I wrote an update the other evening and lost in in trying to publish it! Needless to say, IT is not my forte!
The meeting of the Constitutions' Commission has just finished and a communique will appear shortly. It was during the previous meeting of the same commission that I wrote my last blog, so in a sense we have come full circle!
After holidays in August I went to Algeria to visit the French friars there. Because of circumstances their presence there is a very discreet one, but they have been given permission to act as chaplains to the Catholic students from sub-Saharan Africa who attend the university in Tiaret, the city where the fraternity is situated.
Visitation of the French province in October was an opportunity to revisit Strasbourg, where I had studied many years ago, and also to visit friaries I had never seen before. There are still over two hundred friars in the provinces, but more than one hundred are over eighty years old. But there is still plenty of energy, as witnessed by the new presence in Algeria (which began two years ago), and the preparations for a new multi-cultural fraternity in a poor area in the Paris region. Preparations are underway for the chapter in February 2009.
November saw the entire definitory headed for Dar es Salaam to meet the African conferences, and then on to Bangalore to meet the Indian conference. From there we headed to Penang in Malaysia to meet the Asia-Pacific conference. Each of the visit was very short but gave us an opportunity to have some insights into the the positive and negative sides of Capuchin living in these areas.
Coming from the ageing region of Europe, for me it was very invigorating to see so many young friars, especially in Africa and India. Also fascinating was to see first hand the variety of ways in which the Capuchin charism has been incarnated, while all the time retaining the simplicity and fraternal spirit which characterised our family. It was a great trip, tiring but satisfying, which hopefully has helped to create a new sense of unity and purpose in the wider Order.
Happy Christmas to one and all. Nollaig fe shean is fe mhaise dibh go leir, as we say in Gaelic!