Youth Caught in the Web

Nairobi, 15 April 2011

A three-day symposium organised by the Institute of Youth Ministry (IYM), came to an end today at Tangaza College.  On three afternoons different experts shared their ideas to a large audience on the theme of www.youthcaughtintheweb.com The symposium is an annual event, and this year’s one was specially planned by Fr Hubert Pinto.  On the first day, Mr Ronald Omboto, an IT-expert, led a three hour session on the history of Internet and  the World wide web (WWW).  He spoke also of the tremendous possibilities that exist due to this relatively new development. He also enumerated the socio economic political and cultural impact of the internet.

On the 2nd day, Fr Sahaya G. Selvam, SDB led the discussion on three sub-themes related to ‘youth caught in the web’.  He began […]

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Come and See: 7-Step Retreat

Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 12 April 2011

Last weekend (8th to 10th April) 52 youth gathered at the Mbagala Spiritual Centre for a weekend retreat that I was privileged to animate together with Mr Prosper Dionis. Prosper has been my faithful companion in several training programmes and retreats since the year 2000.  The retreat, that is part of the annual programme of the Chuo Cha Maisha programme, was organised by the Don Bosco Youth Educational Services (DBYES-Tanzania) that I had lauched in 2005.  Chuo Cha Maisha programme is a Christian lifeskills training programme run by DBYES-TZ in the Archdiocese of Dar es Salaam.  Every year the programme reaches out to about 300 youth from 6 to 7 parishes; it runs from July to May every year with 20 days of training.  The training is offered by a voluntary youth group: Don Bosco Youth for […]

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Sermon for Cycle A – 3rd Sunday Homily

They left everything
 
 
The Bible in the Catholic Tradition
With this Sunday we officially begin to listen to the Gospel according to Matthew during Sunday liturgy of the ordinary time. During moments of common worship in the Catholic Church we listen to the Bible in a systematic manner.  We avoid picking and choosing passages according to the preacher’s whims and fancies, though the church does allow choosing readings on some occasions.  The Sunday readings are arranged in a three year cycle: Year A uses the gospel of Matthew (as is the case this year); In Year B we listen to Mark; and Year C uses the gospel of Luke.  The gospel of John is read during Lent, Eastertide and some feasts. Similarly, the weekday readings are arranged in a two-year cycle.  This systematic listening applies not only to the gospel readings but also the first readings during weekdays, and the second readings […]

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Sermon for Cycle A – 4th Sunday Homily – Blessed are you

Blessed are you…
In October 2000, I had the privilege of visiting the home village of the late Julius Nyerere, the father of the nation of Tanzania.  We were visiting the grave of this great Catholic, now a Servant of God and whose process of beatification is still in progress. In this dusty little village – Butiama, not far from Lake Victoria – world’s great leaders had gathered a year earlier to lay to rest the remains of the first president of Tanzania.   It was an awesome experience to note that an African president had spent his early days and the final days in this remote simple location: with no drive, no gates, no green lawn, no mansions.  As I stood praying at his grave, admiring the simplicity of the surrounding, I had this thought come over me: here lies a man who lived the Beatitudes!
Jesus, the new Moses
The gospel reading […]

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Sermon for Cycle A – 7th Sunday Homily

“You must therefore be perfect just as your heavenly Father is perfect.” Mt 5:48
Dachau was the first Nazi concentration camp to be opened.  It was basically a forced labour camp.  Today it is open to the public.  In this memorial site there are different churches and also a synagogue that have been built. What impressed me most during my visit to the memorial site last summer was the Church of Reconciliation.   The peculiarity of this church is that its structure has no right angles.  The irregular shape is a symbolic protest against the orderly layout of the camp in which all the buildings are set in perfect array.  As I was leaving the memorial site, I thought, an exaggerated sense of order could be a sign of neurosis.  And it could be life-threatening.
In the gospel passage of today, as Jesus continues his ‘Sermon on the Mount,’ he reiterates, “You must […]

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