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Martin Addai 10 years commemoration


Dear confreres, stagiaires and friends,

It has been ten years since our brother, Fr. Martin Addai, left us to the Father’s abode. As the formation house where Fr. Martin spent his final days in the mission, we wish to invite you all to join us on the 10th of March 2017, in commemorating his departure from this world.

On Friday, 10th of March 2017 here in the Formation House, Nairobi, the confreres working in Nairobi, the Missionary Sisters of our Lady of Africa (MSOLA) and the Friends of late Martin Addai shall be joining us in the thanksgiving Eucharistic celebration.

We want to thank God for the many years that our brother dedicated to service in God’s vineyard as a priest, formator, friend, lecturer and brother. In our prayers, we also remember all those who still need healing, regarding the tragic circumstances in which he was killed here in Nairobi.

We wish you all a fruitful celebration. May the Soul of late Martin Addai Rest in Perfect Peace.

Yours Fraternally,
Communication Team, Nairobi

Flash 2017 of the Swiss Sector (in French only)

« Malgré le lourd déclin des vocations, nous gardons l’espoir. Non que les choses redeviennent comme avant. Mais une renaissance est possible en adoptant l’esprit de l’apôtre Paul : se laisser saisir, accrocher par l’Evangile du Christ et prêcher cet évangile sans relâche. A l’issue du dernier Chapitre Général chargé de discerner ce qu’est notre mission aujourd’hui, un tel langage est bienvenu. Une des grandes questions a été : Comment répondre à la Mission de l’Eglise là où notre charisme est sollicité pour une mission prophétique de rencontre et de témoignage ? Tous les membres de la Société des Missionnaires d’Afrique, se trouvant aussi bien en Afrique que dans leurs pays d’origine ou ailleurs, se sont posé cette question. Le FLASH 2017 s’en fait l’écho. Comme chaque année, vous trouverez aussi quelques nouvelles du Secteur Suisse.

Télécharger le Flash Suisse de Février 2017

Jubilee of Mgr Michael Fitzgerald (PE nr. 1078)

On the 29th January 2017, our confrere His Lordship Michael Fitzgerald celebrated, at our Generalate, his Jubilee of 25 years as a Bishop. The mass was celebrated in the late afternoon, followed by a festive buffet. It was concelebrated by Cardinal Arinze, Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for Divine Worship, and Father Stanley Lubungo, General Superior of the Missionaries of Africa. Most confreres were present as well as many friends of Michael.

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Irénée Jacob 1938 – 2016 (PE nr. 1078)

Irénée was born at Saint-Tite in the district of Champlain, Quebec, Canada on the 14th April 1938. He attended primary school there before going for his secondary school education at St. Joseph’s Seminary in Trois-Rivières where he also studied Philosophy. On the 17th August 1957, he entered the novitiate of St-Martin de Laval near Montreal. The following year, he left for Carthage for four years of theological studies. Irénée blossomed in this international community, showing himself to be very open, respected for his commitment, for his jovial and obliging character and his apostolic spirit. He had a sensitive and tactful temperament, but vulnerable under the appearance of outward calm. His superiors recognised him as a generous and loyal confrere who merited their trust. Irénée took his Missionary Oath in Carthage on the 27th June 1961. He was ordained priest on the 30th June 1962 at Trois-Rivières.

Fr. Jacob found himself in Rome in September 1962 to study Dogmatic Theology. After completing his licentiate exams, he went to Switzerland for some rest. He then went to a poor parish in London for three weeks to learn some English. At the end of September 1964, he was at Lumen Vitae in Bruxelles to follow a course in Catechetics. In a letter to the Canadian Provincial, he wrote, “Regarding the courses in Lumen Vitae, it is a real psychological break when I compare them with the theological exams of last year which were a real nightmare and which drained me completely.”

Irénée was appointed to Rwanda in September 1965. He taught at the Catechetical Institute in Butare. Then he was sent to the Language Centre in Kigali to learn Kinyarwanda. In July 1966, he worked as a curate in Cyahinda and then in Muyunzwe. This period of parish work was a difficult time for Fr. Jacob. He had many qualities, was serious and supernatural, but was a perfectionist, which prevented him from taking initiatives. In August 1971, Irénée was appointed to Canada. He took time out for a well-earned rest. He then began studies in Educational Psychology at Trois-Rivieres while working in a city parish. He was then chaplain in a secondary school and liked to work in close collaboration with those teaching Catechetics.

In 1976, Fr. Jacob returned to Rwanda, firstly to Runaba in the Diocese of Ruhengeri. A year later, he was appointed to the Rural Formation Centre for Young People at Butamwa in the Diocese of Kigali. It was a training centre for young people coming from rural areas, which gave instruction in modern agricultural and breeding techniques over a period of two months. Irénée felt very much at home in this responsibility and worked very hard for the success of the centre of which he was Director. In this intense working conditions, he found a personal blossoming that allowed him overcome many personal difficulties.

