GREENLAND: A VAST AND AWESOME EXPERIENCE |
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By Fr. Barry Bercier, A.A.
They are a remarkable people, these Filipinos, ready for the sake of their families to live and work in a place so perfectly alien to their homeland. Their vitality, simplicity, generosity and unassuming self-sacrificial disposition are a wonder! I am grateful to have been included, for however short a time, in their story there in Nuuk. But again, Nuuk is a good sized town, about 16,000 people, with paved roads, cars and busses, decent plumbing...even internet. One can be rather sheltered there from the full force of life in the Arctic and removed from the life of the Arctic peoples. The native Greenlanders of Nuuk are mostly Lutheran, and outside Nuuk they mostly speak Greenlandic, an Inuit language, or Danish. So there was little for me by way of ministry to them... What I'm suggesting is that the experience in Greenland has not satisfied my desire for the North but, on the contrary, has intensified it. A place people think about even less than Greenland is Arctic Canada, which is mostly English-speaking. Catholic missionaries have planted a number of struggling Inuit communities that make their way with none of the conveniences one finds in Nuuk. Their access to the outside world is much more restricted. They are poor. And as you might guess, they are very short of priests. If the door were to open up, I would be ready to spend my last days with them, up at the end of the world! ![]()
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 23 August 2016 15:14 |