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Too Shy to be a Priest

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DUBLIN, IRELAND — February 22, 2016

When Fr. Raphael Annan, CSSp. first mentioned to his father that he wanted to enter the seminary, he was told he was too reserved to become a priest.

“I remember him telling me, ‘You can’t be a priest. You’re too shy and quiet,’ ” says Fr Raphael. “He said the priest’s job was to speak loudly and interact with a lot of people. He found me to be a very reserved person.”

Fr Raphael, who was born in the fishing port city of Cape Coast in southern Ghana, first considered joining the priesthood while at school. He remembers priests from the missions, or the “white fathers” as they’re commonly known in west Africa, asking him to consider following a religious life. However, the young student was unsure whether he was ready to dedicate his life to religion.

“I was hesitant because of the challenges,” says the Ghanaian Spiritan priest. “People said, ‘You want to be a priest? You’re not going to get married? That’s too demanding.’ I said, ‘Give me a chance to think about it.’ ”

When he finished school he followed in his father’s footsteps and began working in electrical engineering. He is one of 12 children and, after his parents separated when he was very young, he grew up in his father’s care. They lived in the bustling city of Kumasi, which he describes as a “mix of all the different tribes in Ghana”.

After five years of working for the electricity corporation, his father encouraged him to apply for new job within the industry. Around the same time, he went to visit a Spiritan priest, who brought him to visit a Catholic vocation centre. There he was offered the chance to begin training as a Holy Ghost Father.

“He told me they would be starting in October, and if I wanted to join I would be most welcome. I said, ‘Okay, I’ll give it a try.’ So I went back and resigned from work.”

Despite his father’s initial reservations, he was happy with his son’s decision. His uncle, on the other hand, had already made plans for his future. “When he heard he said, ‘But I’ve got somebody for you to marry.’ I said, ‘You’re joking, you didn’t even tell me you were looking for somebody for me’, so we just laughed about it.”

Fr Raphael began his training in Gambia. He quickly made friends with his fellow seminarians but he found the demands of the seminary challenging.

“It was difficult. I was not used to the discipline. It was very quiet and we had no siesta. The first person who was in charge of us was very strict. We had to follow a rigorous training but we kept on going and said, well, if that’s what the missionary life is, we’ll persevere and hold on.”

After a year of novitiate training, where the young men were taught about the spiritual aspect of their trade, he was sent to Nigeria to study philosophy and theology.

“Philosophy was to broaden the mind and learn about different philosophies, whether they’re Catholic or Protestant. We did a lot on Marxism, Karl Marx. We learned about a world where there is no God. We learned about atheism as well.”

After ordination he spent six years working in Nigeria before returning to Ghana, where he began preaching in a large parish in Kumasi. After a few years he received an invitation to spend a month in a parish in the UK.

“It was so completely different, but I loved it. I visited again afterwards. In the summer, when they wanted to go on a break, I would come for one month.”

In 2006 he spent three months preaching in a church in Long Island, New York. He remembers the local parish priest listening carefully to his first Mass from the sacristy to ensure Fr Raphael could communicate clearly with the local parishioners.

“In the States they are very particular. If you bring someone in, the people might say they can’t hear because of the accent. He wanted to get a reaction from the people but he was happy.”

After 11 years in the Kumasi parish, Fr Raphael began to grow restless. His application for a two-year sabbatical in the US was denied, so he requested another appointment. He was sent to the UK to carry out a mission appeal for donations.

He was subsequently transferred to Ireland. Fr Raphael was initially surprised to hear Irish parishes were in need of younger priests. He remembered how the Irish Spiritan fathers in Ghana often spoke of the popularity of the priesthood in Ireland.

“During training the Irish were telling us that in every family in Ireland you had a priest, sometimes even two or three of them.”

He arrived in Ireland in October 2014 and was introduced to his new home with the Holy Ghost Fathers in Kimmage, Dublin. “Culturally, socially, the way we do things here is quite different. In Ghana the liturgy takes longer. It’s a celebration so it can go on for two or three hours. You aren’t done in just one hour.”

Before he came to Ireland, a priest in Manchester explained to him that people in northern Europe “want to move fast”. “Part of the mission training is to adapt to difference and change.”

“I know about the decline in the priesthood here. The priests are getting older so they need more young people.”

Fr Raphael works with two other priests in the Kimmage and Greenhills parishes. “The idea is due to the shortage of priests. If one of them goes, we should be able to manage the two parishes together.”