Soon, the De La Sale Brothers took over the direction of the Butamwa Centre. Irénée was able to go on home leave and followed the Ignatian Spiritual Exercises in Daily Life. In 1981, he was appointed to the community attached to the Language Centre in Kigali. His task was to compile and publish a Kinyarwanda-French Dictionary. Irénée threw himself wholeheartedly into this monumental task. It became a dictionary in three volumes, comprising 25,000 words. Rwandan proverbs illustrated each word in order to define it in all its nuances. In the preface, our confrere reminded us that compiling a dictionary is a long and laborious enterprise. However, in undertaking this work, he had not begun from scratch. The work done by White Father confreres, which were used for many years for learning the language, helped him enormously. He told us, “For six years I compiled masses of documents which were put at my disposal by confreres and researchers at the Ministry of Education. The result was a dictionary in three big volumes of about 600 pages each. A real labour of love people said in order to tease me.” L’Institut National de Recherche Scientifique at Butare greatly facilitated the realisation of this project. The Canadian Ambassador in Kigali also collaborated in the publication of this landmark tome. The work caused him many grey hairs, some criticism, a big consolation, and a pacemaker for a heart, which had become very sluggish. Irénée had the joy of being decorated by the late President Habyalimana for this precise, protracted and fastidious work.

After a holiday in Canada, Fr. Jacob returned to the country of a 1000 hills in 1989. As professor at the Language Centre, he prepared a course for learning the Rwandan language for missionaries and expatriates working in the country. A few years later, he published Manuel d’apprentissage de la langue rwandaise (Twige Ikinyarwanda) in collaboration with a Dutch Presbyterian Pastor. A confrere who knew Irénée very well wrote, “All his life the Rwandan language played a big part in the missionary life of Irénée. As he was a perfectionist, he felt that he never knew the language well enough to express himself in front of people. So, he abstained from preaching and kept himself to himself. He spent his time studying the language. He even sat for long hours with primary school children and catechumens to keep his ear attuned to the local language. At that time, there were no benches so he sat on tree trunks with the children. Through sheer will power and hard work, he got to know the Kinyarwanda very well.”

Following the terrible events in 1994, after the assassination of the President, Fr. Jacob had to leave Rwanda hurriedly. It was a complete break from his missionary activity and his work of teaching the language. He suffered from a severe nervous shock and obviously needed time for some rest and to receive medical advice. In fact, his doctor advised him not to return to Rwanda before April 1995. In the meantime, he accepted a temporary appointment as Superior of our First Phase house in Ottawa.

Irénée returned to Rwanda in April 1995. He was stationed at the Regional House in Kigali. He gave some courses on the language and it was suggested to him that he polish up his homilies, given over many years, and to edit them for the good of the local Church because they contained great spiritual richness. He also got involved in parish ministry in Holy Family Parish.

However, by 2001, Fr. Jacob was worn our physically and psychologically. His health was badly shaken. He had to return to Canada for a long rest and treatment. He returned to Rwanda in 2006, this time to Butare and he took up some Parish ministry.

On the 22nd April 2010, at the Office of the Canadian Embassy, the Governor General of Canada held a reception in his honour. It was an occasion to present medals to honour those people who had contributed in a significant way to Canadian-Rwandese relationships and our confrere Fr. Irénée Jacob was among those honoured. The inscription accompanying the medal read, “The close ties that link Canada and Rwanda depend a great deal on the contribution of passionate people such as you, Fr. Irénée Jacob… Your love for this language of your host country has led you from learning it to teaching it as much to expatriates as to Rwandan citizens, to the writing of a Rwandan-French dictionary and a manual for learning this language. Without fear of contradiction, you are a worthy ambassador of the Canadian values of inclusion and the search for excellence.”

In September 2016, Irénée was taken to a clinic in Kigali. He was very weak, he could not feed himself and he often seemed confused. The doctors diagnosed a serious cancer. The confreres did their best to find a way of transporting him to a hospital in Canada where he might receive better care. However, he died in the ambulance en route to Kampala, Uganda, for a flight that was due to take him home. On 13th October 2016, at the Holy Family Parish, all the confreres celebrated Fr. Jacob’s Easter. The Archbishop of Kigali, Thaddée Ntihinyurwa and the Bishop of Butare, Philippe Rukamba presided over the Eucharist in the presence of a large number of Christians who were anxious to express their friendship and support to the White Fathers at this time of mourning. After the Mass, Bishop Rukamba, together with the confreres, accompanied the mortal remains of Irénée to their last resting place in the cemetery of Ndera about twenty kilometers from Kigali.

Let us give thanks to God, who allowed Irénée to die in the country where he had chosen to live, which he loved so well, and in which he had wanted to die. Irénée now rests among the Rwandan people whom he had served faithfully and with whom he loved to speak their language.

