THE NEWEST ASSUMPTIONIST COMMUNITY IN COLOMBIA SPREADS ITS WINGS |
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"We arrived on December 13 in the state of Riohacha bordering the Caribbean Sea. We thought we would be working along palm-lined beaches with salty breezes. Wrong! In fact we ended up in an arid inland region known as Guajira where the diocese hoped that we could help a fairly underserved population to prepare for Christmas.
We were afforded a wonderful welcome by the native population, the vast majority of whom belong to the Wayúu tribe. We were housed by locals in modest rooms with a bed, a fan, and a bowl of water for washing. Rising early, we spent long hours going from house to house to preach the gospel, visit the sick, bring Communion to shut-ins, and end the day with processions of the faithful culminating in a pre-Christmas novena. In most of the adobe houses people sleep on hammocks. We ate with families who outdid themselves to prepare us typical local plates." Since Fr. Esteban was the only priest on the mission during the 11-day visit, he would go from village to village celebrating Mass, hearing Confessions, and anointing the sick. Sometimes a village had a chapel but some did not and he would celebrate Mass in the open or in a makeshift chapel (a tarp as a canopy to protect from the sun or the occasional downpour). The Wayúu accepted Christianity only after many years and there are still primitive vestiges of the previous animist religion. The misión culminated in a midnight Mass in one of the villages with more than a thousand colorfully dressed people in attendance, featuring Christmas hymns and a post-celebration meal with traditional dances. ![]()
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Last Updated on Wednesday, 17 February 2016 09:53 |