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Molly Hightower’s Family Continues her Mission

http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2010/July/Family-Continues-Daughters-Mission-to-Haiti-Orphans/

Molly Hightower a volunteer who worked with Fr. Rick Frechette, died in the Jan. 12 quake, in Haiti while gathering shoes for disadvantaged children.

Now, her family is determined to honor her mission. This is the first time they been to Haiti. They collected and delivered more than 180,000 pairs of shoes for the kids who Hightower believed needed them the most.

Please consider a donation to help the Passionists in their ministry to people living in poverty: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: DLisotta@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.


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Posted in Haiti, Province News.

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St. Benedict’s Clinic Responds to Dengue Outbreak

A patient with Dengue. He is receiving IV fluids at the clinic as there is insufficient capacity at the hospital.

These photos were taken today at St. Benedict’s, the Passionist sponsored clinic in Tegucigalpa, Honduras where the state of emergency due to the dengue fever epidemic continues. At least 13 people have died and 10,200 others have been hit by the disease. Health Minister Arturo Bendana said that of the total reported dengue fever cases, 476 were of the hemorrhagic type. Both staff and patients are grateful for the generosity of our donors who have made it possible for the clinic to provide free medications to those who need them.

Honduran President Porfirio Lobo is leading a nation-wide campaign aimed at eradicating the mosquitos, which are the carriers of the disease. All public offices are clearing areas of still water in their vicinity.

Please consider a donation to help the Passionists in their ministry to people living in poverty: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: DLisotta@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.


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Posted in Honduras, Province News.

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Dengue Fever Swamps Clinic in Honduras

Dr. Elliot Casey, Medical Director of St. Benedict’s Clinic in Honduras reported this morning that the epidemic of dengue is ongoing and the government has elevated the level of concern to the highest level or emergency. He thinks that there have been 22,000 cases with 26 deaths. The public and private hospitals are overwhelmed. The outbreak is stressing the limited resources of the government and the hospitals. The clinic is trying to pick up some of the slack and help by working longer and weekends. Because they were prepared and have medicines that many of the other clinics don’t have they are worried about their ability to meet all of their anticipated needs.

Dengue (or “breakbone”) fever, is a disease that is characterized by high fever, rash, and severe headache with aching bones, joints, and muscles. Dengue and its deadly complications, dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome, have increased over the past several decades. Global warming has substantially increased the number of people at risk of dengue epidemics, as warmer temperatures and changing rainfall conditions expand both the area suitable for mosquitoes and the length of the dengue transmission season in temperate areas.

Currently, dengue fever and its complications cause an estimated 50 to 100 million infections, a half-million hospitalizations, and 22,000 deaths annually in more than 100 countries, including parts of South America, Central America, the Caribbean, India, Southeast Asia, and Africa. By 2085, an estimated 5.2 billion people—3 billion additional people worldwide—are projected to be at risk for dengue because of climate change–induced increases in humidity that contribute to increased mosquito presence.

Please consider a donation to help the Passionists in their ministry to people living in poverty: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: DLisotta@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.


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Posted in Honduras, Province News.

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An Important New Project – Fr. Rick Frechette

Francisville cookies

My update of a few days ago did not include one extremely important project that I wanted to cover separately. This  is a production and training center that we named in honor of St Francis of Asissi, called Francisville. The motto for this endeavor is “works of justice are works of peace.”

Francisville is envisioned to be a place where we produce what we and other missionaries need, of good quality and good price, and the production is intended to be also training. Many of the Francisville staff had training in Italy for all the pre-quake activities:  producing cement block, baking of bread, a print shop producing our hospital forms and school materials, and preparation to open a vehicle mechanic shop. During the earthquake, we used the damage building to continue and even accelerate bread production to help combat hunger, and the warehouses of Francisville were an important base for the many containers of aid shipped to us from many countries, and also as a storage base for the Italian Civil Protection.

Marco with his apprentices

In the last six months, we have repaired most of the Francisville buildings and the perimeter walls, and we have begun the foundation for a huge warehouse area, and have increased our production to include cobblestone for making roads, and pasta to go with the bread in battling hunger. We will soon open a sewing center there, to make clothes, especially school uniforms.

