diocese. His interests in music led him to sing with choirs in Jerusalem and Dubai. He is happy to serve the Church of Algeria as rector of one of its most beautiful and symbolic places, the Basilica of Our Lady of Africa.

Taken from  « Notre-Dame d’Afrique – Lettre aux amis – Février 2018 »
Translation: webmaster

A joint youth pilgrimage for peace (PE nr. 1087 – 2018/01)

Already published on the International Website on January 2Oth, 2018

Cornelius (Kees) Akkermans 1929-2017 (PE nr. 1087 – 2018/01)

Kees, as he was affectionately known to his family and confreres, was born in Teteringen in the Diocese of Breda on the 30th September, 1929. At the age of 20 he decided to apply to join the Missionaries of Africa as a Brother. After postulancy he was received into the Novitiat e at s’Heerenberg on the 7th of September, 1951. After 2 years he made his first profession on the 6th August, 1953. He then went to Luxemburg to the Brothers’ Scolasticate for Continue reading “Cornelius (Kees) Akkermans 1929-2017 (PE nr. 1087 – 2018/01)”

Jean-Pierre Pickard 1926 – 2017 (PE nr. 1087 – 2018/01)

Jean-Pierre was born on the 18th September 1926 in Schaerbeek, one of the 19 municipalities of the city of Bruxelles. Primary schooling was at a school run by the De La Salle Brothers. He did his secondary schooling at the Institut Sainte-Marie in Schaerbeek. In 1944, in the middle of the war, he entered the White Fathers at Thy-le-Château. The novitiate at Varsenare followed and he studied Theology at Heverlee, where he Continue reading “Jean-Pierre Pickard 1926 – 2017 (PE nr. 1087 – 2018/01)”

John Lynch 1936-2017 (PE nr. 1087 – 2018/01)

John’s health had been poor for as long as anyone could remember. He fell almost daily, did fall or collapse occasionally, was often in pain, had digestive problems, walked with difficulty and still survived and remained actively present in community. We began to think he was indestructible.

Then suddenly he was gone! On Thursday evening, September 21st, after a rosary walk with Jean Robitaille, he left the house for his Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. Pushing his walker across the church parking lot, he was knocked to the ground in a freak bicycle accident. That night, he lay in the hospital and totally in character telling Jean: “Get me out of here.” His brain was bleeding, however, and soon he fell into a coma. He died the next morning.

With a mixture of sadness, love, and gratitude, friends and colleagues gathered for memorial Masses in the US and in Scotland. In Scotland, there were former Young Missionaries, survivors from a group John helped found in his early years. In Florida, the community remembered him as a born leader, a steady presence, and a “go to guy.” Two Irish American men who met John only recently at AA mourned the loss of their new friend. They recalled his wise presence in their group. “John said little the first few times although there was something profound about his presence. One evening, the topic had touched “spirituality” and John stood up and leaning on the chair in front of him as everyone looked and listened: “Faith,” he said,” as he often did, “is nothing more than believing something on the word of another.”

In Washington, the Africa Faith and Justice Network recognized his major role there and everyone recalled his charm, humour, and wisdom. In all three places there was the shared memory of a dynamic priest. The love and respect for him was shared by all.

John Lynch was born in Newmills, Fife, Scotland on the 18th April 1936. After secondary school he studied at the Priory, Bishop Waltham. He studied Philosophy in Blacklion, Ireland and did his novitiate in s’Heerenberg (Netherlands). Four years of Theology in Carthage in Muslim Tunisia followed. He took his Missionary Oath there on the 27th June 1961. This would prove to be his longest stay on the African continent. He was ordained priest on the 30th June 1962 at Oakley, in the Archdiocese of Edinburgh.

