THE MESSAGE OF THE RECTOR MAJOR
Fr. Angel Fernandez Artime, SDB
BETWEEN PAIN AND HOPE
We are witnesses to a living Gethsemane and Calvary.
Let us hope also to see the Resurrection of this country and its people.
My dear friends, readers
of Salesian media around the world,
As I write these lines to you, the media worldwide are giving, minute by minute, almost instantaneous news of the terrible war that is taking place in Ukraine. I am convinced that the vast majority of the Russian people do not want to harm anyone. Indeed, I think that most of us agree in describing what is happening in that land blessed by God as being terrible, unimaginable, and unbelievable in the 21st century, calling it total madness and true genocide. The thought of how we would feel if we were living that reality must, I suppose, shake us and fill us with sadness.
The sad reality is
that, yet again, evil makes noise, destroys things and people, brings death,
skews human lives, fractures families, etc. The good—so much good and
solidarity—that we are witnessing even while rockets and long-range projectiles
fall, is all done silently. This good tries to mitigate the pain, dry the
tears, and provide human warmth. The human heart is capable of this, too. In
situations such as these, we see the worst of human nature and the greatest
beauty of the human heart simultaneously. We are witnesses to a living Gethsemane
and Calvary. Let us hope also to see the Resurrection of this country and its
people.
This very thing happened
during that first Holy Week—with those who betrayed Jesus and in his pain, death
sentence, silence, and radical loneliness. “Were it not for his Mother and the
Beloved Disciple, he would have been totally abandoned.” God had the last word,
however: the Resurrection, the “Other-Life.”
I do not know what
this Easter season will bring with the war in Ukraine. I am writing in advance,
and things change from day to day. I trust that peace will come with
reasonableness, pressure from almost all nations, and the strength of human
solidarity, and faith and prayer.
As I write this
greeting, we are on day 10 of this terrible war that has displaced a million
and a half people. While this is true, I want to underline that the solidarity,
fraternity, and humanity of simple hearts and families, in addition to the response
of many governments, are the things that help me feel better about being a
human being. If it were not for these realities, I don’t think we could forgive
ourselves.
Our little grain of sand
I am in daily contact
with our confreres and sisters in Ukraine and Poland. It gives me great peace
to know that, as a Salesian Family, we are also offering our little grain of
sand. I am happy to hear that the young people who had been received into our group
home in Lviv have also been welcomed in Salesian houses in Slovakia. It gives
me peace to know that the Salesian houses on the border between Poland and
Ukraine have all opened their doors to take in those displaced by the war.
Dozens of mothers and their children have been offered food, rooms, and places
to live in dignity.
Acts of solidarity
such as these are also coming from other nations and many other Salesian
presences. Indeed, help is arriving from all over the Salesian world and all the provinces,
regardless of size, according to each one’s possibilities. We are acting as the
channel for sending monetary donations and shipments of medical supplies to the
most remote places, thus bringing help to people who need it most. Albeit a
grain of sand, we are tens of thousands of people and institutions who are helping
the cause.
Prayer for Peace
All is done in silence—not “making noise” like the bad news—without advertisement, just in solidarity and
in simplicity. It is time to move from Gethsemane and Calvary to the hope and
strength of the Resurrection.
It is very painful that, in this preparation for Holy
Week and the holy solemnity of Easter, bombs, bullets, rifles, and death are present.
Even amid this pain, I do not stop proclaiming that life is stronger, human
fraternity is stronger, solidarity is stronger, the dignity of the person is
stronger even when it’s trampled, and the help from brother to brother, sister
to sister, is stronger—even if
we do not know each other or speak the same language. Hope is more contagious.
I ask the Lord of Life in prayer to help
us come to our senses—especially for those who have created this tragedy. I ask that peace
win. I ask that hearts filled with true humanity not be silent.
May we do whatever each of us can, dear
friends. Let’s join efforts with our voices, our helping hands, and our prayers.
May the Risen Lord fill us with his strength
and his peace.
In Him,
Fr. Angel
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