Zambia

Sports Challenge in Zambiaakap team depart zambia-1.jpg


Golfers, Hurlers & Footballers   

 The challenge laid down to the Hurlers & Footballers Ireland wide was to join with the Alan Kerins African Projects to help us build and  complete a dormitory to house 150 vulnerable  boys who have been orphaned as a result of the aids epidemic. There will  be an opening of a school which was funded and built by the charity.

The Lads are also bringing out 6 specially adapted wheelchairs for physically challenged children. The challenge will run from 10th November 2008 to 20th November 2008.
 
Thankfully the call has been answered by Mark O’Sullivan (Pro Golfer Galway) Damien Joyce (Galway Hurler) Declan Meehan (Galway Footballer)
Donal Og Cusack (Cork Hurler) Kevin Harnett( Cork Hurler) Conor Deegan ( Former Down Footballer) Brian Carroll ( Offaly Hurler) Pat Comer(Ex Galway Footballer) Frank Leonard (Eo Teilifis/Ros Na Run) Sinead Culhane (Charity Ambassador Galway)Gemma Ní Chionnaith(RTE RnaG/Seó SpóirtTG4 Galway) Mark Flood (Racing Post Newspaper)
 
In January 2005, Alan Kerins travelled to the town of Mongu in western Zambia with nothing more in mind than a short three month stint as a voluntary physiotherapist in a local centre for physically disabled children. What he saw triggered a fundraising campaign that has since helped changed lives and futures forever.
 
Your support will make a massive difference to the lives of these children living in the poorest areas of Zambia. We are appealing to your spirit of good will to help us help the people of Zambia for a better future with practical help.
 For more information see www.alankerins.ie or Phone 091 586547

 

Photo: l.r. Brian Carroll (Offaly Hurler)Gemma Ní Chionnaith (RTE RnaG/TG4)Mark O'Sullivan (Pro golfer Galway)Sinead Culhane(Charity Ambassador Galway)Frank Leonard(Eo Teilifis/Ros na Run)Declan Meehan (Galway Footballer) Alan Kerins (Galway Hurler & Charity Founder)Donal Og Cusack (Cork Hurler)Kevin Harnett( Cork Hurler)Pat Comer(former Galway Goalkeeper)

 

missing from Photo is Damien Joyce who :

Plays for Cappataggle, they won the Galway intermediate hurling championship final on Sunday (first time since 1962), and now play the Connaught final next weekend.  Damien will be leaving to join the gang in Zambia on mon 17th Nov

 


Alan Kerins African Projects
Office Phone: 091 586547
www.alankerins.ie 

 

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Founding Fathers

Started in 1931, most of our work is done on mission stations which serve the large and poor area of western Zambia and the Caprivi Strip in Namibia. The Capuchins are also heavily involved in Bonaventure College in Lusaka. This college is a venture of the Franciscan family and serves seven countries.

The Traditional Beliefs of the Lozi people of Zambia

In Zambia, long before any Christian missionary ever set foot in Africa, the Lozi people already believed in God. They, like many of the tribes in Zambia, believed in one God, the all-powerful maker of heaven and earth and the everything that exists – the seen and the unseen. Furthermore they also believed in and honoured the spirits of their ancestors in much the same way as Catholics honoured the saints. They also believed in the existence of devils and evil spirits. Every misfortune is attributed to evil spirits; just as everything good is attributed to God. So at a level of belief it was not so difficult for most of the tribes in Zambia to accept the teachings of Christian missionaries.

The main obstacles to Christianity

Traditional healers and Witchcraft

Like people the world over, health is something that is treasured by the people of Africa. Sickness is a threat to life and so it is greatly feared and dreaded. It is important to realise that one does not find in Africa the clear-cut demarcation that exist in Europe between the medical doctor, the surgeon, the psychiatrist, the chemist, homeopaths, the faith-healer, the exorcist etc. Because the common belief that what is good comes from God and what is not good is caused by evil spirits, there is a deep-seated tendency among most African people to attribute sickness and all other misfortunes to evil spirits.