Francisville runs at no expense to NPH Italy, NPH Haiti, or any NPH affiliate. The St Luke program manages Francisville as a mission cooperative, paying for the production often through grants, and donating the profit to NPFS Haiti.

Since   January 2010 we have produced 950,000 small loaves of bread, 32,000 cement block, 4,000 cobblestone, and 360,000 printed forms. Most of the bread is used for the poor, some sold to restaurants and other charitable organizations. The block is used to help people rebuild their homes, missionaries rebuild their missions, and to rebuild Francisville itself. We just started the cobblestone and have not yet used it for paving. The printed matter is mostly for our hospital and 24 schools. The net profit to NPH Haiti over the last six months was US$ 32,116.

We are very proud of the progress of this creative and life generating center, managed by Nebez Augustin and Father Fhito Randal. We are especially grateful for the enthusiastic help from NPH Italy.

Other projects to be realized in the near future for NPFS Haiti include the construction of a trade school (by the government of Mexico) for our young adults from NPH, housing for the same students, and a secondary school (by Artists for Peace and justice)  for the young adults of NPH and the St Luke program.

Again, thanks for your encouragement, prayer and support. It is important at this moment of Haiti’s history that help to the country be immediate, generous, concrete and involve forming young people through education and enterprise.

Best regards and God Bless you,

Fr Rick Frechette CP
July 22, 2010
Port au Prince

Please consider a donation to help the Passionists in their ministry to people living in poverty: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: DLisotta@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.



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Posted in Haiti, Province News.

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Reflection on Passionist Volunteers International Orientation

It is strange to want to summate something as the first steps towards the rest of your life. I stood at the door of the retreat house for St. Paul of the Cross Monastery in Pittsburgh not entirely sure of what awaited me, but with what I considered a reasonable understanding of where I came from.

Less than a month ago, like many young people of my age, I adorned a cap and gown as I walked across a stage to receive my college diploma. What I chose to do after though, is what distanced me from my peers, and brought me to the door of the Passionist Monastery.

I chose to break the traditional path that my other fellow graduates would endeavor because of the calling I felt. This was by no means an easy decision, but the affirmation I received in my three and a half weeks of training in Pittsburgh for my experience with Passionist Volunteers International was the blessing I needed to be able commit whole heartedly.

I, along with ten other volunteers, all of us recent college graduates, began to root ourselves in the eminent experience of overseas missionary service. To do so, we took great pains to reflect as both an individual and as collectives, particularly in the group with whom we would live with in intentional community in either our site in Jamaica or Honduras. It was made clear to us that with the stresses of international service is it important to know oneself. This task, though appearing straightforward enough, was perhaps the mot difficult part, but the lynchpin of my orientation experience. It is in my path of self discovery that I could truly understand how this volunteer experience corresponded with God’s plan for me. I began to see how this experience offered opportunities of growth and understanding that truly affirmed my presence there.

Contributing to this understanding and my place in the program was grasping the Passionist charism. Studying the history of St Paul of the Cross, the expansion of the Passionist Community into North America, and the work they continue to do around the world gave us future volunteers valued perspective. We became part of something bigger than a volunteer, and throughout the training period, my own interaction with the Passionist priests and brothers demonstrated to me how familial our embrace with the Congregation of the Passion would be. Furthermore, our study of Passionist charism also gave us the fundamental mission ideology we share, “ to accompany the crucified and suffering of today”. The way in which we each grasped this accompaniment is very personal but serves as the modus operandi in our individual service abroad.

It is a unique opportunity to be able to love and serve with the support of a collective and the autonomy of the individual. That is what I needed when I passed those doors into the retreat house. To enter a new part of my life, be able to look back, but have confidence in where I am going.

By: Brendan O’Leary
Serving in Mandeville, Jamaica July 23, 2010-July 2011

Brendan and his fellow PVIs are generously giving a year of their lives in service to others. Please consider a donation to support their work! Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: DLisotta@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website. You can use the drop down menu to direct your donation to Passionist Volunteers International.


