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Care for the elderly confreres in St. Charles, Heythuysen (PE nr 1090 – 2018/04)

This article offers information about the team of lay people at the service of elderly confreres in St. Charles, Heythuysen. The team is composed of three ladies: One coordinator, Jose Hendriks, and two contact-persons Annie Keijsers and Marian Timmermans.

From left to right: Annie Keijsers, Jose Hendriks, Marian Timmermans

It is a pleasure for me to describe my experiences in my function as Coordinator of the White Fathers community in St. Charles.

The care for the material interests of the community and the spiritual and physical well-being of the confreres are at the core of our job. First and foremost comes our personal contact with the Missionaries of Africa in Heythuysen. We are also responsible for the external contacts such as with the local GP, the Local Council, the relatives, or the Land van Horne Institution which provides the overall care and from which we rent the flats.

In order to fulfil, as best as possible, the above mentioned core tasks, it was important in the beginning, that we got to know the White Fathers as such, their needs and wishes with regard to community life for instance. We therefore thought it of great importance to create an atmosphere in which the community could flourish, and which responds to their needs.

Their confidence in us had to grow; this happened in a natural way by our readiness to be of assistance to them.

The Situation

The Dutch Sector has only one community; it is St. Charles in Heythuysen. 36 White Fathers live in this community. Their average age is 82.8 years.

St. Charles is a complex of 79 flats with in-house care facilities, of which the White Fathers rent 36.The Land van Horne Institution owns the building and provides the overall care.

Each confrere lives in his own flat. We try to let them live as independently for as long as possible with appropriate help.

The meals are taken together in the restaurant. In this restaurant, a section is reserved for the confreres. Three times a day they meet to enjoy their meals together. In the course of the morning and afternoon they can have a coffee/tea break together; it is their meeting-place.

Each day there is the Eucharist at 9.30 in the morning and vespers at 17.00 hours. Adoration takes place every Sunday.

To receive confreres living outside the community or who are still in Africa, we are renting three guest-rooms. These are at our disposal for the whole year, and are frequently used; not only by confreres but also by relatives and friends of the WFs.

The front of the house at Heythuysen as it was a few years ago

Care and Help

The Coordination team arranges transport for the sick, makes medical appointments, organises outings, maintenance of the house, contacts with relatives and discusses any issues with the care-providers, and the domestic staff. The coordinator and contact-persons are informed about appointments with the local GPs and specialists and if needs be, one of them accompanies the confrere to his appointment. The Team also makes requests for more skilled care and for all sorts of supporting equipment. Some confreres are able to drive themselves to appointments or are driven by a volunteer. However, we do notice that confreres are getting older and less mobile.  We have to watch out that they will not overtax themselves, as they all are getting on in age.

All the confreres in St. Charles receive domestic help to clean their flat. For most of them, the expenses are reimbursed by the Local Council. We have to apply for them to be registered and the Land van Horne Institute will provide the personnel if the application is granted.

Regarding personal care, a number of confreres are totally autonomous and do not need help. For those who do need help, we can apply for help and again the Institute will provide the personnel if the help is granted. For this too, we have to pay a contribution, the rest is paid by the health insurance or the government. It is one of our tasks to keep the registrations up to date, or when more care is needed to ensure that the appropriate measures are provided.

Self-sufficiency is promoted by the government. Health-care in the Netherlands has become too expensive, and is becoming more so every year. One is expected to live independently at home for as long as possible, and that’s why people is starting to take better care of their health, with good diets and supplements from sites as reportshealthcare.com. Still people are growing older and needing more care and attention, and Government subsidies are getting less.

The confreres help one another but due to their age, this is getting harder and more demanding. This means that we feel a great responsibility towards the community especially in these times when people are needed who will notice what is required, and who will take the necessary steps.

The jubilarians at Heythuysen on the 29th June 2017

Our Experience

Now, after having worked here for 8 years, I can say that we, Annie, Marian and I, have got a good bond with the White Fathers. We have become part of the scenery and trusted contact-persons. More and more we are becoming part and parcel of their daily lives in St. Charles. We feel accepted and respected, and confident to continue on the road taken.

This work is giving us a lot of satisfaction, because we are able to be close to people and to be of direct service to our fellowmen; particularly so to this special group of men who have always been at the service of others. We feel it as a privilege to be allowed to do so; we keep learning more every day, and it is enriching our own lives.

Jose Hendriks

Retirement as active as possible (PE nr 1090 – 2018/04)

“Efforts need to be made to make retirement as active as possible.” (AC.5.3-a)

This wish, expressed in the Capitular Documents, can be an obsession, sometimes painful but always persistent, with all those responsible for our communities of elderly confreres. A long time ago, it was during the 80s, I was a nurse in our retirement house in Tassy for three great years but they were not easy ones. Now and for the last three years, I find myself responsible for our retirement/nursing home at Bry sur Marne. The circumstances of these two periods of service were completely different but I tried to do all that I could so that this aspiration was not just pie in the sky. However, there are certain warning signs that cannot be ignored and I would like to draw attention to them here.