It is commonly believed that it is only the very old who die from natural causes. So if anyone else dies, there is the immediate tendency to believe that they died or got sick because they had been bewitched. In other words, the real reason why the person got sick and died was because someone had put a spell on them.

European medicine and hospitals have as everyone knows, their limitations. So if a patient in hospital is not recovering, or if a person is living in a remote area where there is no hospital, then there is a strong tendency to have recourse to one or other of the various types of traditional healers.

Some of these traditional healers may well be simple herbalists. But more often than not, they may also dabble in the occult. They may well be diviners. If they are they then proceed to use the magical powers, which they are believed to possess, to point the finger at some poor unfortunate individual, who will immediately be branded as a witch or wizard and hence the one who is responsible for the sick persons illness or death.

It is this deep-seated and widespread belief in witchcraft and sorcery, which is the main obstacle to the growth of Christianity in Zambia. Apart from other considerations, it is because this belief is so invidious and divisive, sowing, as it does, unfounded doubts and suspicions within the community, that it is, quite patently, diametrically opposed to Christianity.

The Work of the Christian missionary

Caught not taught

Christianity is a way of life, a way of living or more accurately still, a way of loving. So it is communicated more by example than by word. The early missionaries in most parts of Africa built hospitals and leprosariums, where they showed compassion for the sick and suffering. In their schools they helped to enlighten and develop the uneducated. In this way they were able to communicated love and compassion in a way that could not be expressed in mere words.

Moreover by inculcating the good news of Christ’s love in this way they were able to get round the otherwise insurmountable difficulty that is caused by the multiplicity of local languages. Love is a language that is universal. What people came to sense by experience was later confirmed and made clearer for them when they heard or read the Scriptures.

Most Zambians today are devoted and avid readers of the bible. The bible is much closer to their culture and way of life than it is to the more sophisticated European. The Zambian people welcomed the Good News of Christ with joy.

It was the great African saint, St Augustine when giving advise as to how to instruct people, pointed out that the main reason why the greatest missionary, Christ Himself, was sent on a mission to earth was; "so that man might know how much God loves him"(cf. Jn. 3.16).

So the work of every missionary is just the same. He or she must make God’s love known, especially for the poor and underprivileged. The Capuchin missionaries in Zambia strive to make God’s love and concern for the wellbeing of the African people tangible by the hospitals and the leprosariums that they set up to alleviate the sufferings of the sick and the afflicted. By setting up schools they help them to develop their minds. So it is by preaching by word and deed that the friars help to make God know it in Zambia.

VILLAGE LIFE

For the people in the villages the day begins early. Before the first grey streaks of dawn have lightened the eastern sky, the rowdy cocks, perched in the nearby mango trees, begin boisterously beating their wings. Their rude, strident, persistent crowing shatters the night’s stillness and rouses the slumbering village.

Women

The first to emerge from the mud-and-grass-roofed huts are the women. They are anxious to make an early start and get to work without delay. They head to the fields and gardens in the nearby forest. They collect their hoes and perhaps a gourd of drinking water and, in groups of 2 or 4, in single file, they head off through the trees following the narrow, winding path that takes them to their work. They chat and laugh as they hurry along. They begin tilling, planting or weeding as soon as it is light. The sun usually rises at 6am and they try to get as much work done before the day gets too hot.

Many of the women will have nursing babies with them in the field. A young daughter of 9 or 10 is brought along to look after this baby at the edge of the field while the mothers are busy working in the field. At 11am, as they prepare to return home, they collect some firewood or wild mushrooms or some fruit or some cassava leaves for the evening meal. They arrive home before the searing heat of midday.

Men

In the early morning the men let the cattle out of the kraal in order to allow them to graze. Other men take their paddle and go to a nearby lake or river where they go by canoe to check their nets and fish traps. They string the fish together on a piece of bark rope and bring them home for the evening meal, which is the first and only meal of the day. Some men are busy thatching their huts or making baskets to catch fish. Others do the various jobs that are needed to maintain the village.