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Posted in Jamaica, Province News.

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Six Month Update from Fr. Rick Frechette

Dear Friends,

Six months have gone by since the earthquake, and easily our work is three times larger than it was before. We have so many new programs to meet the pressing needs. Today for the first time, we fired up our crematorium. Although I was joking that I would like to use it to make Sister Judy’s birthday cake (for her 65th today), the sad truth is that poverty still humiliates the poor even after their death (a simple trip to the general morgue would show that to be true in a second). Our first attempt at a more dignified burial through cremation was predictably for a child, for five-year-old Lori Demosthene. We said the usual prayers for the dead, and commended Lori to God, to ash, and to the earth. This is our reality. The circle of life, coming around all too soon, completed already in childhood. Our crematorium is dedicated to Our Mother of Sorrows. We have the sorrow of burying more than 50 children and 30 adults every week.

Our new campground for displaced children is nearly ready. We have been working there all week. Instead of circling the wagons, we squared off empty containers in a huge rectangle covering 4,000 square meters. We will expand it in time. The containers themselves will soon be dormitories for the children, and the area for meals, schooling and activities will be in the shadow of the containers with the help of large awnings. There are about 350 children waiting to come in. There will be an area for small children dedicated to St Ann, the grandmother of Jesus, and a section for older children dedicated to St Louis. We hope to open July 27, on the feast of St Ann. In the meantime, the program for kids in tent cities, called Fr Wasson’s angels of light, is going strong and fast becoming an informal school system and nutrition center for 3000 children.

We have started another eight street schools over these six months. One of them is for blind and deaf children. The school they used to attend, St Vincent’s in Port au Prince, was destroyed by the earthquake, so we made a simple school for them until St Vincent is rebuilt. Our first ten children are already in this simple school. We named the school for the late beloved founder of St Vincent’s, Sister Joan Margaret. Our other 23 schools are all in session, some in tents and some in undamaged buildings, and all of them will be rebuilt slowly. We have a campaign in progress for this.

The program for prosthetic s and rehabilitation called St Germaine is well underway, and many people leave our gates with crutches, wheelchairs and artificial limbs just a little bit stronger and a little bit more able after every therapy visit. The mothers are so beautiful and patient with their children, but sadly sometimes the mothers also are disabled or missing a limb from the earthquake. Hope springs eternal.

Our St Luke field hospital for adults and children has saved a few lives already. It looks like something from Gilligan’s Island but it works for now. We are making a prefab surgery room at the moment, and doing our best to make it a family environment. We have a portable CT Scan already, and a portable Digital XRAY in the planning, most important since we receive terrible trauma injuries.  Our ability will be greatly increased by this equipment, which will be used in an air-conditioned container! Just today, we received the donation of an ambulance for the field hospital, from the government of Spain.

On July 23, our original orphanage (as of 23 years) we will receive 40 children from the earthquake. It will bring the population there at St Helene to 400 children.

We are still very busy with distributions of food, clothing, water, tents, and thousands of shoes donated in memory of Molly Hightower, one of our deeply mourned volunteers killed when our headquarters at Petionville collapsed. The distributions are difficult but important, since Port au Prince hardly at all much improved from the original catastrophe six months ago. I think many of you saw the pictures of the memorial we made for our deceased children, staff, volunteers and colleagues from the earthquake. It is at St Damien Hospital. It is our new cornerstone.

At St Damien hospital, our cancer program is improving, the surgery center is very active, the new maternity and neonatology programs and struggling but doing well, and we now can do digital electroencephalograms and have them interpreted abroad. This is to monitor the seizure activity of our patients. It is a huge advance in our treatment of seizures. Also, just today, little Anabel returned to Italy to have part of her skull replaced, finally, after losing it in the nightmare of January 12, 2010.

Many thanks to all of you for your prayers, donations, encouragement!

Fr Rick Frechette
July 20, 2010

Please consider a donation to help the Passionists in their ministry to people living in poverty: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: DLisotta@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.