“We get along very well. All of them have been to Africa before; one was in Kenya and one was in Sierra Leone. They have a cultural understanding of me, so we work together as a team perfectly well.”

Asked how long he plans to stay in Ireland, he smiles and lets out a small chuckle.

“I’ll stay here as long as I’m needed. As a missionary, you go wherever you are needed.” (Irish Times)

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Duquesne University Names New Education Dean

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PITTSBURGH, PA — March 2, 2016
Dr. Cindy M. Walker has been named dean of the Duquesne University School of Education effective Monday, Aug. 1. She will succeed Dr. Olga Welch, who is retiring after serving as dean of education since 2005.

“Dr. Walker is a perfect fit for what we need in our School of Education,” said Duquesne University President Charles J. Dougherty. “I predict she will be a great success, building on the achievements of Dean Olga Welch.”

Walker, a professor of educational psychology in the School of Education at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, has served as the school’s associate dean of research and engaged scholarship since 2012.

“I am very excited to embark on this new journey in my life at Duquesne University. Everyone that I met during my campus visit clearly embraced the social justice values that underlie the Spiritan mission,” said Walker. “While these values are what prompted me to apply for the position, the way in which everyone I met exemplified those values—coupled with the quality of the programs, students, staff and faculty in the School of Education—is what made me decide that Duquesne was where I wanted to be.”

Walker previously held positions at several academic institutions, including the University of Washington, Illinois State University and the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, where she was presented with the College of Education’s Distinguished Alumni Award in 2013.

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Spiritans and St. Katherine Drexel

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HOUSTON, TX — March 3, 2016
Today’s Feast Day of St. Katherine Drexel reminds us of the blessed and productive working relationship our community enjoyed with Mother Drexel.

The cooperative relationship of these two congregations goes back well over 100 years. Katherine Drexel had contact with the Holy Ghost Fathers from the time of her early novitiate formation in Pittsburgh. In Philadelphia she was instrumental in the Fathers obtaining a tract of land just a mile from her own center in Corwells heights. That property is now the site of Holy Ghost Preparatory School in Bensalem, PA.

St. Katherine Drexel

Subsequently the Sisters and the Holy Ghost fathers worked together in literally dozens of parishes and schools serving African-American communities in Philadelphia, new York and the deep South.

Over the years hundreds of Spiritans, clergy and lay associates served in these “unwanted” ministries, including a large number of Holy Ghost Fathers from Ireland who came under a special arrangement with the innovative Mother Katherine.

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Fifty Years of Missionary Service

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ARUSHA, TANZANIA – March 7, 2016

Tanzania MapOn March 7, 1966, four young Spiritan missionaries arrived in Arusha, Tanzania to begin their missionary service to the Congregation and the Church.  Frs. Ned Marchessault, Joe Herzstein, Vince Stegman, and Don McGregor arrived that memorable day in beautiful Arusha to take up their call to proclaim the good news to the ends of the earth.  The newly appointed local superior of the District of Kilimanjaro at the time, Fr. George Crocenzi, along with Frs. Vince Donovan, Tom Tunney and Ed Kelly met the new group of young missionaries who had just arrived from Nairobi with a brief walk around quiet downtown Arusha and their first taste of African hospitality.

4.2 Neds Maasai Mission in Endulen Tanzania7 960x420Frs. Joe Herzstein and Ned Marchessault are still continuing the work of evangelization with the Maasai tribe in the Archdiocese of Arusha near the Ngorogoro Crater.  They continue to reach out to people in the area who want to hear about the Gospel and they rarely tire of going to the most difficult out station to meet the people and discover God at work in their lives.  Fifty years later they feel especially blessed to be living the missionary call and are just as excited to find the best way to share the Good News with those who have scarcely heard of the Gospel.  “The day of our arrival in Tanzania and the beginning of our new work in the mission is even more important to me than the day I was ordained because this was the beginning of the work for which I was sent”, recalls Fr. Ned.  Fr. Ned and Fr. Joe celebrated the special occasion with a simple get together in Ngorogoro parish where they will share some popcorn and recalled many stories of their many years of missionary life.

jpeg-8After spending more than 35 years of working in Tanzania and Ethiopia with the Maasai and Borana tribes, Fr. Vince Stegman continues to remain faithful to his missionary vocation as he works with young people as part of the Spiritan Campus Ministry team at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh.

The Spiritan Congregation has been blessed by such dedicated service of these brothers and the People of God have been enriched in so many ways for their missionary call.