A retirement home is not a novitiate: we cannot consider our elderly confreres as the young people of the future! On the contrary, each confrere has had an extraordinary experience of a life of incalculable riches with a raft of unique personal experiences. Therefore, he cannot be made to fit into a mould, thanks be to God that would stamp out his particular personality. Neither is it a question of locking him into any old system in what we judiciously call “retirement homes.”  Each elderly confrere has spontaneously written, in his own way, a page of the history of the African Church, so he is worthy of admiration, and still more, he deserves to have his freedom respected.

Our retirement home for elderly confreres in Bry-sur-Marne

The disciples of Jesus returned from their mission enthusiastic but tired. As a consequence, Jesus invited them, from the depths of his compassion, and even more from his immense respect for each of them to “come and rest awhile.” Is that not the best possible invitation we can offer to our confreres returning definitively from Africa? Or will they add to their exhaustion by undertaking more years of service in their Province of origin before finally being able to take a little bit of rest? They often do so because, although they are tired, they do not know it yet or hide it for fear of being appointed to a hospice for the dying. However, once they have crossed the threshold of our house, many forget quite quickly all thoughts about the  pastoral work they were going to do before coming in because, suddenly released from all care, the fatigue they had hidden from themselves suddenly overcomes them. Then they appreciate they have much less material cares, they have a lovely room cleaned every day by the staff of the house, suitable food, a well organised spiritual life in the midst of a large and supportive community. Now they can really take it easy because they deserve it.

Community Mass in Bry-sur-Marne

So what does it mean to say “to make retirement as active as possible”? Above all, it means respecting their liberty. There are those who like to read and/or write, there are the web junkies, there are those, if they can still manage it, who like to go out to parishes, others pass their time in front of the TV or in the chapel. Still others like DIY activities, others like games, some like walking, still more visit the sick confreres or those who are dependent. Some old confreres like to frequent exhibitions and there are those who just dream…However all have one thing in common, they listen to themselves grow old, unconsciously they watch the first symptoms of illness, infirmities, dependence…or that things are not getting better and that determines how they spend their time. How do we keep them occupied? By what right can we prevent them from living their “today” in faith and abandonment? What if living, at their age, was simply living in the present as best as possible, each in his own way, while they enjoy community life, which is absolutely essential in their eyes? In that case, the role of the responsible is to respect their liberty and create a suitable climate adapted to helping them fulfil their ongoing missionary vocation. Everything must be done to stimulate a community life of great richness and incredible diversity. There is, of course, the fixed framework of a retirement/nursing home with its particular timetable and that applies here in Bry with its more than 15 lay staff members. There is a concern to keep everybody aware of the ‘outside’ world and to be actively present through encounters, sharing, the recounting of memories (ah yes) and of course through prayer. One can organise any amount of “sessions” (CA, 5.3b) or “twinning” (CA.5.3g) but if their personality is not respected, then their daily life becomes miserable.

We are grateful to our elderly confreres for their constant prayers for the Mission in Africa (CA.5.3c).

A very elderly confrere made this remark to me after reading this passage, “Do they imagine that because we are at the end of our lives, it is easier for us to pray better than when we were younger…”

Certainly, our elderly confreres try to do their best to pray for the Mission in Africa; but we should never forget that they also need our prayers at this crucial period of their earthly life.

 

 

 

 

Clément Forestier

Elderly Confreres (PE nr 1090 – 2018/04)

Some authors argue that our lives have in recent years become longer, safer, happier, more peaceful, more stimulating and more prosperous, not just in the West but worldwide. Certainly, as a Society we can be proud of our concern and continued support of our elderly confreres so that they are able to live happy and fulfilled lives knowing that wherever we are we never stop being the missionaries we were called to be and that we are surrounded with love and care.

   Certainly, when we were young we were able to take on the world and so many other tasks alone, we were almost invincible, and our energy never seemed to waver; that is why maybe we resist the thought of ageing and the very idea that we will not go on forever. The truth is as we grow older we become more acutely aware of the many losses that our age brings, our health, our strength, the people we love, a place within a given community and the status and purpose such a life gave us, although we can still look young with the help of socialist as the Dr. Greg Fedele, we still want more in life. When we were younger it was as if we were dancing through life, despite the trials and the many challenges that we faced in our missionary endeavour. It would be good to remind ourselves of the words of Carl Jung: “the afternoon of human life must have a significance of its own and cannot be merely a pitiful appendage to life’s morning.” Hopefully our older self has more depth and resonance than our youth, however having said that it is our attitude towards our losses that will determine the quality of our senior years. Some would say that we have to mourn our losses, a mourning that is also a liberation, which leads us to discover the ability and joy to embrace life as we have always done but in such a way that it continues to be an intense and varied experience. Our age does not mean that we are out of the game, that we are powerless, or that we cannot influence life in our Society or that that we are unable to witness to the power of the Gospel. We are not to be spectators of our life but immerse ourselves in it – for the time is always now.