At Carthage, though he fitted in well, he had a difficult time with his health. After ordination, he was appointed to Uganda but he was held in Scotland on doctors’ orders after major stomach surgery. He never really got over this loss. He served as bursar, teacher, Vocations’ Director and promoter of Missions in the various houses of the British Province, St.Boswells, Bishop’s Waltham, Dorking and Rutherglen. His football skills and youthful personality touched many young people. In 1972, he began his long service in the then American province. He did a little more vocation work, then studied counselling, earning a MA from Loyola University, Chicago. He served as counsellor and spiritual director to a large community of Religious Sisters in Michigan for five years. Returning to Chicago, he coordinated a modestly successful Associates program sending a handful of Associates overseas including an outstanding priest from Milwaukee, Father Jerome Thompson, who served for a number of years in Tunisia and other countries.

By this time, John was an important presence in the US Province. He was Provincial from 1987 to 1994 and in 1999 he became Provincial Treasurer and worked on the fundraising program. Feeling the need for lay expertise, he hired an assistant who now directs the fundraising effort.

John had a rich and interesting personality. He was always the first to welcome newcomers with that broad smile of his and to engage with them and listen to them. He loved being in community and loved being around people. Red of hair and complexion, he was not to be pushed too far or frustrated too much. He adopted America as his country yet remained a Scot. Never losing touch with his roots, he spent home leaves in Scotland enjoying time with his sister, friends, and with the Rutherglen community. Every once in a while, in America, he would regale us again and again with tales of the eccentric and cantankerous pastor of his youth. Then he would break into bursts of inscrutable and entertaining dialect. He loved to joke and tease, humour fuelled by a certain irony and near pessimism regarding human nature.

Without illusion, firm and tough though he was, he could be a soft touch for the hard luck story. His heart was too big. With confreres or “colleagues,” as he liked to call them, he was generous to a fault. He survived on indomitable tenacity, not without a streak of stubbornness. In the labyrinth that is the Washington house, you always worried that he would fall down the stairs. You could tell him to please take the elevator but he seemed to regard that as “giving in” and the day after your request you would meet him dragging himself up the main stairway.
Poor health not only took away his dream of Africa. He also suffered from alcoholism, a condition that became urgent early on in America. Humbled by this addiction in the 1970s, he had to accept treatment and, through AA, face the challenge of interior growth. There he learned to call difficult problems by their names and to acknowledge his own challenges. In his fading years giving homilies at Mass in the Washington community, he would sharpen his tone, naming something needing improvement in our life together. He would pause briefly and glance around the room daring us to deny it!

On a trip to Uganda in 1983, he gave a retreat to a group of diocesan priests amazing them by his open admission of his own struggles with alcohol. As Provincial and Provincial Treasurer, he had to confront very difficult situations and often painful decisions. This helped both individual confreres and the Province/Sector as a whole.

During the last fifteen years of his life, he suffered from painful back spasms, underwent knee and shoulder operations, had serious stomach ailments and reduced mobility. All this struggle and suffering, by the Grace of God, transformed him into an outstanding Missionary of Africa.

As a leader of Missionaries and a friend and counsellor to Religious Sisters, seekers and many recovering alcoholics, John channelled his struggles, illness, pains, and losses into a wisdom we could count on. He never stopped searching for depth of spirit. His book shelves were filled with the latest writings of Nouwen and Rohr and many others. He was the “Wounded Healer” of Henri Nouwen. In time of trouble we could go to him not for a pat on the back or cheap optimism but for authentic hope, the hope spoken of by St Peter in his letter. He would listen to us, respond, and then share from his own life. We missionaries would leave ready to continue our journeys on the road to healing.

Bob McGovern, M.Afr.

Welcoming new members of the Society in the best possible way (PE nr. 1087 – 2018/01)

In consultation with the Administrative Secretary of the Society, we are recommending that those responsible for the 4th Phase of Formation and the Provincial Secretaries to send us in good time the list of confreres who will take their Missionary Oath and/or will be ordained Deacon or Priest. Please include the following information: Parish and Diocese of origin of the student, the date and place of the Oath and/or Ordination, the Province to which he is appointed and of course, a photo of each confrere whom you wish to present to the Society. The webmaster and the editor of the Petit Echo will only be too happy to publish this information so that we may all share the joy of welcoming these new confreres.

Freddy Kyombo, M.Afr.