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Spiritan Speaks on Living Mission Interculturally

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HOUSTON, TX — March 17, 2016

Fr. Tony Gittins, CSSp., visited St. Ignatius Parish in Houston on March 16, 2016 to deliver a talk on “living interculturally”. Cities and neighborhoods today are highly multicultural: people of many diverse cultures live in close proximity. This is also true of parishes. But such multiculturalism does not necessarily produce mutual concern among different peoples. Fr. Gittins explained and illustrated a possible and highly desirable move from multicultural coexistence to authentic intercultural living, where differences are acknowledged and valued, and where an “us”/”them” opposition might yield to building more inclusive communities of “we.” This is the vision of Jesus, and there is an urgent need to embrace it, lest communities continue to polarize and fragment.

Fr. Anthony Gittins CSSp.Professor Dr. Anthony Gittins, CSSp., taught Theology and Anthropology at The Missionary Institute, London, UK, from 1980 to 1984, and at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago from 1984 until 2011, where he held the Bishop Ford Chair of Mission Theology between 1999 and 2008, and is now Emeritus Professor of Theology and Culture.
Born in Manchester (England), and ordained in 1967, after completing his theological studies he subsequently earned M.A.s (Summa cum Laude) in Theoretical Linguistics and in Social Anthropology, and later a Ph.D. in Social Anthropology from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. After ministry in Africa, he pursued post-doctoral research at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, England.

Fr. Gittins focused on the interface between the social sciences and theological disciplines, and he team-taught courses with Professors of Bible, Liturgy and Pastoral Care. He continues to do Consultancy work and offer workshops, seminars, short courses and retreats in more than thirty-five countries from Africa to the Pacific.

He is the author of twelve books, all of which are available from Amazon.

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Retirement Residence for Elderly & Infirmed Priests

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Bishop Dennis Durning House

Retirement Residence for Elderly & Infirmed Missionary Priests
Usa River, Arusha, Tamzania

Project Coordinator: Fr. Kastory Kisuda, CSSp., Provincial Treasurer

Project Cost: $280, 120

Acquired to-date: $144,500

Needed Funding: $135,620

 

 

The retirement residence is being built at Usa River approximately 20 kilometers  from Arusha Town, easily accessible by road. Three acres of land have been carved from the land owned by the Spiritans and on which their minor seminary and health center are located.
The project responds to a lack of a suitable facility for retiring and sick priests, many of whom require medical care which will be provided by the heath center. They will also require handicap accessibility and trained staff to care for them.

 

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The Tanzanian Province includes 143 Spiritans ranging in age from 25 to 96. Of those, 18 are above 60 years of age. An additional 18 are between the ages of 55 and 59.  Even younger priests  find themselves with serious ailments such as heart conditions which also require special care. The Bishop Dennis Durning House will provide such care.  (Pictured: Fr. Joseph Babu, CSSp. ,96)

 

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Bishop Dennis Durning House will consist of:

Chapel for Mass and other spiritual use

13 handicap accessible bedrooms

Kitchen and dining room

Recreation room

Exercise and physical therapy rooms
Laundry facilities

Infirmary

Reception and visitors parlor

Grounds for walking and gardening

(Pictured: Fr. Josephat Msongore, CSSp. ,87, inspecting the building’s dedication plaque)

March 2016 233

 

The project is being constructed in three phases

Phase I: Cinder block construction of foundation and walls — $144,500 (Completed)

Phase II: Installation of roofing — $34,425

Phase III: Installation of doors, window, fixtures, painting — $48,587

 

 

 

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Documentary, FATHER JOSEPH, highlights work of Spiritan Father Joseph Philippe

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From feature documentaries to short films, Floating World Pictures produces stories that move, challenge, entertain, and inspire. Jeff Kaufman has produced and directed a number of documentaries for Amnesty International. He has also produced, written, and/or directed programs for The Discovery Channel (including a special on the World Trade Center recovery effort), MTV, The History Channel, and The Learning Channel, and worked on other human rights projects. He is doing a feature documentary on the life and work of Haitian Spiritan priest Father Joseph Philippe, an economic visionary who has lifted the lives of thousands of people. FATHER JOSEPH is a feature documentary on Haiti’s unique history, challenges and potential. (View a trailer on the documentary FATHER JOSEPH at www.floatingworldpictures.com.)

