Salesians in Brazil Reach Remote Villages
Salesian Missions provides new outboard motors
(ANS - São Gabriel da Cachoeira, Brazil – Nov. 25, 2024) – Salesian missionaries in the Amazon are better able to travel to remote villages to provide pastoral support to indigenous people thanks to outboard motors that were purchased with donor funding from Salesian Missions of New Rochelle. More than 1,000 youths and their families living in the Alto Rio Negro region of Brazil have been impacted by this donation.
Salesians
aid the communities of São Gabriel da Cachoeira and Santa Isabel do Rio Negro,
which are far from the Salesian headquarters and hard to access. With the new
transportation, Salesians are more easily able to access these communities to
visit families, identify problems they face, guide and inform them, and refer
them to services. Salesians are also able to offer training to pastoral leaders
and prepare youths and adults to receive the sacraments.
Salesian
missionaries have been supporting this indigenous region for generations to
provide pastoral support, meet basic needs, and ensure access to education. The
region faces several challenges that hinder the work being done, including the
lack of roads. As a result, the necessary support is carried out using small
boats that transport Salesians to various remote locations. The acquisition of
outboard motors has brought safety, practicality, and reliability to travel for
the various activities carried out by the Salesians in this area.
One
Salesian said: “The local leaders of the communities have expressed positive
feedback regarding the frequency of the visits. The Salesian priests are also
feeling more confident in carrying out their missions, as previously, without
an adequate and new motor, their journeys were challenging.”
According to the World Bank, the COVID-19 pandemic has had a
devastating impact on Brazil with poverty tripling in 2021. Nearly 17 million
people fell into poverty in the first quarter of the year and the poverty rate
now is higher than it was a decade ago. Researchers estimate that some 27
million people, 12.8% of Brazil’s population, are now living below the poverty
line.
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