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Posted in Haiti, Province News.

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Dr. Anthony Alessi: On my 3rd visit to Haiti after quake, I’ve seen some changes for the better

St. Damian’s Hospital is the only free children’s hospital in Port-au-Prince.

Dr. Anthony Alessi: On my 3rd visit to Haiti after quake, I’ve seen some changes for better – Norwich, CT – Norwich Bulletin.

Dr. Anthony Alessi, one of the physicians who traveled to Haiti to work with Fr. Rick Frechette in the aftermath of the earthquake reports on his latest visit to the island.

  • The Haitian medical staff of St. Damian’s has largely returned, but the number of children needing care has increased dramatically. Mothers and infants begin gathering at the gate at 4:30 a.m. for outpatient care. The emergency room is seeing record numbers of infants, many suffering from malnutrition and related diseases. A new EEG machine has been donated by an Italian charity and staff was sent from Verona, Italy, to train Haitian technologists.
  • A CT scanner donated by the McDonald’s Foundation of Germany will be arriving soon. It will be only the third working CT scanner in Port-au-Prince, and the images will be transmitted to Backus Hospital for expert interpretation by members of the Norwich Diagnostic Imaging Associates.
  • St. Vincent’s School for deaf and blind children was run by a group of sisters in downtown Port-au-Prince. On Jan. 12, the school was reduced to a pile of stone. Some children perished in the school, but the majority of almost 200 students have been left without a school while the sisters regroup. Father Frechette has opted to connect shipping containers and build two classrooms, restrooms and a fenced-in play area to provide a temporary location for these needy children. It is scheduled to open this week.
  • The biggest development has been the opening of The St. Luke Family Health Center. Its temporary structure consists of well-used shipping containers connected by corrugated metal roofing and a concrete floor. The first patients had primarily orthopedic earthquake-related problems requiring corrective surgery. Soon to be added is a trauma center with four operating rooms that is being constructed in Europe.

Please consider a donation to help the Passionists in their ministry to people living in poverty: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: DLisotta@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.


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Posted in Haiti, Province News.

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St. Ann’s Novena begins in Scranton

These 10 days of special prayer, preaching and reflection follow the pattern established by the Blessed Mother and the apostles as they waited in prayer during the nine days between the Ascension of the Lord and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost. “In like manner,” Father Richard Burke, C.P. said, “we experience nine days of special faith and devotion in preparation for the tenth day – July 26, the Feast of St. Ann.”

Father Michael Greene, C.P. and Father Lee Havey, C.P. will be the special preachers for this year’s Novena.

Father Greene was born in New York City. He professed his Passionist vows in 1978 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1982 following his graduation from St. John’s University with a Master of Divinity degree. Following his ordination, he served in parish ministry in Atlanta, and for many years has been a preacher in retreat centers in Shelter Island, N.Y., Jamaica, N.Y. and Riverdale, N.Y. He also spent several years in St. Ann’s Media ministry in Scranton.

Father Havey is from Waverly, where his mother continues to live. He was educated in the Waverly area and entered the Passionist pre-novitiate program in 1997. He professed his Passionist vows in 2000. He graduated from Catholic Theological Union in Chicago with a Master of Divinity degree and was ordained to the Passionist priesthood in 2004. Over the past six years, Father Havey has engaged in preaching in retreat center ministry and parochial ministry at the Passionist ministry center in Jamaica, N.Y. and most recently has been assigned to the Passionist Itinerant Preaching Ministry. He conducts parish missions, Eucharistic devotions and retreats while living in the Passionist Community at St. Ann’s Monastery.

This year’s preachers have chosen for their novena theme: “The Parables of Jesus: Guiding Lights for Our Lives.” These stories the Lord used to teach action principles for living will be examined in light of today’s life circumstances. The preachers will use stories such as the Good Samaritan, the Laborers in the Vineyard, the Mustard Seed and the Pearl of Great Price to encourage us in our faith choices and faith living.

