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Mr. Fred Carpenter
Mr.
Fred Carpenter an SS.CC. friend and benefactor of Sacred Hearts
Retreat Center in Wareham, Mass., traveled with Fr. Bill Petrie, ss.cc., Provincial, to India on the occasion of the Ordination of
Deacon Sudhir Christo Das Nayak ,ss.cc.
ONE: “We
started out from Calcutta”
We started out
from Calcutta, and I got to meet Frs. Michael Shanahan and Ajith
Kumar. Everything was
so fast paced. In the beginning, I tried to keep a journal, but with
all the coming and going, packing and moving, I gave up on that
fairly quickly.
There wasn’t a
day that went by that we didn’t have Eucharist. Right away, I
noticed that in India the Crucifix is turned around, so those
presiding are facing it. Of course, every one is seated on low
stools and mats; every bit of the Eucharistic experience is good.
Never did I
dream how dynamic traveling to India with Fr. Bill Petrie would be.
It’s hard to put into words the love and respect that everyone had
for him: phenomenal. With Fr. Bill as a mentor, the trip became more
like a pilgrimage. The holiness that is there once you arrive is
unbelievable. I couldn’t help but think how in the beginning, when
Fr. Bill first got there over twenty-five years ago, he didn’t have
anyone leading him by the hand the way that I did.>
Fr. Bill knew
everybody. One day we were out for dinner and Fr. Bill was sure he
had seen a maitre’d
he had known from the past at the restaurant. He asked
the other waiters working there to look for him. Sure enough, out he
came and the smile on his face when he saw Fr. Bill was
indescribable. Over the course of our stay, we saw many
Missionaries of Charity and, of course, they all know Fr. Bill!
TWO: The
Ordination was extraordinary
To be anywhere
more than two days was a long time. From Calcutta, we went to Bhubaneswar. Everyone there was so excited about setting out for
Bro.
Christodas Sudhir Nayak’s
ordination, and before I knew it, I was one among the three groups
of people heading for
Balliguda, Orissa in
the mountains. The trip was
nearly seven hours long. The
Ordination was extraordinary. We could see the people arriving and
preparing for it. The parade up to the Church with musicians
stopped traffic. At the ordination there were at least 500 people.
With three men being ordained, the place didn’t have an empty spot. The next day we
traveled even deeper into the mountains for
Bodangia,
the village of the newly ordained priest’s
First Mass. Many times we had to stop
because the grade would be so steep with ditches filled with water.
There were eight of us in the jeep that I rode in, and sometimes,
the jeep’s chassis would bottom out;
at times, I didn’t even think we were going to make it. The scenery
was beautiful with deep valleys everywhere you looked. Close to the
village you see the church that I would never have expected; it
comes from out of nowhere. In Calcutta,
every morning I observed Fr. Michael doing his adoration, and I
began to grow in the understanding that Adoration was happening in
every other place that we journeyed to— only I didn’t see it.
Three: “part
of the program”—Compassion
I always knew
the Congregation did good work in India, but I never imagined the
conditions that SS.CC.’s worked under.
When the brothers say they try to live compassionately, there is no
longer any doubt in my mind, none whatsoever. They do.
It’s “part of the program.” You get a sense of this by the way the
people look up to SS.CC.’s and show them respect and the admiration
the people have for the members.
Fr.
Bill took me to Damien Social Development Institute. To be honest,
I have to admit that I cried when I saw so many people whose bodies
were so deformed by leprosy, welcome Fr. Bill back with so much
love. The men were on one side and the women on another; it was so
hard for them to do even the simplest things. As we walked, they
would hand us flowers and after awhile we couldn’t hold them all.
It’s hard to describe so much of what I saw there.
The
Congregation gets involved in the peoples’ lives. In Fr. Ajith’s
parish ministry, I could see all the energy he puts into programs
for the children and how responsive they are. When I was there, he
was sponsoring a music contest among a few of the youth groups. He
and Sr. Rose Reeves, ss.cc., were the judges, and they asked me to
present trophies to the winners. What impressed me so much was the
amount of self sacrifice that Fr. Ajith poured into his ministry.
I think seeing the way he put his all into it gave me a deeper
understanding of the level of service the Congregation provides for
the Church not only in India but here as well. But once you see
India, you understand how greatly the Congregation is needed. The
community does such a good job of attracting new members. I have
never seen so many young priests; the grace is so bountiful. I
didn’t actually go with a personal motive to be changed, but before
I left, my parish priest said that the experience would change me. I
won’t ever forget the day Fr. Bill offered Mass at Bl. Mother
Teresa’s Motherhouse. We had breakfast with Sr. Nirmala; after that
he took me to the House of the Dying. The next day I had someone
show me the way there, and I was able to volunteer. I got lost
coming back. As I asked people for directions, I was surprised by
the number of people who didn’t know who Mother Teresa was. But with
the help of three different policemen along the way, I got back to
Damien Formation House on Rippon Street; what an experience!
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