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Sunday, March 11, 2018

Salesians Return to Tappita

Salesians Return to Tappita

Mission was founded by Frs. John Thompson and Larry Gilmore

On March 5 ANS posted this follow-up to an interview they published on March 3 (see below).

(ANS – Tappita, Liberia – March 5) - The Salesian mission at Tappita, in the Liberian forest, is now being re-established some years after the 1989-1997 civil war forced its missionaries to depart.


The mission was founded by Frs. John Thompson and Larry Gilmore, American Salesians, in the mid-1980s. For one year the future martyr Sean Devereux (murdered in Somalia for defending the rights of the poor) was a volunteer at the mission.

When war made it too dangerous for the Salesians or Mr. Devereux to stay, the mission was transferred to local clergy, who were not able to give it much attention.

In the current phase of re-awakening, the mission needs everything: little things, like whistles to referee games at the youth center or catechetical materials, to the most ambitious programs like restarting the school and setting up the youth center. It is a reality where the pioneering spirit of the mission ferments every activity of education, social development, and evangelization.

The three Salesians who have taken over the mission have given themselves a few months to size up the situation, understand the challenges, and draft an action plan. They currently live in the house that belonged to the Consolata Sisters until they too had to leave because of the war. In the last 20 years the house was used occasionally by the priest who visited the mission from time to time and then stayed permanently, but its deterioration was progressive and fast. 

For the Christmas holidays [sic], the community had decided to adopt the “do as it has always been done” method to see and learn from the situation. And despite the challenges of the realities at Tappita – rationed electricity and water supply, sketchy communications, linguistic difficulties with the local population – the SDBs have begun to shape pastoral activities.

In January, all the parish groups met: pastoral council, finance committee, men, women, youths, altar servers, choir, and various associations. “Every evening, from 5:00 p.m. onwards, we ‘listened,’” explains Fr. Riccardo Castellino, SDB.

The parish also has 24 outstations in the villages. The Salesians have decided to visit them all. Every Sunday one of them stays in the parish, and each of the other two journeys to a neighboring village.

The local people are simple and poor. They live on agriculture, and though they do not lack food, they have no cash. All the communities, with the little they have, have built or are building a little church of mud and sheet metal.

“There is a lot of work to do, and this involves a great deal of energy and material resources. But they too are children of God and deserve our full attention,” Fr. Castellino concludes.

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