“I try to empower the poor, the young people, women, and peasants. We want to help everyone recognize that they have a lot of gifts, even though they are poor, to give to the community by working together as a body. We can grow together as human beings, and complete each other, and learn from each other. We can become bridge-builders and peacemakers, for ourselves, for others and for the world.” – Father Joseph Philippe

Haiti is a country often plagued by the cruelties of politics, commerce, and nature, but it has also produced some rare individuals, disinterested in self-promotion or personal gain, who have – against incredible odds – found ways to better the lives of those in need. Father Joseph Philippe is one such man, or more accurately, he is five or six social activists in one. Through a vivid profile of Father Joseph’s remarkable life and work the feature documentary FATHER JOSEPH will represent an intimate view of Haiti’s turbulent history, and an unusually immersive community portrait. Named “2010 Social Entrepreneur for Latin America” by the Schwab Foundation, Father Joseph was born to poor mountain farmers and was the first in his family to get a college degree.

He became an accountant and a Spiritan priest, established the Bank of Fonkoze – Haiti’s first micro-credit bank for the poor (with small business loans and training for tens of thousands of women), started the Association of Peasants of Fondwa, co-founded a 700-student K-12 school, an orphanage, a clean water project, a reforestration program, a health clinic, a radio station, built dozens of homes, and founded the University of Fondwa, Haiti’s first rural college. Along the way, he has experienced shocking violence, remarkable courage, and equal amounts of tragedy and inspiration. Almost all of Father Joseph’s 25 years of work was destroyed by the 2010 earthquake that devastated Haiti, but he is rebuilding on several levels.

FATHER JOSEPH, and the outreach campaign this film launches, will bring alive an inspiring personal story with epic scope, and connect a diverse audience to themes of economic and educational opportunity, social justice, environmental protection, healthcare, history, the power of faith, and public service – issues that should speak to people everywhere.

 

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Cardinal Onaiyekan visits the University of San Diego

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SAN DIEGO, CA – March 31, 2016

Cardinal John Olorunfemi Onaiyekan, Archbishop of Abuja, Nigeria, delivered a lecture at the Joan B. Kroc School of Peace Studies at the University of San Diego on Thursday, March 31, 2016 where he was invited to participate in the University’s ongoing series on interreligious peacebuilding efforts.

Card Onaiyekan (2)The Cardinal was welcomed to southern California and hosted in San Diego by three Spiritans, Frs. Bill Headley, C.S.Sp., Mike Onwuemelie, C.S.sSp., and Mike White, C.S.Sp.  They joined Cardinal Onaiyekan for a special lunch that was hosted by the School of Peace Studies at the University of San Diego during which he gave a lecture that was titled “Boko Haram and a Resilient Nigerian Faith Response.”

Cardinal Onaiyekan is well-known for his tireless work for peace in Nigeria. He has received decorations at home and abroad including the Pax Christi International Prize on October 31, 2012, in Brussels. He was also a candidate for the Nobel Prize, together with a Muslim exponent of Nigeria, with whom he promoted a series of initiatives against fundamentalism.

The Cardinal’s visit to the University of San Diego brought to a close a number of interreligious peacebuilding events that have occurred at the School of Peace Studies that focused on Islamic relations.

The School hosted the first Catholic-Muslim National Dialogue. The Sufi-oriented Pacific Institute jointly sponsored with the School a program entitled, “Muslim Voices against Violent Extremism.” A small cluster of the School’s faculty has reached out to fellow academics in neighboring universities interested in countering Islamophobia. These periodic meetings have as their focus: “Community Resilience against Violent Extremism.” Finally, Professor Headley is teaching a course this semester entitled, “Warmongers and Peacebuilders: Religious Extremism.”

Card Onaiyekan (4)Archbishop Onaiyekan was appointed by Pope Benedict XVI to serve as one of the papally-appointed Synod Fathers for the October 2012 Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops on the New Evangelization.  He was created a Cardinal by Pope Benedict XVI in a consistory on 24 November 2012.

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Toilets are Serious Business

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SULTAN HAMUD, KENYA — April 7, 2016

Without toilets, infectious diseases put the lives of the world’s poorest children more at risk. Good sanitation is essential to ensure strong health in every community. (UNICEF)

A small amount of money can make a major impact. A case in point is the Holy Spirit Secondary School  in Kenya where 8 pit latrines were fabricated to service the needs of the student population and administrators.

Sultan Hamud Secondary School 3

These boys aren’t leveling the ground for a sports field or smoothing a path for vehicles. They are in fact creating the foundation for what will be 8 pit latrines.

The students provided in-kind funding while a local businessman made a small contribution. The majority funding originated from St. Basil Coffee based in Houston. The total project cost was $8,000.

 

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Pictured is the completed facility.

What we take for granted in our day to day lives such as adequate sanitation is only a dream for many in developing countries.