The Rev. Lee Havey, C.P., homilist at Saturday’s novena, talked about appreciating the mysteries of faith.

“It seems to me that in the fast-paced, high-tech world in which we live, many people have begun to lose a sense of wonder and lose a sense of mystery,” the Rev. Havey said. “And yet, even as many people continue to lose their sense of mystery, God continues to face us with wonder after wonder.”

He recalled how the gospels say Christ urged his followers to be open and curious like children.

“The message is simply this: Don’t ever completely lose the wonder of life itself,” he said. “Surprise us, amaze us and astonish us in every part of your creation.”

Services
The novena runs from today until St. Ann’s Feast Day on July 26.

Daily at 7, 8 and 11:45 a.m. and 5:30 and 7:30 p.m., with novena services at 8 and 11:45 a.m. and 3:30, 5:30 and 7:30 p.m.

Special Services
Wednesday, July 21: At 5 p.m., the Byzantine Sacred Liturgy with the Most Rev. William Skurla, bishop of the Passaic Byzantine Eparchy. Replaces the regular 5:30 p.m. Mass.

Saturday, July 24: Mass for children, with a special blessing of infants and children at 10 a.m.; Mass and novena service in Spanish at 1:30 p.m.; and candlelight rosary procession after the 7:30 p.m. Mass and novena.

Monday, July 26: Feast of St. Ann with novena solemn closing at 7:30 p.m., celebrated by the Most Rev. Joseph C. Bambera, bishop of Scranton.

Television
CTV will broadcast the novena from St. Ann’s Basilica in Scranton, PA July 17 to 27, 2010

Sat/Sun   July 17 – 18 7:00 p.m.
Mon–Fri   July 19 – 23     3:30 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.
Sat/Sun   July 24 – 25     7:00 p.m.
Mon/Tue  July 26 – 27    3:30 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.

(1 hour each)

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Posted in News, Province News.

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Update from St. Benedict’s Clinic in Tegucigalpa, Honduras

Medicines from Europe being delivered to the clinic

We have just received this update from the Dr. Casey, the Medical Director of our clinic in Honduras.

“Things have been rather hectic in Honduras with an outbreak of dengue fever. Because of the grant we are able to manage well the needs of the people that we serve as well as some others who are coming to us because they know we have medicines and the other clinics don’t.

The medicines were purchased from a grant of $15,000  that was obtained from the Catholic Human Services Foundation located in New Jersey.

St. Benedict’s Clinic in Tegucigalpa serves more than 45,000 women, men and children a year bringing the most modern and efficient medical treatment to poor families in the nation’s capital, a sprawling city of millions.

Please consider a donation to help the Passionists in their ministry to people living in poverty: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: DLisotta@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.


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Posted in Honduras, Province News.

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Meet Passionist Volunteers International’s 2010-2011 Honduras Volunteers

Last week you met our new volunteer team headed for Jamaica. This week meet the new team that will serve in Honduras!

Rosi Trichilo: Born in Springfield, MA, grew up in Enfield, CT; 2010 Graduate, Holy Cross, Worcester, B.S. Biology and Pre-med with concentration in Women’s and Gender Studies.  She is an avid reader with a keen interest in music and dance of different cultures. Extensive Volunteer experience in inner city Worcester; has traveled to visit family in Italy, language study in Spain and two immersion programs in Nicaragua; co-Chaired Students for Responsible Choices—a peer education campus group for educating about drugs and alcohol abuse.  Rosi’s immersion experiences in Nicaragua solidified her plan to volunteer internationally as she came to feel, “that I had not only a moral obligation to serve others but rather a responsibility to do so.  I would not describe this as a decision so much, but as a logical culmination to everything that I have learned and started at Holy Cross.

Brooke Lahr: Was raised in Indianapolis, IN; 2010 Graduate, Bellarlmine University, Louisville, B.S Biology with Minor in Psychology; immersion experience, Guatemala; member of THE EDGE OUTREACH for applying global education and assistance towards pure water and sanitation.  Interests are: people, social justice, biology and photography.  As Brooke looks ahead to serving with PVI, she reflects, “I realize that I cannot fix the problem of growing poverty that exists in the world, but I can do my part to work towards improvement.   However I don’t just want to help the suffering with service work and donations; I want to respect their culture, enjoy their traditions, feel their struggles, and acknowledge them “face to face.”  I want to come to know the people through solidarity and love.

