The mystery of faith in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Friday, September 23, 2016
"To search for God in simplicity and love, at any time."
A
delegation from international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) has
returned from a field visit to Kivu province, in the east of the Democratic Republic
of Congo (DRC). Regina Lynch, director of ACN’s project department and Father
Martin Barda, ACN International’s Ecclesiastical assistant spoke about their
experiences Sept. 23, 2016.
By Aleksandra Szymczak
What
is the situation in DRC today?
Regina
Lynch: For the past 20 years it has been a
place of war “on and off.” According to the International Red Cross about 5.4
million people have died. The problem is that few people are aware of what is
happening there, nobody really speaks about it. There has been no or very little
development of the region.
Which
experiences saddened you the most?
Father
Martin Barta: There is a very low sense of
security, people are afraid to go out to the countryside, and you usually can’t
drive out of the city after 6PM, because you risk being attacked or kidnapped
by various armed groups. There is always
danger, even in the city, people told us.
Regina
Lynch: As foreigners, we were considered
particularly important targets. In the last nine years seven priests have been
killed. The question of violence and insecurity dominates every conversation.
In Goma we have visited the Franciscan
Missionary Sisters of Mary. One of them, Sister Georgette takes care of young
single mothers. What happens is that the women go to the forest to collect wood
for cooking, and there they are attacked and raped. Pregnant, these young women
are then not accepted by their families. So Sister Georgette takes them in,
along with the babies, and she keeps them there for about a year in order that
she can teach them some sort of a small trade. Sister Georgette also cares for some
80 orphans, rejected by their families or found in the streets.
If the Church weren’t there, I don’t know
who would look after these women and children…
Which
experiences brought you joy?
Father
Barta: Conditions there would be absolutely
intolerable for Westerners. Yet, eople there tend to speak about their pain and
sorrows with a sense of composure—we never saw anybody crying. But seeing them
praying and dancing during the Holy Mass, it was as if they would put all their
great emotional distress into it. This expression of faith, which overcomes
these unhuman conditions, really touched me.
Is there a
quotation from a project partner you could relate?
Father
Barta: We visited a community of Trappist
sisters. The nuns are in constant danger. One was killed in 2009. But they
remain there praying for the whole region. There is one 90-year-old French
sister, whom we asked about the community’s charism and she replied: “To search
for God in simplicity and love, at any time.”
Regina
Lynch: We also asked one of the priests in
Goma why people are choosing to stay. He said: “People say we stay because the
priest is still there.” That is probably typical for the whole region. And it
doesn’t only refer to the priests but also the sisters. The people stay as long
as the Church in the form of the Church personnel is there. That is the reason
for the people to stay. The Church gives them God and where God is, there is
hope and light in the darkness.
A sister helps a mother in child in DRC; ACN photo
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