Visit of Mexico and USA by Br. Didier Remiot, Assistant general |
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Father Superior General had asked me to be, among the five members of the General Council, the one who would more closely follow the activities of the "North America/Philippines" province. The new Provincial Superior of this province, Fr. Miguel Diaz Ayllon, requested as well that I become a member of the Assumption College Board of Trustees and attend the February meeting. These were the two main factors which led to my visit of the Assumptionist communities in Mexico City and Massachusetts last February. I had never been to Mexico. Just to reach it was exhausting: as a result of a stop-over at JFK, it took me some 26 hours of traveling to reach my destination! The one week I spent there was barely enough to begin to discover the many dimensions of Assumptionist life in this capital city. I had repeatedly read that Mexico City was a huge city, a nightmare of traffic jams and heavily polluted. If there indeed were traffic jams, I must say I have seen worse in Asia. Is it because I was there during the winter , I did not notice any heavy pollution and I actually found the city quite pleasant… Soo much for preconceived ideas… But I did not have much time for sightseeing. A week-long stay gave me barely enough time to spend two days in each of the three Assumptionist communities: - the "Emperatriz" parish, historically the first place where the Assumption was launched in Mexico, now a parish in a well-to-do area of the city; - the new "San Andres" parish of which the Assumption took responsibility just three years ago, with its very large territory on the outskirts of the capital; - the "Casa Manuel" community, with its large and vibrant membership of young candidates, aspirants and postulants, most of whom exercise some form of pastoral work in the two parishes. I also had an opportunity to visit the two "community centers" which the Mexican Assumptionists have created and are still in charge of: centers where the local population can, at reduced prices, find a considerable variety of psychological help, self-help workshops and spiritual counseling. Assumption College seal Emmanuel House, the community of Assumptionists active on campus at the College, is bristling with life. Quite a few new faces are living here with Assumptionists I had known since I did my novitiate in the Boston area (back in 1986-87!): postulants and candidates from various countries and venues. That is also the case for the Brighton community (in the suburbs of Boston) where I spent the last 32 hours before my flight back to Rome; that community houses over 20 people, most of them post-grad students of theology in the nearby universities. They're quite a diversified lot: among them, two religious from the Edmundites, a New-Zealand priest, a Benedictine monk, a young man from Singapore, another from Guatemala, and one from the Philippines. I am told that some of these students might have an interest in Assumptionist life. It makes for a lively and interesting community where, beside the common prayer and meals, there is always something happening. ![]()
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Last Updated on Monday, 02 April 2012 10:13 |