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Spiritan Formation in the the Congo

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KINSHASA, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC of CONGO — April 8, 2016

The Spiritan province of the DRC is a young circumscription. It was only in October 2014 that the circumscription obtained the status of province. The province lacks financial resources to cover all the needs of community life in the theology formation house. As an example, the province struggles to pay the attendant fees for the students. The annual fees at the St. John Paul XXIII Institute are $660 per student. each year the province spends about $7920 for the 12  scholastics presently going through the first year formation process.

An American couple has generously committed to provide an annual grant of $2,800  for funding of formation of four theology students in The Democratic Republic of the Congo for a four year period. Other donors are being sought.
Congo Scholastics
The 12 present Scholastics

The DRC is rapidly growing in the Catholic faith. As of 2015, 33% of the country’s population or 1,220,066 are considered Catholic, thus, a demand to form priests to address this expanding need.

For more information on this project, or to make a donation please contact us at: Spiritan Office for Mission Advancement 17700 West Alabama St. Houston, TX 77096 713-522-2882.

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Newsletter Focuses on Formation

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HOUSTON, TX — April 14, 2016

The Spiritan Office for Mission Advancement’s inaugural newsletter highlights formation work underway in many parts of the globe. As of June 30, 2014 the number of professed members of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit totaled 2,707.  This figure included 32 Bishops, 2,096 priests, 118 Brothers and 456 Junior Professed.

Congo Scholastics

The overwhelming majority originates from Africa while vocations are rapidly increasing in Asia, especially Vietnam. the 2016 estimate for all Spiritan students (professed and non-professed) throughout the Congregation number 950 seminarians.

To read the full newsletter...

Hierarchy of Congregation of the Holy Spirit (Spiritans)

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Holy Ghost Prep Wins 18th State Forensics Championship

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BENSALEM, PA – April 15, 2016

Holy Ghost Preparatory School, the only Spiritan High School in the United States, is once again tops in the state in speech and debate.  The HGP team captured this year’s state championship at the Pennsylvania High School Speech League tournament over the weekend on the grounds of Susquehanna University in Central Pennsylvania. It is the 18th state championship in the school’s history.

HGP StateChamp2016“We didn’t think we were going to pull it out, but we kept saying, ‘We are still in this,'” said Massimo Cifelli, 18, a HGP team co-captain. “As soon as (the judges) shouted out that we had won, we were so thrilled. It is amazing.”  For the seniors on the team at the private, all-boys Catholic school in Bensalem, the state championship is a kind of a “bookend” to their speech and debate careers, HGP team co-captain Collin Quiqley said. The team won its last state championship in 2013, when the current seniors were freshmen. “We’ve had a lot of ups and downs over the last four years. But we are always rebounding and this team was able to do it,” Collin, 18, said Monday.

Competitors from 150 public and private high school teams squared off in a variety of contests including prose and poetry readings, persuasive speaking, dramatic and humorous interpretations and public forum debate.  Massimo captured the individual state title for prose reading. Holy Ghost student Nick Guiliano won the state title for extemporaneous commentary, and Joe Zampirri captured the top state prize for poetry reading. About a dozen more HGP competitors finished in the top five of their respective event, school spokesman Ryan Abramson said.  “It is great to win the individual awards, but the big team award is what we want to win in the end,” Massimo said.

In the two weeks leading up to the state competition, team members kept assessing their previous competitions and figuring out what could be improved, coach Tony Figliola said. The extra effort made all the difference.  “It was such an underdog group,” Figliola said. “But they really came together and we are very pleased. They did what they needed to do and I was emotionally moved.”  Holy Ghost will send several of the speech and debate competitors to the National Catholic Forensics League Nationals in Sacramento, California, over Memorial Day Weekend and to the National Speech and Debate Tournament in Salt Lake City, Utah, in June to compete in individual events, Figliola said. Both competitions are open to public and private school students.

Jerry ColapintoFigliola has teamed for decades with assistant coaches Jerry Colapinto and John Buettler to guide the Holy Ghost competitors toward the goal of competing on the national stage.  Colapinto was inducted into the PHSSL Hall of Fame during last week’s competition for his almost four decades of service to the speech and debate competition. Figliola and Buettler have been PHSSL Hall of Fame members for 20 years.  The coaches help the competitors learn how to control every aspect of themselves, including their voice and eyes, Figliola said. “That’s how you figure out how to motivate your audience,” he said.

Beyond the competitions, participating on the speech and debate team has helped them with their communication skills in the classroom, the students said.  “I am never afraid to raise my hand,” Massimo said. “It just makes it easier to talk.”

