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Monday, August 31, 2015

Being an educator


One of my main duties as a Salesian Lay Missioner is to be an educator to the youth. I interact with the youth in a variety of places and teachings opportunities arise all the time. I could be teaching good sportsmanship on a basketball court, having a discussion with teenagers while they are doing there chores at the boarding school, or teaching in a formal classroom setting at a school in the country. This is what I came down to Bolivia to do, to be Don Bosco for the youth that is to point the children to God and help them discover their gifts to help each other.

I have been spending my time lately at many locations around Yapacani. I move back and forth from the boarding school in the country to helping at the parish and surrounding schools in the “city” of yapacani. I say “city” because yapacani is not really a city on USA terms but here in Bolivia the urban area of yapacani is considered a small city to the Bolivians. Father Arturo really encourages me a lot to spend more time at the boarding school in the country. I like being at the boarding school with the kids. I miss them when I’m back at the parish, but that also means if I’m out there at the boarding school all the time, I cannot be with the kids that are in the city. Ahh the trouble of only being able to be in one place at one time.

So what do I do when I’m with the kids in the city?  I visit their schools. I try to have a 2 minute speech about God or a prayer ready to give to the kids outside on the playground. The kids who are about 7 to 13 years old genuinely stay tuned in. Surprisingly to me they love listening and talking about Jesus. They also like to tell me what they know about Jesus too. They have the desire to learn more about our Lord. Many of the small Christian classroom building schools here in Yapacani do not have religion teachers so I like to make an effort to visit these schools.
When I’m at the boarding school I usually arrive in the afternoon when the kids have already returned from school and are doing their homework. So I usually jump right in helping the teenagers with their English homework. I also can help with math and science. If you ask me to help you with Bolivian History and languages, you are out of luck. Once a week I give a “good night” which in my style is a powerpoint and video clip. The good nights are usually a lesson to the kids about our Christian faith and God. A tradition that Don Bosco carried out with his kids. I would also say that I know more about the kids here than say the kids that I visit at the school or anywhere else. I help the kids at the boarding school with their hw, I eat meals with them, I play with them, I watch tv with them( we only get two channels), I chase chickens with them, I go to mass with them, etc.

'harvesting' Yuca for dinner in the garden

dinner time!!!!

Celebrated the Anniversary of the boarding school 'Casa Don Bosco' and the Bicentennial B-day of Don Bosco. the kids invited their family to the boarding school and they played games, did skits, and danced
 

I am an Alterserver teacher. On Sundays I’m the one responsible for “recruiting” and training children who want to be alterservers. We do not have 2-3 alterservers serving at mass like the USA but instead usually 10 alterservers. I have an excel sheet of 30 alterservers with a rotation schedule. HAha I had to come up with a job list trying to give each alterserver something to do in mass. You ring the bell during the sacrifice, you two can hold the tela during communion, you can light the candles,…and you well you can just stand there and be an “angelito”. Another thing that I realized and that I thought was funny is that like 80% of the alterservers are girls. I told the girls to go ask their amigOs, only behaved boys, if they would like the privilege to serve at mass and well the girls didn’t let me down, the boys are starting to sign up. Some of the kids like serving at mass so much that some of the kids ask me to put them on the schedule for both the 9am and 11am mass.   
 
The Bicentennial birthday of Don Bosco fell on a Sunday so we celebrated mass outside on the basketball court to accommodate all the people and dances during mass. it was a beautiful Mass.

 

I’m also a religion teacher at two schools and I teach at each them once a week. There are tens and tens of small schools that are in need of religion teachers. One can make their entire Salesian missionary experience in just visiting and teaching at schools. The schools are small so classes I teach will usually have 3rd,4th,and 5th graders in one classroom which usually brings the total number of kids to 25-35 students. It’s nice to have a permanent teaching role in these schools.
Escuela "Naranjal" a small school that I teach religion in
 
I use the parish moto to get around from place to place

 

I also look forward to teaching Confirmation class on Tuesday nights at our parish church in Yapacani. The kids are 15 & 16 years old. Just a note confirmation class is 2 years long. After the second year they receive there sacrament from the Bishop. Prior to this the last time the kids received formal teaching about religion from the church, was when they were 8 years old when they received their first communion. So in between the time gap of 8 yrs old and 15yrs old, the kids do not receive teachings from the church. That’s sad. They do not have CCD here like in the USA. Also many of the students have not made their previous sacraments including baptism, so Connor and I teach everything about the Catholic faith in our Confirmation class. So although I’m not going around with the Bible to isolated villages to people dressed only in Loin cloths, I’m still teaching about our Faith to people who have never come to know Jesus and how to live a Christian lifestyle…. Experiences like these makes me feel like a missionary.
two of our students from our confirmation class
 

I am happy to teach others about the truths of our faith so that they can live a joyful life with Christ and I am very grateful for the opportunities to teach these kids that I have come to love. I also like being a good role model to the kids and teaching them good values through my actions and words. The quality of my visits depends a lot on how much time I spend preparing for my visits to these different places. I want to give these kids the best I got. I’m working for the Lord during this experience and it’s all about Him and His children. To me being a missionary here in Bolivia, is being a missionary 24-7, this is the reason why I am here in Bolivia and I want to help the spiritual lives of the children as much as I can. So these things are what make my experience so fruitful now and in the long run.
This is what I feel like at the end of the day


2 comments:

  1. Bravo, Adam! Thanks for telling us in such detail what you do, and showing some pix too. God keep you full of life and energy and enthusiasm, and always in his grace!

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  2. Excellent description of your work, Adam! We can see how spiritually uplifting it has been for you in Bolivia. All these young people will most certainly hold in their hearts your teachings about their faith for their entire lives as they will also remember you their entire lives.

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