God is eternal
newness…[God] takes us to where humanity is most wounded…So if we dare to go to
the fringes, we will find [God] there; indeed, he is already there. Jesus is
already there, in the hearts of our brothers and sisters, in their wounded
flesh, in their troubles and in their profound desolation. He is already there.
-
Pope Francis, Gaudete et Exsultate, # 135
Hopefully everone will read Gaudete et Exsultate, by Pope Francis |
I smiled often as I read for the first time Pope Francis’s latest
apostolic exhortation, called in English “Rejoice and Be Glad! On the Call to
Holiness in Today’s World.” So much of what the pope wrote led me to think of
the vision and the mission of Mission Mexico—the “daring” effort of the Diocese
of Calgary to “go to the fringes” and to accompany and assist our “most wounded”
brothers and sisters among the indigenous peoples of the mountains of Mexico.
Father Lawrence Moran, CSB, began the connection between the Diocese of Calgary and the impoverished in Mexico. His picture still hangs in a meeting room in Los Reyes Metzontla. |
Living here in the mountains offers daily many opportunities and
challenges to respond to the God who is “already there” in the “wounded flesh”
and “profound desolation” of the impoverished peoples. As I was writing this
line, a young orphan knocked at my door; he wasn’t allowed into his high school
today because the old shoes he has worn for years finally fell apart, and the
school uniform code demands black shoes. I knew Lalo’s mother before she died; I
never met the father who abandoned the family years ago; and I know that his
elderly grandmother can hardly walk and is quite ill. Tomorrow, Lalo will show
up at school with new black shoes. Thank you, Diocese of Calgary.
Edgar, seen here with grandmother and mother, is more mobile with the wheelchair donated by Mission Mexico. |
Last week it was Elena, a woman from San Marcos who was on the back of a
truck that went over a cliff. Both of her legs were broken in several places,
but the doctors here in Tlapa said that they couldn’t operate, that she would
have to go to Acapulco or Mexico City. I was with Elena’s family on several
occasions, and I was willing to transport her in the Mission Mexico truck, but personnel
at the local hospital wouldn’t give us a medical recommendation so that Elena
(who doesn’t speak Spanish) would be assured of entry into a hospital. It was
only when a lawyer from the Tlachinollan Human Rights Center threatened to
denounce publicly this lack of a dignified response to indigenous Elena that
the director gave the family the medical recommendation—and included an ambulance
to deliver her to Acapulco.
A sweater is only a sweater—or is it? What else might it be? |
Other days involve young people trying to register for high school or
university or vocational school for next year. For example, on Friday I will
drive five hours to Puebla with five indigenous students—and the director of
their high school—the five will write an exam on Saturday at the Iberoamerican
University in Puebla; the exam is for a scholarship offered by this Jesuit
university. None of the five students have ever been to Puebla, and this
accompaniment is one small way to support the dreams of these students who are
so used to living “on the fringe.”
Living on the fringe doesn't mean that one doesn't dress up on special days. |
On Tuesday night I took an overnight bus that went from Tlapa to Mexico
City. I accompanied Daniel, a nineteen-year-old young man from Tlapa who was
heading to the U.S. border in the hopes of crossing. His dream is to work in
the United States for three years, to help his mother in educating his younger
brothers and sisters.
Daniel's last breakfast in Mexico City before boarding a bus "for the north" |
Abel Barrera—surely the most respected man in the Mountains in the eyes of the poor |
Abel Barrera being greeted by a child with Down's syndrome (photo used with permission from Mirna Xibille) |
Thousands of students' families are grateful to Mission Mexico for helping to build and maintain the Champagnat High School of the Mountain |