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Jim
Collins, SJ, Leads Delegation of Loyola Academy Teachers on 10-Day
Journey to Peru
Wednesday,
June 05, 2002

Jim Collins and the Pozo-Mamani Family in Tacna Peru
During the Loyola Academy Spring Break a Delegation of eight teachers
visited Peru. The mission of the group was to honor and dignify
the people and institutions they encountered with sincere interest
and real questions. The delegation went to experience and admire
the Jesuit works in Tacna and Lima. Jim Collins, SJ, led the delegation,
whci included Sheri Anderson, Mark Chang, Nichol Hill, Scott Myslinski,
Mary Ann Quinlan, Brian Schoonover, and Lori Willer.
The
delegation spent five days in Tacna, where they visited Colegio
Cristo Rey for two days. They engaged in roundtable discussions
with administrators, teachers and students to hear what they viewed
as the most admirable aspects of their school. Loyola teachers sat
in on classes, spent recreation times chatting with students, joined
in a class Mass celebration, and toured the impressive facilities.
Loyola
teachers were impressed with The students. who seemed to have a
sense of the importance of their Christian formation in preparing
them to displace the corruption and dishonesty in the political
leadership of their country. During the roundtable discussion with
a group of students, Daniel Meza Mosqueira, a 14-year-old student
offered this profound reflection:
“What
Colegio Cristo Rey is teaching us is very important in so far as
it is teaching us values. Because, what has happened in Peru lately
is that there has been stealing within the government. Politicians
have been taking money that doesn’t belong to them. There
has been a significant lack of honesty.
For this, it is important that our school teach us values. Because
in the future Peru has to strive to be something better and we have
to contribute to our country’s development. Isn’t that
true? However, bit by bit you can see it improving.”
The
LA teachers were hosted in the homes of Cristo Rey teachers. They
agreed that there is no better way to get inside the Peruvian culture
than to live with a Peruvian family. Many admired the sense of extended
family and hospitality that they experienced in their host homes.
The
delegation also visited the Cristo Rey Center for the Working Child
and the Fe y Alegria school in Tacna. The group shared lunch with
some of the working children at the cafeteria. The group was most
impressed with the beautiful facilities of the Center and the quality
and breadth professional assistance that is offered to these children
and their families.
The
group also visited a paprika farm which is managed by UNISER and
alumni of Colegio Cristo Rey and whose proceeds are used to self-finance
the various Jesuit works in Tacna. Finally they spent a day at Colegio
Miguel Pro, the newest addition to the family of Jesuit works which
is located in the Habitat For Humanity neighborhood. Fr. Fred Green,
S.J., who has lived and worked in Tacna for over forty years, spoke
with the delegation about his experiences and wise perspectives.
In
Lima, the delegation stayed at the retreat house located on the
grounds of Colegio La Inmaculada. Fr. Kevin Gallagher, S.J., and
Fr. Robert Dolan, S.J., offered tours and commentaries of their
impressive campus. Fr. Kevin responded to the teachers many questions
and shared his insights and wisdom regarding the socio-economic
context of Peru..
Fr.
Frank Chamberlain, S.J., hosted the group for a morning at his expansive
parish in El Agostino neighborhood in Lima. His insights into Peruvian
Catholic culture were quite helpful.
This
delegation seems to have met its goal to enlighten the Loyola Academy
faculty so as to enlighten their students. They were impressed by
the quality and breadth of the various Jesuit works in the Peruvian
Province and became more aware of the socio-economic responsibilities
inherent in our global village.
The
best testimony of the success of our trip was a comment made at
the end of the journey by Sheri Anderson, a recent convert to Catholicism,
who admits, “I just never realized that Catholicism has this
whole social justice component that I’ve not been aware of.”
I believe that she made this comment based on her experience of
seeing various works of the Church, The Society Of Jesus, practicing
“a faith that does justice”. This is the type of ‘enlightenment’
that this delegation hoped to achieve.
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