Michel Carbonneau, M.Afr.
Petit Echo nr. 1078

Roger Duvollet 1911 – 2016 (PE nr. 1078)

Roger was born on the 27th August 1911 at Vesoul in the east of France. He entered the Junior Seminary of Luxeuil in 1921 followed by studies at the Major Seminary of Besançon. He contacted the White Fathers in 1933 and in October of that year, he was admitted to the novitiate at Maison-Carée, Algiers. On the 1st October 1935, two days before the feast of St. Theresa of Lisieux, (then observed on the 3rd October), he took his Missionary Oath at Carthage. Continue reading “Roger Duvollet 1911 – 2016 (PE nr. 1078)”

Xavier Boinot 1918 – 2016 (PE nr. 1078)

Xavier was born on the 3rd December 1918 at Niort in the department of Deux-Sèvres, France. He was the tenth child in a family of eleven children. His family was deeply Christian and produced six priestly vocations. Two boys became Diocesan priests, one joined the Dominicans, and one joined the Benedictines while Xavier and his elder brother François joined the White Fathers. Continue reading “Xavier Boinot 1918 – 2016 (PE nr. 1078)”

Thomas Bradley 1931 – 2016 (PE nr. 1078)

Tom was born in Newry, Co. Down, Ireland on the 3rd June 1931. He was the eldest child in a deeply Catholic family of five children, three sisters and two brothers. Tom attended the Abbey School run by the Irish Christian Brothers in Newry from 1942 to 1946 and obtained the Junior Certificate of Education. Continue reading “Thomas Bradley 1931 – 2016 (PE nr. 1078)”

Clement Alekwe 1960 – 2015 (PE nr. 1078)

Fr Clement Alekwe was born on 7th March 1960, in Enugwu-Agidi, Diocese of Awka in Nigeria. He was the fourth child of a family of eight children. He took his Missionary Oath on the 7th of December 1991 in Totteridge, England and was ordained priest on the 22nd August 1992 in his home diocese of Awka, in Nigeria.

Continue reading “Clement Alekwe 1960 – 2015 (PE nr. 1078)”

Review of Jean Monbourquette, Les projections maléfiques. Comment échapper à leur violence. (PE nr. 1078)

Jean Monbourquette was a Canadian priest who died in 2011. He is much appreciated for the quality of his published works, such as “How to discover your personal mission,” “How to befriend your shadow,” “How to forgive,” “Growth through loss,” and “The men of violence” etc. (available in English through Amazon)

This posthumous book is short and easy to read. It is very instructive on marginal phenomena, which society recognises as destructive projections such as being under the influence of curses, being a scapegoat, being bullied at school, the butt of jokes at work and being the black sheep of the family.
He begins with clear definitions based on Jungian psychology: the persona, this ability to adapt to the outside world, and the shadow, all that we have repressed into the unconscious (white and black shadows and the dark areas arising from family, national and institutional experiences). This leads to an analysis of the phenomenon known as projection, which is very common even among those we consider ‘normal’.

As defined by Jung, projection is an unconscious transfer, not perceived and involuntary on the part of the subject, of subjective psychic elements onto another person or animal or an exterior object. It can be beneficial. It is therefore an essential tool for educators, parents, schoolteachers, and formators. However, it can also be harmful or even evil. The rest of the book is devoted to this last aspect. This part is very concrete and is composed of a number of examples coming from family life (relationships between the couple, between parents and children), the educational system, as well as the workplace.

The author mentions the types of personalities at risk: those who are envious, jealous, those with negative mindsets, those who are self-satisfied (self-important). He then goes on to describe the victims, those who are scapegoats, bullied, the black sheep and the butt of jokes. He also mentions cyber bullying and internet harassment that make many adolescents suffer today. In Canada, 70% of young people between 13 and 15, when asked, replied that they had been bullied on the Internet and 44% admitted that they had intimidated someone else at least once (p.66).

The book finishes by furnishing strategies to get out of this cycle of victimisation and develop respect for self. This is, no doubt the most interesting part of the book. So, here is a new tool to help personal development, which is worth its weight in gold!

Jean Monbourquette,
Les projections maléfiques. Comment échapper à leur violence,
collection Développement personnel,
ISBN 978-2-227-48846-5,
Bayard, Montrouge, Novalis, Montréal, août 2015, 118 pages, 14 euros

Guy Theunis, M.Afr.
Petit Echo nr. 1078

Father Jean Marie Leport « Piripori » (PE nr. 1078)

Do you see this beautiful photograph? A very old Missionary of Africa sleeps in front of the tabernacle of the church at Muyaga in Burundi. He is Fr. Jean LEPORT, that is his real name, and at the end of his life, he was very sick. The doctors in Bujumbura had diagnosed a stomach cancer that was inoperable. He was 87 years old. Piripori, as he was known then, had asked to return to Muyaga to die among his own people. On the 14th September 1964, he fell asleep in the Lord after 61 years in Burundi. Continue reading “Father Jean Marie Leport « Piripori » (PE nr. 1078)”