Written by Joan Hellyer of the Bucks County Courier Times

To see local coverage by the CBS television station click here

 

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The Passing of Fr. Albert McKnight, C.S.Sp.

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BETHEL PARK, PA – April 18, 2016

Fr. Albert McKnight, C.S.Sp. of Bethel Park, a member of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit, died peacefully April 17, 2016 at Marion Manor, Greentree PA. He was 88 years old.

McKnight_honoraryDocDU2

Fr. McKnight receives an honorary Doctorate from Duquense University in 1993

Father McKnight was born August 18, 1927 in Brooklyn, NY. He professed his vows as a member of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit on August 15, 1947 at Holy Ghost Novitiate in Ridgefield, CT and was ordained to the Priesthood June 6, 1952 at St. Mary’s Seminary, Ferndale in Norwalk CT.

Father was first appointed to St. Paul Church in Lafayette, LA. He then served for many years in various parishes in Louisiana including Our Lady of Lourdes, Immaculate Heart of Mary, St. Martin de Porres and Holy Ghost Parish.  In 1969 he started and was president of the Southern Cooperative Development Fund.  He was passionate about serving the black community and served on many national financial philanthropic and human rights committees including being the Executive Director of the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus.  He was a novice director in Texas for four years until he asked in 2005 to retire in Haiti to continue serving the poor.  In 2012, Father returned to the Spiritans’ retirement home in Casa Laval and was in residence at Our Lady of the Valley in Hemet until he came to Libermann Hall in Bethel Park in 2015.McKNIGHT_Albert-harley

Fr. McKnight wrote a well-known auto-biography titled “Whistling in the Wind” which detailed his work to spearhead the economic development of Afro-Americans in Louisiana along with a spiritual revival seen as the only true means to authentic liberation and real equality.

Fr. McKnight was preceded in death by his parents Albert and Althea Holmes McKnight and his sister, Mrs. Colleen McKnight. He is survived his brother Donald McKnight and sister, Brenda Hubbard and many nieces and nephews.

A Memorial Mass will be held in the Immaculate Heart of Mary Chapel at the Spiritan Center, 6230 Brush Run Road, Bethel Park on April 21, 2016 at 9:00 am with a Celebration of Life service to be held in Opelousas, LA TBD.  Burial will take place at Assumption Cemetery in Carencro, LA.

In memory of Fr. McKnight donations may be made to the Spiritans designated for Haiti or for the educations of future Holy Spirit Fathers 6230 Brush Run Road, Bethel Park PA 15102.

Condolences can be sent to his brother Donald at 2909 Bluebonnet Ct. Antioch CA 94531.

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New Spiritan Pastor: “Greatest day ever in my life”

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MAGAGOA, SAME, TANZANIA —   May 12, 2016, was a very special and historic day for the Catholic community at Mgagao outstation in the Catholic Diocese of Same in north eastern Tanzania. More than 500 parishioners and well-wishers from neighboring parishes gathered festively to celebrate the blessing of their new rectory, to witness the dedication of their new parish church, St. Andrew Parish, and to witness the formal installation of the first pastor, Rev. Fr. Mathew Ambrosi, CSSp. According to Fr. Mathew this was”the greatest day ever of my life”.

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The joyful ceremonies, which included the confirmation of 27 youths, were presided over by Most. Rev. Rogart Kimaryo, CSSp., the Spiritan  bishop of the Diocese of Same, along with numerous diocesan clergy and Spiritan missionary priests.

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The Same Diocese encompasses 10,000 square kilometers with a population of 562,300. Seventy thousand are Catholic.  The present twenty-nine parishes are served by 56 priests.

The Spiritan Office for Mission Advancement (SOMA) of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit-U.S. Province helped to realize this special occasion by providing a grant of $4,400 towards acquisition of the parish water catchment system and water distribution tank.  Additionally, through friends of the Spiritans an additional $3,800 was secured for rectory plumbing improvements. These modest supports facilitated the possibility of opening up this new and vibrant parish in a remote and drought prone area of the Diocese of Same.

Mgagoa Rectory Catchment System

Fr. Michael Begley, CSSp., Director SOMA commented  that “this is a great example of how a former mission station, under missionary care, gradually, over time, develops into the formal structure of a parish with some help from U.S. Catholics”.  He further stated that “it would be great if we could help the new pastor to secure a suitable used Suzuki Vista which costs $7,600”. Donations for this cause are most welcome at spiritans.org.