Andrew Fitzpatrick: Grew up in Drexel Hill, PA; 2010 Graduate University of Scranton, B.A International Language and Business; enjoyed two studies abroad: Guadalajara, Mexico, and Beijing, China; Volunteer with Habitat for Humanity, Cookville, TN; Friends and family are his principal interests.  Andrew sees service as a way “to give back— for the people that may not have been in the same position I have been in my whole life.  After taking a plethora of courses that focus on Central and South America, and having studied Spanish for so long, I came to the conclusion that international service would not only benefit the people I help but also teach me first hand about what I’ve only read about.”  Andrew chose a faith-based volunteer program in order to “deepen my own connection with God not only through prayer at home and Mass but through action in the world.”

Chanel Marin: Born in San Antonio, TX; grew up in a “globe-trotting” military family. After father’s retirement family settled in Killeen, TX.  2010 Graduate, University of Maryland, B.A. Psychology. Spanish is her first language; Semester abroad, Universidad de Valencia, Spain.  By way of interests or hobbies Chanel enjoys reading, painting and photography; deep passion for diverse cooking.  She has long and extensive volunteer experience, particularly in sexual assault and rape crises centers where she is a certified trainer.  Chanel tells us that her original reason for volunteering abroad was “simply to help individuals in what I believed to be more dire conditions than those at home.  Through my community service in the United States I learned that suffering has no boundaries.  There are individuals in every city and country in the world who suffer.   She chose PVI because “it provides a Christian framework which will help me grow in my faith and teach me to live as Christ lived—helping others.  I want to change at least one person’s life for the better and I know that they will do the same for me.”

Melissa Ells: Born in New York City and raised there until her family moved to West Chester, PA; 2010 Graduate, University of Pittsburgh, B.S. Psychology and Latin American Studies; Studies Abroad: participant, Casa de la Solidaridad Inrernacional, University of Central America, El Salvador; two months study, Quito, Ecuador.  Four years volunteered with Crisis and Suicide Hotline, Pittsburgh; Board of Directors, Pitt’s Campus Women’s Organization.  Interested in politically-minded blogs, reading local history and running.  Attracted to Passionist Volunteers through PVI’s mission statement that she says, “really spoke to me and captures why I want to participate in this particular experience, ‘we extend our service…in a spirit of accompaniment.’ I think it’s really unique that accompaniment focuses on a mutual journey rather than roles of the helper or the helped, in the sense conveyed by Lilla Watson, ‘if you have come here to help me, you are wasting your time, but if you  have come because your liberation is bound up with mine then let us work together.’

Molly Beggy: Born and raised in Cincinnati, OH; 2010 Graduate, Miami University, Ohio, B.A. Diplomacy and Foreign Affairs, Minor in European Studies; semester abroad, Florence, Italy; Intern for Congressman Steve Driehaus (D. Ohio, 1st District).  Molly’s initial inspiration for international volunteer service was her sister’s volunteer year, 1998, with Fr. Rick Frechette in Haiti.  Interests include global politics; hobby is reading. Seeks personal and spiritual growth through serving with PVI.  With strong international interests Molly views “peace and justice as intangible aspects of our world that are important not only for today but for future generations.  I believe that justice is fairness and equality for all people but it is not achieved without peace.  For peace we must make a concerted effort in understanding people of different ethnicities, cultures and religions.  It is important that we embrace the similarities and respect the differences in order to work towards peace and justice.  I also believe the reverse is true—we cannot achieve justice without peace.”

These young people are generously giving a year of their lives in service to others. Please consider a donation to support their work! Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: DLisotta@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website. You can use the drop down menu to direct your donation to Passionist Volunteers International.


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Posted in Honduras, Jamaica, Province News.

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