| 1 FEB 2005
Young
Missionaries
by Raymz Maribojoc
Every graduate of a Jesuit University
remembers the initials AMDG. It stands for Ad Majorem Dei
Gloriam, Latin for “for the greater glory of God”,
the motto of the Society of Jesus. Formed to serve as missionaries,
instructors and ministers to the sick, poor, and marginalized,
the Jesuits today strive to spread the spirit of faith,
service and generosity that their founder, St. Ignatius
de Loyola, embodied.
The learning institutions they have put
up—Ateneo and Xavier universities among them—today
also strive to produce what are called “men-for-others”:
selfless individuals who lead lives of loving service to
God and neighbor. Many of these men and women can be found
in the Jesuit Volunteers of the Philippines (JVP).
An organization of volunteers, sponsors
and associates, the JVP has been sending young men and women
to work in under-resourced schools and parishes and with
NGOs all over the Philippines for twenty-five years. It
also provides training seminars and sponsorships for the
financial support of the volunteers and the institutions
to which they are assigned. For 2004, 32 college graduates
and young professionals have been sent to live and serve
for one year in communities in Davao, South Cotabato, Samar,
Masbate, and Palawan.
The nature of service ranges from teaching
in public schools, to caring for the handicapped in special
institutions, to living in indigenous peoples in remote
areas, to working with NGOs in development projects all
over the country.
By providing a support structure for volunteerism,
the JVP works change not only in the communities that it
send volunteers to, but also the lives of the people that
are sent. Bryan Arevalo and Kris Buntag, two volunteers
of this year’s batch, can attest to that.
Both were assigned to the Welcome Home
Foundation, Inc. Ministry of the Deaf in Bacolod City. Bryan
and Kris, alumni of Xavier University-Ateneo de Cagayan,
have been teaching and caring for deaf students since they
were sent there in June. “It’s hard work,”
says Bryan. “When I got here, I knew nothing about
sign language, which is so different form what Kris and
I were used to. The first days were especially different.”
According to Kris, “What you really
develop while working here is patience. These kids, usually
they have no one to talk to who understands sign when they’re
at home. When they see that you can understand them, it’s
hard to get them to stop talking and pay attention to what
you’re teaching.”
In the first few weeks that they spent
in the Ministry, Kris and Bryan learned sign language while
helping out—with a staff of 15 handling almost 500
people, the Ministry needed all the help it could get. Kris
teaches catechism and Bryan, who graduated with an Electronics
major, handles computer classes.
“The students here, with their handicap,
take a while to learn their lessons, because they understand
things differently from people with hearing. To make sure
they don’t forget, you have to teach them over and
over again, and hold their attention while you do it. Once,
I spent half an hour trying to teach ‘ten minus one
equals nine’ to a student,” Kris ruefully recalls.
The volunteers lead simple lives, waking
up at five-thirty in the morning for breakfast and house
chores and to help clean up the kids in their care. From
their dormitory they ride to the Ministry, and from 9-to-5,
their day is filled with teaching catechism, computers,
and helping the people with income-generating projects:
making greeting cards and calendars.
When they got home to their dormitory
in the evening, they hold one-on-one tutorials with students
who ask them for help with lessons, and then prepare for
bed and the coming day. On weekends, they assist the Mass
for the deaf. While it isn’t the lifestyle that they
were used to back home, neither of them are complaining.
They have different reasons for being
there. For Kris, it began with a T-shirt: “I was part
of the local parish back in Cagayan, doing some pastoral
work, singing in the choir, going out on some outreach programs.
One day I saw one of the students in Xavier wearing the
JVP shirt, so I asked about it. The work back in the parish
was good, but I wanted to so something more, to really put
into practice what I was singing about.”
Bryan just went to a JVP orientation out
of curiosity, having heard about the JVP back in high school.
“The orientation really opened my eyes. I felt privileged,
being where I was, and I wanted to give something back.
I volunteered because I thought there had to be something
I could offer to pay God back for his blessings.”
Now, half of their mission year has passed,
and they are in the middle of doing just that. It is hard
work, but it has grown into something that they love and
look forward to, every day. Brian explains, “At the
end of each day, there’s this great feeling of fulfillment,
and you just realize this—doing this is what makes
me happy.” For Kris, the weariness of a long day is
lifted when one of the children just comes up to her for
a hug, when she sees the children smile.
Both say the experience has definitely
changed them. “We’re ruined for life,”
Bryan jokes. Once shy and a bit of a loner, he is now more
sociable, and gets along with people more easily. Kris says
that her work in Bacolod has strengthened her love of kids.
They agree, laughing, that they are now a lot more patient
than when they started.
Both are considering extending their stay
after their mission year is up. Bryan is thinking of setting
up a foundation like Welcome Home back in Cagayan. For now,
he thinks of ways of using his background in electronics
to help educate deaf people. Kris, if she doesn’t
stay for another year, will go back to Camiguin and teach.
Whatever the future may hold for Kris
and Bryan, they will always carry with them the memory of
their experience, of the people and the lessons taught and
learned, and how it changed them.
The JVP continues to send more young men
and women who wish to extend a hand to those who need it,
to build a just society, to build a community. “We
are all angels with one wing,” an article in the JVP
publication, Trip, read, “and we need each other to
fly.”
At the core of the JVP endeavor is the
power of one: the power to make a difference, one life and
one student at a time, creating ripples that will one day
result in a unified nation of social justice. Over 25 years,
over 700 volunteers have been sent all over the country.
Over 25 years, thousands of lives have been touched, given
aid, loved.
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