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Fr. Joseph Kelly, C.S.Sp. Remembered

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BETHEL PARK, PA – May 25, 2016

Fr. Joseph Kelly, C.S.Sp. of Bethel Park, a member of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit, died peacefully May 21st at St. Clair Hospital in Pittsburgh, PA. He was 91 years old.KellyonKilimanjiroMassB-W421 Kelly

Father Kelly was born September 16, 1924 in Philadelphia PA. He professed his vows as a member of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit on August 15, 1945 at Holy Ghost Novitiate in Ridgefield, CT and was ordained to the Priesthood September 15, 1950 at St. Mary’s Seminary, Ferndale in Norwalk CT.

Father was assigned to the missions in East Africa where he was destined to minister for fifty-two years. He worked in various positions in parochial ministry in the Arusha and Moshi Dioceses of Tanzania and Usa River one of the missions in Arusha; he started AMECEA Documentary Service in Nairobi, Kenya which shared the pastoral situations, experiences between the dioceses of Eastern African and with the universal Church. He was Director of Development for the Catholic University of Eastern Africa and in 1997 was appointed head of the Spiritan Planning and Development Office for the Holy Spirit Fathers in Arusha Tanzania.  Fr. Kelly returned to the States in 2003 and was a resident of Libermann Hall Spiritan Retirement Community in Bethel Park.

Fr. Kelly was preceded in death by his parents Patrick J. and Margaret Conway Kelly and his sisters, Mrs. Ruth Bicknell and Sister Martha Marie, O.P. He is survived by his sister Mrs. Kenneth (Eileen) Rehm of Sayville NY, nieces, nephews and many extended family members and friends.

There will be viewing in the Immaculate Heart of Mary Chapel at the Spiritan Center, 6230 Brush Run Road, Bethel Park on Saturday May 28 at 9:00-10:45 am with the Funeral Mass being celebrated at 11:00 am. There will also be visiting hours at Raynor & D’Andrea funeral home in Sayville, NY on June 1st 2-4:30pm and 7-9:30pm.  Committal service folKellyFrJoseph-FAV Kellylowed by burial will be in St. Lawrence Cemetery, Sayville NY on June 2nd at 11:30 am.

Condolences can be sent to Father’s sister and brother-in-law, Eileen & Kenneth Rehm, 68 Pine Street, Sayville, NY 11782.

May his soul and the souls of all the faithful departed rest in eternal peace!

 

Fr. Joseph Kelly, C.S.Sp. Viewing – Spiritan Center, 6230 Brush Run Road, Bethel Park

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Spiritan Priest Subject of Documentary

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HOUSTON,TX —  May 31,2016

Documenting over three decades of service to the poor by Fr. Joseph Philippe, CSSp. , the film is being screened at selected film festivals in the U.S. and Europe.

Father-joseph-poster1-Documentary

Father Joseph established Haiti’s largest micro-credit bank for the poor (Fonkoze), which has given literacy training and financial opportunity to hundreds of thousands of peasant women and their families. He also founded a 700-student K-14 school, an orphanage, a clean water project, a reforestation program, a health clinic, and a radio station; he has built dozens of homes, and he created the University of Fondwa, Haiti’s first rural college. Along the way, several of Father Joseph’s friends and colleagues were murdered because of their work for the poor. Almost all of Father Joseph’s 25 years of work was destroyed by the 2010 earthquake, but he is rebuilding with an inspiring humor and determination.

“I have spent the last 30 years of my life working to empower the rural poor in Haiti to transform their lives and to teach them to give back,” says Fr. Joseph. “My spirituality is based on giving back.”

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HGP STUDENTS ON MISSION TO DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

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HGP Mission Trip 2016 FINALSAN JUAN DE LA MAGUANA, June 15, 2016 — Once again, students from Holy Ghost Preparatory School in Bensalem, Pa., departed from JFK International Airport in New York, on Sunday, June 12, for an annual mission trip to San Juan de la Maguana, in the Dominican Republic.  HGP students have been going to the Spiritan mission in the Dominican Republic for nearly 10 years, helping to change the lives of young people on the Caribbean Island nation.

After an orientation session with Fr. Don McEachin, C.S.Sp. — pastor of the parish of Nuestra Señora de la Esperanza (Our Lady of Hope) in Villa Liberación, in the northern sector of San Juan — and Dominican camp counselors at the beginning of the week-long mission trip, HGP students operate a sports camp during the day for the children of the Spiritan mission in San Juan de la Maguana. Baseball, soccer, volleyball and basketball camps and games are organized and run by the HGHGP Mission Trip 2016 CraftsP students for the mission children during the morning hours.

