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Celebrating 208 Years of Community! January 26th, 2024

Light brown buildings clustered together

By Jorge ALBERGATI, OMI, General Councilor for Latin America

Originally Published on OMIWORLD.ORG

Click here to see the article en Español

Greetings from the Central Government as we commemorate the 208 years of the First Community of the Congregation.

On January 25, 1816, the day the Church celebrates the conversion of Saint Paul, marks the beginning of our missionary family in Aix. As our history narrates, Eugene de Mazenod and his small group of missionaries officially move into the old Carmel Convent of Aix and experience community life. From day one, they strove to practice religious and communal life virtues within their small group, engaging in mission preaching and working with the youth.

For our missionary family, it has been 208 years of faithfulness to this received gift, walking with the people, serving the poor and most abandoned, especially the youth. The approach chosen by Eugene de Mazenod and his first companions in the mission was to work together as a community.

Recently, the central government and members of the Aix Community gathered at the General House in Rome. It was a profound encounter to share our lives, vocation stories, community life, and current mission. It was a moment to live the essentials, to unite in our following of Jesus, and to view our personal history through the eyes of the Crucified Savior, reviving the spirit of the first Oblate community. As Pope Francis stated, “Being a neighbor is an everyday task because selfishness pulls you down, being a neighbor is going out.’” (PEC Discourse by Pope Francis)

READ FULL ARTICLE ON OMIWORLD’S WEBSITE: https://www.omiusa.org/index.php/2024/01/24/celebrating-208-years-of-community/ 


Sunflower Trivia January 26th, 2024


Oblate Ecological Efforts Praised by Illinois Nature Preserves Commission January 18th, 2024

Thanks to Fr. Séamus Finn, OMI and Sr. Maxine Pohlman, SSNDDirector, La Vista Ecological Learning Ctr.

EDITOR‘S NOTE: Fr Séamus Finn, Director of OMIUSA JPIC and OIP, shared an email from Ms. Debbie Newman of the Illinois Dept of Natural Resources praising the Oblate efforts in forest preservation around Godfrey, IL and the work of noted cave explorer and mapper, Fr. Paul Wightman, OMI. Fr. Finn’s enthusiastic introduction is just below, followed by Ms Newman’s email with links to various publications from the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources.

Originally published at OMIUSA.ORG

Thanks to Fr. Séamus Finn, OMI and Sr. Maxine Pohlman, SSNDDirector, La Vista Ecological Learning Ctr.

EDITOR‘S NOTE: Fr Séamus Finn, Director of OMIUSA JPIC and OIP, shared an email from Ms. Debbie Newman, a Natural Areas Preservation Specialist with the Illinois Nature Preserves Commission, praising the Oblate efforts in forest preservation around Godfrey, IL and the work of noted cave explorer and mapper, Fr. Paul Wightman, OMI. Fr. Finn’s enthusiastic introduction is just below, followed by Ms Newman’s email with links to various publications from the Illinois Nature Preserves Commission.

Thanks to Fr. Séamus Finn, OMI and Sr. Maxine Pohlman, SSNDDirector, La Vista Ecological Learning Ctr.

EDITOR‘S NOTE: Fr Séamus Finn, Director of OMIUSA JPIC and OIP, shared an email from Ms. Debbie Newman of the Illinois Dept of Natural Resources praising the Oblate efforts in forest preservation around Godfrey, IL and the work of noted cave explorer and mapper, Fr. Paul Wightman, OMI. Fr. Finn’s enthusiastic introduction is just below, followed by Ms Newman’s email with links to various publications from the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources.

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From Fr. Séamus P. Finn, OMI:

What a terrific story that OMI USP through our property in Godfrey has been a part of for nearly 30 years. This story that needs to be told, replicated and celebrated.

Fr. Séamus Finn, OMI

Brings to mind the talk that Pope Francis delivered on Thursday to a group of visiting priests this week.

Pope to secular missionary priests: ‘Be in the world, for the world “

  … Pope Francis began by underlining “the value of secularity in the life and ministry of priests.” “Secularity (secolarità),” he stressed, “is not synonymous with secularism (laicità)…

Secularity, he said, is rather “a dimension of the Church,” having to do with its mission to “serve and bear witness to the Kingdom of God in this world.

Sr. Maxine Pohlman, SSND

Special thanks to Sr Maxine Pohlman SSND who keeps this relationship alive for all of us.

The email clearly lays out the value of the Missionary Oblates Woods Nature Preserve in the big picture and the work we do there. It brings to mind the foresight and guiding hand of (the late) Fr. Bob Moosbrugger, OMI, who was integral to this project in the beginning. Enjoy!

  • Fr. Séamus P. Finn, OMIDirector, OMIUSA JPIC, OIP

Read the full article @OMIUSA.ORG

 

From Ms. Debbie S. Newman

Greetings Landowners, Partners and Volunteers! 

Happy New Year to each and every one of you!  I hope you had a good holiday season.  I hope 2024 will be a great year for you.

Working with volunteers in the preserve are: Sr. Maxine Pohlman, SSND, (far right) and next to her is Natural Area Preservation Specialist, for the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, and author of the email below, Debbie S, Newman.

Read the full article @OMIUSA.ORG

 

 

 

 


Former Oblate & Current Justice and Peace Leader Dies on Jan. 7, 2024 January 17th, 2024

by Fr. Harry E. Winter, O.M.I.