The Family

The house is surrounded by a six-foot high fence and forms a courtyard. It is within the courtyard that the family lives, cooks and eats their meals. Within the courtyard or "lapa" as they call it, there are reed mats spread out on the sandy ground, preferably in the shade of a small tree. They spend most of the day out in this courtyard and retire to their thatched huts only at night to sleep.

School Children

The school children too would have to rise early. School begins at 7am. They dress in school uniform and go in groups to school. They love school, particularly the company of other young children. Like their parents, they are very sociable and love company.

The village about 9 a.m.

At 9am the village is quite deserted. The only people you find there at that time are the grandparents and some young children. The small children would amuse themselves while the older children would sweep the courtyard or washing last nights dishes. The grandparents may be sitting under the shade of a tree, shelling ground-nuts or weaving baskets.

The early afternoon

On returning from the fields the women had more work to be done. Some may go off to the river and wash the clothes. Other begin preparing the evening meal. The pounding of maize is a laborious and time-consuming task. They pound millet or cassava, wash and cut vegetables and with pieces of dried meat put them in a three legged pot to simmer over an open fire. The girls would go to nearby streams with pots on their heads and draw some water.

The evenings

About 5:30pm the young children are bathed. At 6pm just before dark they have their evening meal. By the time the meal is over it is usually dark. They would sit around the fire talking about the day. By 8:30pm most would have drifted off to bed. And so the day begins again at sunrise

Special occasions

Normally the nights are quiet. However every now and then, especially on the bright moonlight nights, they would share a drum of locally brewed beer. As soon as they began drinking the drums and the strains of drumming and singing would begin to drift along the valley. Then the crowds from the nearby villages would gradually gather, drifting in to join in the drinking, dancing and generally having fun. This would continue into the night or often till the next morning. The brewing of beer might well be occasioned by some young girl coming of age, a boy coming out of circumcision camp or by a wedding. It is with these celebrations that variety and relaxation are brought into the otherwise arduous routine of village life.

A friendly, courteous people

Life especially for women and mothers is particularly difficult. Women generally are always cheerful, patient and accepting. They are very caring to their children. All the people of Zambia are very friendly, amiable, have a great sense of community, sociable, help and share with one another freely. Zambia is one of the few African countries that have enjoyed peace and stability since it won its independence in 1964.


Our contact addresses in Zambia are:

St. Conrad's Vice Provincialate
POST.NET.OBX 147P/Bag E891
Lusaka
Tel: +260-1-250969
Fax: +260-1-252828

St. Jude’s Frairy
P.O. Box 920017
Senanga
Tel: +260-7-230090

Capuchin Friars
P.O. Box 910046
Malengwa
Mongu
Tel: +260-7-230090

Capuchin Friars
La Verna Friary(SBC)
P.O. Box 32821
Lusaka
Tel: +260-1-273244
Fax: +260273242

Capuchin Friars
Mangango
P.O. Box 9400
Kaoma

Capuchin Friars
Our Lady's
P.O. Box 60031
Livingstone
Tel: +260-3-3321760
Fax: +260-3-3323926

Capuchin Friars
Chinyingi
P.O. Box 150015,
Zambesi

 
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Contact Us:
danjoe@
irishcapuchins.com
or call 01-8200915

Congratulations to Brother Kevin Crowley who was awarded “Soul Person of the Year” by the Dublin Soul Festival Committee for his work with the Marginalised.


More Congratulations  and prayful goodwishes to Bro. Stephen Kim, OFM Capuchin Korea - Who was ordained Deacon in Dubln by Archbishop Diarmuid Martin,  14th  Nov 08.

Our next vocations weekend will take place in Raheny on the 28th to the 30th of November.

Contact:

seandonohoe@
irishcapuchins.com

 

 
The Beginning of the Capuchin Order
Beginning of the Capuchins Pope Clement VII, from his residence in Viterbo, permitted Brothers Louis and Raphael Tenaglia from Fossombrone, with the Bull, Religionis Zelus, to live the hermetical life according to the Rule of St. Francis of Assisi. 
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