What’s more the ageing process offers us fresh opportunities to grow. The elderly, once vibrant and independent, now learn a fresh dependence on others. And the young and energized can find new ways to serve the older generation. Both those who need care and those who offer it can grow in character. As elderly confreres we have something to offer, to our communities, to our Society, and to our friends and family.  Echoing the great American spiritual writer Thomas Merton, I believe that the only real journey in life is the inner journey – not in any way an ego-centric one, but the journey of self-discovery, from the false self to the true self – it is the journey that makes us aware that such changes in our life are not so much losses but the recovery of that which is deepest, most original, most personal in ourselves. Hopefully as we age there will be more wisdom, more freedom, more flexibility, more candour, more self- honesty and the beautiful experience that being born again is not to become somebody else, but to become ourselves.

I end this editorial with a quote from Beyers Naude, the great South African theologian:  

“Every day that I live becomes more meaningful, more fulfilled, and, for me, much more enriching. Time is too short, so I’ve discovered, for all the tremendous revelations of the love of God which he has given to me – new insights, new visions, new possibilities, new dimensions of human living, new relationships with people around me, new depths of concern, and of agony, and of joy which make my life – yes, I can truly say it – so deeply meaningful that I’m eager when I go to bed at night to awake the next morning and to say, ‘It’s a new day, a new life, it’s a new experience of God and of humankind.”  (Beyers Naude)

 

 

 

 

Francis Barnes,
1st Assistant General

Editor’s Word (PE nr 1090 – 2018/04)

The confreres of the General Council who visit the communities of our elderly confreres are often impressed by their interest in the mission and in our missionary Society. This reflects the missionary dynamism that continues to support their lives in their retirement.

One of the preoccupations of the last Chapter was exactly that: “Sustaining the missionary dynamism of our sick and elderly confreres while providing them with appropriate care (medical, psychological, and spiritual)” (CA 5.3). Some of those responsible for the communities of our elders have accepted to share briefly the spirit which reigns in our retirement homes.

Growing old and the loss of some mobility is not a reason to let go of one’s ideal or to quit. It is sensible to adopt a strategy adapted to one’s means and to do what one can with what one has. One remains totally a missionary even if sometimes one’s activities are limited to praying for those who are involved directly in pastoral work, those who are preparing for it and those who serve us all. We need our old people.

Freddy Kyombo

Réal Doucet, new AMS provincial

After consultation of the confreres appointed to or coming from the Province of the Americas (AMS) after a deliberative vote of the General Council and after having obtained his agreement, the Superior General, Fr. Stanley Lubungo, has appointed Fr. Réal DOUCET as Provincial Superior of the Americas for a first mandate from 01st July 2018 till 30th June 2021.

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A recollection from Nigeria

James Ngahy

Here comes a recollection given by James Ngahy, M.Afr. for the Nigeria Sector at the end of April on the theme :

AN APPROPRIATE TIME TO RECHARGE OUR SPIRITUAL BATTERY:
CREATED HUMAN AS A MISSIONARY OF AFRICA I AM TO BE AS WE CELEBRATE THE 150th ANNIVERSARY OF OUR FOUNDATION

John Michael (Ben) Henze, R.I.P.

Father Terry Madden, Provincial Delegate of the sector of Great Britain,
informs you of the return to the Lord of Father

John Michael (Ben) Henze

on Monday the 7th May 2018 at Ealing Hospital (London – UK)
at the age of 84 years, of which 57 years of missionary life
in Zambia and in the United Kingdom.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

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150 people for the 150st in The Netherlands

The MSOLA (Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Africa) in the Netherlands reopened their exhibition “The White Caravan” in the Center of the Religious Heritage in Sint Agatha (near Nijmegen), an exhibition celebrating the 150th anniversary of the founding of the “Lavigerie Family” (the Missionaries of Africa and the Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Africa).

The religious ceremony took place on 29 April 2018 in the presence of Sister MacDonald, MSOLA Superior in the United Kingdom and Fr. Jozef de Bekker, Provincial Delegate of the Missionaries of Africa in the Netherlands.

The celebration was animated by the Parish Choir of St. Charles Lwanga in The Hague and the 150 people present at the celebration ended up being drawn to the festive dance.

The exhibition is open until 21 October 2018 and, in the meantime, five lectures will be given :
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Fernand Mertens, R.I.P.

Father Emmanuel Ngona, Provincial of Central Africa
and Father Luc Putzeys, Provincial Delegate of the sector of Belgium,
inform you of the return to the Lord of Father

Fernand Mertens

on Saturday 5th Mai 2018 at St. Francis’ Hospital in Kampala (Uganda)
at the age of 76 years, of which 50 years of missionary life
mainly in D.R. Congo.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

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Gérard Reynaert, R.I.P.

Father Aloysius SSekamatte, Provincial of the East African Province
and Father Luc Putzeys, Provincial Delegate of Belgium
inform you of the return to the Lord of Father

Gérard Reynaert

on Thursday 3 April 2018 at St. Francis’ Hospital
Nsambiya (Kampala) – Uganda
at the age of 92 years, of which 66 years of missionary life in Uganda.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

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