Portrait of man wearing a blue shirtPaul Martin, an Oblate priest for six years and Justice and Peace world leader for over 50 years, died at age 87 on Jan. 7, 2024, in New York City, USA, from pneumonia complicated by covid. Although his first name was Joseph, he never used it.

Born in England on June 28, 1936, Paul served as a young officer in the British Army, 1954-56.  He then entered the Oblate novitiate of the Anglo-Irish Province in 1956, making his first vows on Sept. 29, 1957.  He was then sent to the International Roman Scholasticate, where he attended the Angelicum, now called the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas, earning Licentiates in Philosophy and Theology. He made his perpetual vows on Sept. 29, 1960 and was ordained to the priesthood on Feb. 22, 1964.

Paul was in Rome for the first two sessions of Vatican II, the autumn of 1962 and 1963.  By that time he had learned French, and was able to understand the two French journals we listened to during our meals: L’Information Catholic International, and La Documentation Catholique.  These journals helped prepare us for the upheaval of Vatican II, as did the various Oblate bishops and theologians who visited the Scholasticate.

Interacting with Oblate Bishop Francis Taylor of Stockholm, Sweden, Paul was thinking that he would serve in Sweden, when the superior general, Leo Deschatelets, asked him to go to Lesotho, South Africa, to teach and become dean of the men’s residence at the new University of Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland, to help in its transition from what had been an Oblate College to an independent public university.

While serving as dean of students and lecturer, Paul’s superior was Anthony Hall, O.M.I.  After three years in Lesotho, he received a scholarship that enabled him to enroll in Columbia University, New York City, USA, in 1967. He earned his doctorate in philosophy with the thesis entitled Educating the Sotho, 1833-1884, a study of the work of Protestant, Catholic and Anglican missionaries. During his time at Columbia, he visited Oblate houses both in the United States and Canada.

Paul fell in love, and left the Oblates after being in vows for 14 years.  He and his wife, Roberta Isakson, raised two children, one of whom is a research scientist in immunology and the other director of exhibits at a New York City museum.  Bringing them up in the faith was a real challenge.

Over the years Paul has served as Eucharistic Minister in the parishes he attended.

Paul authored numerous articles, including two in the Catholic journal Commonweal, and one with Harry Winter, O.M.I., “Religious Proselytization,” Proselytization and Communal Self-Determination in Africa (ed. Abdullahi Ahmed An-Naiim, (NY: Orbis, 1999), pp. 20-50.  In 1978 he founded and directed for 27 years Columbia University’s Center, now Institute, for the Study of Human Rights.  Among its programs, the Human Rights Advocates Program, founded in 1989 and still continuing today, has brought to the university annual groups of human rights advocates from the Global South for four months to study under his direction and to make the contacts needed to support their work at home. On the trips to Washington, D.C., USA, they would meet with George McLean O.M.I.’s students at the latter’s Center for the Research in Values and Philosophy Program at Catholic University.  Paul has also written on human rights and religion in one of McLean’s own publications. He has edited three collections of human rights documents and contributed to the Oxford Encyclopedia on Political Science and the Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East.

In the 1990’s, Paul designed and directed a $1.8 million project to familiarize activists and government officials from the former Eastern Bloc with Western ideas about religious freedom. Four groups came to New York for four months study.  Three international conferences on religious freedom were held in Sofia, Budapest and Cracow.

Throughout his years at the Institute, Paul traveled extensively in Third World Countries, helping to establish programs in human rights education in Ghana, Burkina Faso, Uganda, Brazil, Liberia and Ecuador among others.  One of his ongoing concerns was Haiti, where he has lectured at Notre Dame University in Port au Prince and been impressed by the quality of its students. For the past twelve years he had taught and directed the Human Rights Studies Program at Barnard College, Columbia University.  Until shortly before his death, he taught every Tuesday and Thursday.

Paul cherished his Oblate Cross and made sure in April, 2020, that it was sent to our scholasticate in San Antonio, TX, to be passed on to a future Oblate.  He also cherished his Oblate brethren, keeping in touch with his Swiss classmate, Jean Pierre Caloz, and visiting at the retirement center in Tewksbury, MA, Paul Daly, Will Harvey and myself, on March 8-9, 2020.

Paul’s family is arranging for private burial, on Shelter Island, NY, (where he and his wife Roberta/Robin have a home), with a celebration of his life there in the summer. There will probably be a celebration at Columbia University in April.

Donations may be made in Paul’s memory, to a charity of your choice, or possibly to Camfed, which supports education for girls and young women in Africa, or to the Pine Ridge School for Girls, founded by one of Paul and Roberta’s parents’ friends, which does the same for Native American girls in the US.

Paul’s unexpected death deprives Barnard College of an unequalled activist who trained so many experts in Justice, Peace and the Integrity of Creation.  But those thousands he did train will carry on his work.

 


Fr. Louis Studer, OMI, Former U.S. Provincial Named President of Oblate School of Theology January 5th, 2024

Oblate School of Theology (OST) is thrilled to announce Fr. Louis Studer, OMI, former Provincial for the U.S. Province of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, has been named the institution’s 20th president! A humble and inspirational leader with a track record for building innovation through faithful excellence, Fr. Louis Studer will begin his term on July 1, 2024.
 
Join us in congratulating him on his new endeavor!

 

 

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