In the afternoon, the HGP students conduct arts and crafts stations, as well as supervise music and dancing sessions, followed by swimming in the pool with the campers, site-seeing and other activities.

The mission concludes with a farewell Mass on June 19, and a return trip to the United States on June 20.

Holy Ghost Prep was founded in 1897 as Holy Ghost Apostolic College, a six-year seminary for the education of the Holy Ghost priests and brothers. HGP today is a vibrant community of more than 500 young men from more than 100 elementary feeder schools from throughout metropolitan Philadelphia counties and New Jersey. HGP students prepare for college and adult life through a challenging program which stresses the cultivation of students’ unique gifts and talents, academic excellence, and generous service to the poor, forming young men morally, intellectually, and spiritually in the Spiritan tradition.

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Knights Support Spiritan House

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HOUSTON, TX  — June 20, 2016

Thank you Knights of Columbus Council 14700!

This past Saturday members of Council 14700 coordinated a landscaping beautification project for the Spiritan House in Houston, where the Spiritan Office for Mission Advancement is located. Fr. Mike Grey, CSSp.,(pictured in gray shirt and shorts) resides at the house and has served as chaplain of the council for the past several years.

The project entailed restoring the garden, pruning trees and scrubs, removing vegetation from the shingle siding on the front of the building, weeding and spreading over 100 bags of mulch throughout the yard.

Lunch followed giving the council members time to interact with Fathers Begley, Grey and Nguyen and learn more about the Spiritan mission.

Knights of Columbus Council 14700 (www.kofc14700.org), St. Michael the Archangel was chartered in 2009 with the required membership of 30 men. The council membership now stands at over 180.

K of C Recruiting

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Spiritan Enlarged General Council Meets In Rome

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EGC Opening MassROME, ITALY, June 22, 2016 — Thirty-three representatives from across the Congregation are meeting in Rome from June 19 to July 2, 2016, as part of the Enlarged General Council (EGC), which serves as a mid-point review four years after the 20th General Chapter in Bagamoyo in 2012. The EGC has a three-fold purpose according to the Spiritan Rule of Life, #205.3: to evaluate and to assess the implementation of the decisions of the Bagamoyo General Chapter; to study new means of strengthening and bringing about the Congregation’s objectives; and to reinforce collaboration throughout the Congregation at the level of the circumscriptions, the Unions of Circumscriptions and the General Council.

 

EGC Meeting Room AngleIn his opening address to the EGC, the Superior General, Fr. John Fogarty, C.S.Sp., noted the two fundamental convictions effectively underpinning all the deliberations and orientations at the 2012 General Chapter in Bagamoyo: “the need for greater EGC Altar Images - Sizedauthenticity in our Spiritan life and mission, in fidelity to the charism of our Founders; and for a more inclusive Spiritan family marked by a true sense of belonging and collective ownership of our missionary commitments and our common future.”

 

EGC Meeting Room Duaime - CopyHe also addressed the fundamental question of how leadership can effect change in an institution like our Congregation. “If leadership knows where it wants to arrive and consistently guides the institution in that direction through the various means at its disposal, significant change will be evident in the longer term,” said Fr. Fogarty.  “The election of Pope Francis, the single most important event in the Church since Bagamoyo, and the leadership he has adopted and challenged us to imitate, encourage us to believe in the possibility of radical change inspired by the Gospel.”

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Rehabilitation & Treatment Centre

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HOUSTON, TX —June 24, 2016

St. Martin’s Rehabilitation & Treatment Centre

Muranga (Nairobi), Kenya

Alcohol & Drug Addiction Facility

 

Project: Expansion and purchase of equipment for centre kitchen

Project Coordinator: George Irungu

Project cost: $6,000

Once an addict himself, George Irungu’s life was turned around by Fr. Martin Keane, CSSp., who has worked in Kenya for many years. After achieving some financial success George wanted to repay Fr. Keane’s care and counseling which led to the founding of St. Martin’s Rehabilitation & Treatment Centre, serving men and women addicted to drugs or alcohol. With an expanded kitchen the centre will provide the ability to serve the nutritional needs of the client base.

The centre serves 30 clients and has a staff of 6 permanent and 3 on-call members to serve them. The treatment for alcohol spans 90 days and the program for drug addiction is 6 months.

Unemployment in Kenya is 40% and, young men in particular, gravitate to addiction due to poor job prospects, peer pressure, depression and superstition.

St Martins Kenya 2

St Martins Kenya

 

 

 

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