Évangéliser aujourd’hui, Le sens de la mission – Review

Pierre Diarra, Évangéliser aujourd’hui, Le sens de la mission, Mame 2017 – 86 pages – 10 €

We have here a very interesting little book which could help many of us to spread the missionary ideal and evangelisation. In his preface, Cardinal Fernando Filoni, Prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples, presents the book as “a text written for formation and missionary animation.” Nowadays, we are called to be missionary more by “a contagious love” than by a “strategy of conquest” (p.7). In his introduction, the author Continue reading “Évangéliser aujourd’hui, Le sens de la mission – Review”

Integrity of creation: Missionaries of Africa’s contribution (PE nr. 1087 – 2018/01)

Considering the current ecological crisis, the 2016 Chapter was concerned about the question of Integrity of Creation and called for a fervent devotion to eco-spirituality – “With the help of Church documents on eco-spirituality such as Laudato Si’ and available resource materials of the Society, we recommend that recollections and sessions be organized at Provincial and Sector levels” (CA, 1.3.). The Chapter requested that communities be ‘good examples of environmental protection’. Let us be a “Green Church”. It exhorted us to Continue reading “Integrity of creation: Missionaries of Africa’s contribution (PE nr. 1087 – 2018/01)”

Take up your pens, dear confreres! (PE nr. 1087 – 2018/01)

The Editorial Board of the Petit Echo wishes you a very Happy New Year! This year we will continue to look more closely at the different themes of our last General Chapter, notably Formation, at the service of confreres and of the mission, the government and structures of the Society, the finances of the Society and, of course, the 150th anniversary of the Society.

The General Council would like each confrere to participate in one way or another supplying material to our family magazine. The most direct way is to contribute an article which would support confreres in keeping the flame of mission alive.

As Editor I would like to ask you to send articles to us based on your own personal experiences of the mission entrusted to you. We are not interested in any way in learned articles, all we are asking is that you share how you live out your mission there where the Society has planted you and what are the ‘fruits’ that the Lord has produced through your availability. What were my ‘desert’ moments? What were my rewarding experiences? By doing this, we will be telling people of the hope dwelling in us and telling each other that the Lord’s work in which we participate and for which we have given our lives, is not in vain and is worth proclaiming on the rooftops of the world.

You do not have to be a famous author or an intellectual, this concerns all the confreres who have been appointed and sent on a specific mission by the Society be it in Africa or outside Africa. It means sharing generously and simply our joy at following the Lord on the sometimes twisting paths of the mission. We should not look down on the ‘insignificant’ experiences we have; maybe a devoted catechist teaching children catechism in a village, or teaching secondary school students, accompanying a parish group, or just simply being a chaplain to those on the peripheries or the sick. There are so many edifying stories to tell.

Normally we ask confreres to write articles of 900 words and to send us three of four photos as illustrations. This fills four pages of the Petit Echo. The editorial board has the role of deciding which articles should be published. If you are not sure of the ‘readability’ of your article, then you can give permission to the editorial board to improve the style (including basic corrections). What we really need is your story and your experiences which go to make up the life of our ‘little’ Society.

You may be interested by the history surrounding the beginning of such and such a mission and if you have details (dates of events, names of people, places and photos etc.) do not hesitate to write a good article (up to 2,000 words). It is an opportunity to showcase a number of our confreres who showed proof of extraordinary zeal. It is a way of thanking God for the particular gifts given to our Society over the course of the years. In fact our column “150 years, 6,500 missionaries” is there for that. It is our space to honour and relate the lives of confreres who have really inspired us and opened up unexpected paths of doing mission.

So, confreres take up your pens (or cursor) and write! Each of us has his own “sacred history;” tell us about it!

Freddy Kyombo, M.Afr.

Sister Helen Scullion (Margaret of Scotland), R.I.P.

The Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Africa
invite you to pray for

Sister Helen Scullion (Margaret of Scotland)

originally from the diocese of Motherwell,
and from the community of Maryville Care Home, London
who entered into eternal life at Maryville Care Home, London
on 31st January 2018 at the age of 89
of which 62 years of religious missionary life
in Algeria, Ghana and the U. K.