---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: John Ashworth <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 2017 at 08:52
Subject: [sudans-john-ashworth] South Sudan, a place of extremes,
adaptation and hope
To: Group <[email protected]>


South Sudan, a place of extremes, adaptation and hope

by Chris Herlinger
Jun. 7, 2017 in GSR Today

Those of us who are not called to consecrated life but write about
women religious may sometimes feel our spiritual tools are inadequate.
We see the example of the sisters and think, "I cannot possibly match
them."

But traveling in South Sudan on assignment these last few weeks, I
think that may be viewing things with the wrong lens. In an
environment of extremes — of civil conflict, war, humanitarian crises
— the frailty and humanity of all people is more visible. And that
includes the sisters themselves, who work in a country where just
under half of the nation's 13 million people are believed to be
Catholic.

Here, in the capital of Juba, sisters get frustrated by nonsense and
day-to-day annoyances like anyone else, though their tolerance and
patience are usually far higher than that of the average soul.

Still, even sisters sometimes utter an expletive. One sister and I
shared such a moment three weeks ago when some reckless kid in a car
almost sideswiped the vehicle the sister was driving. We both cursed
him loudly, laughed at our infraction, and joked about the stereotype
of sisters not cursing.

Another way of putting it: In the depths of pain and suffering in a
country experiencing famine, civil war and persistent poverty, sisters
embrace not only the moments of grace and hope but also embrace the
frailties common to all people.

And in a place like South Sudan, it's no surprise that sisters aren't
afraid to acknowledge that side of life. They don't have all of the
answers; their work in the name of God is only a small part of God's
love for South Sudan.

"We're not superwomen or supermen," Sr. Anne Kiragu, the superior for
a small Daughters of St. Paul community in Juba, told me when I first
arrived there last month.

Kiragu was a key contact for me when I visited South Sudan in 2014
during my first assignment for GSR. She has remained a good source of
help — not to mention inspiration — since then. With her trademark
humor, infectious laugh and love of the absurd, Kiragu is energy
personified. Still, she acknowledges that being in South Sudan can
wear a person out. Kiragu has been here four years now.

"We're not stones," she said. "We have feelings of fear and anxiety, too."

Still, Kiragu persists, and she remains steadfast in the belief that
the work of women religious (as well as of men and of the church in
general) is making a difference in South Sudan, even in the face of so
many problems.

"We can't let go of that string of hope," she told me.

A sister colleague, Sr. Barbara Paleczny, a Canadian School Sister of
Notre Dame, agrees. Paleczny works as a teacher and workshop leader
with Solidarity with South Sudan, a coalition of religious
congregations training teachers, nurses, midwives, local farmers and
community leaders throughout the country.

Paleczny's email signoff reads, "Lord, protect us from malaria,
mosquitoes, snakes and scorpions, armed thieves and accidents, bullets
and bombs, a collapsed economy," providing a glimpse of some of the
country's hardships.

Paleczny believes a strength sisters possess is in knowing "that our
'roots' are elsewhere." That embrace of God and a sense that there is
a reality beyond our immediate understanding gives sisters an insight
into the vagaries of life.

"That makes the many challenges and inconvenience easier. The flight
is canceled, and you're at the airport for a day," said Paleczny, who
travels the country running workshops to help survivors heal from
trauma. "And then the next flight is canceled again. You learn to
adapt."

In the coming weeks, I will be telling some of the sisters' stories
from South Sudan and the stories of brave and patient South Sudanese
who remain committed to the ideas of peace, stability and a better
future. This despite a present moment that has given many only dashed
hopes and broken promises — the equivalent of bitter ashes in the
mouth.

In all cases, the stories are of human beings — frail, vulnerable and
imperfect — who are not naïve about their fellows and certainly not
naïve about conditions in South Sudan. But in the particular case of
the sisters, the women I met bring to the present moment courage,
persistence and hope for the future, no matter how difficult things
can get.

"I don't think the present situation will be permanent. I think it
will change," said Sr. Mary Faida, a South Sudanese sister and member
of the Sacred Heart Sisters. "God is present."

[Chris Herlinger is GSR international correspondent. His email address
is [email protected].]

http://globalsistersreport.org/blog/gsr-today/south-sudan-place-extremes-adaptation-and-hope-47151

END
______________________
John Ashworth

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