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Serving
the Dying of Kolkata and Being Filled with God’s Blessing
...
by
Marc Barbara
This past August I went to India
for two weeks to serve the poor and the homeless with the Missionaries
of Charity, founded by Mother Theresa of Calcutta. I was joined with my
older sister (21 years old), my older cousin (21 years old) and my friend
(21 years old). We traveled from Lebanon to Kolkata (formerly known as
Calcutta) in West Bengal. Kolkata is one of the poorest cities in the world.
The Missionaries of Charity welcome a continuous stream of volunteers who
come to offer their help. I discovered that volunteers don't even have
to sign up or call to be part of their program. You give your name as soon
as you get there. The sisters have so many people to care for that they
can't do their work of mercy without the help of volunteers from around
the world. There are many poor and sick people in need and very few sisters
to care for them. Every volunteer really makes a huge difference, and the
sisters are more than happy and thankful for each new volunteer who offers
their service.
After our plane arrived in Kolkalta
we took a taxi to the hotel, and then started working the very next morning.
We went to the Mother House where the Missionaries of Charity live, gave
them our names, and then chose one of their centers we wanted to serve
in. In Kolkata they have a center for the sick people, a center for the
mentally ill, a center for the physically handicapped, and a center for
the people who are dying. I volunteered to help at the center for the dying
people.
We worked every day in the center
from 7 am to 12 pm. I chose the job least chosen by most volunteers; washing
people’s clothes by hand, feeding those who were dying, and even showering
them. Most of the dying can't walk, so I would carry them from their beds
to the bathrooms. Most of the other volunteers couldn't stand to see the
people I was working with because of their misery and the poor state of
their bodies. Four people I worked with died during my stay.
I joined the sisters every morning
at 5:30 am in their Mother House chapel where they prayed the psalms
together and received the Eucharist at their daily Mass. Without this time
of daily prayer with the sisters and being filled with God's blessing for
the day, I would have had no energy or motivation to volunteer. Just before
going to work, we used to sing a small prayer all together which the sisters
taught us: "We have our hope in Jesus that all things will be well in the
Lord." There was also a prayer and meditation time in the Mother House
every afternoon at 5 pm. It was a calm and peaceful environment during
that time, a good time to forget everything around us and concentrate on
being alone with God.
I heard a saying that Calcutta [Kolkata]
is an attack on the five senses. The smell on the streets is very bad,
you can't touch anything because it is so dirty, the people and the condition
in which they live in can be disturbing. You barely find good food that
won't make you sick, and you always hear the sound of heavy traffic – a
lot of cars and honking horns. Kolkata is a really disturbing city, and
I found the first days there very hard because I didn't know anyone or
anything about the local culture. I expected it to be tough, but when I
got there it was much worse than I could have ever imagined. After a few
days passed by, I got used to it. The weather for me was the worst combination
ever – very hot and humid with heavy rain.
Every morning I used to spray my
whole body with insect repellant to prevent mosquito bites. I underwent
all the vaccines necessary before the trip and took malaria pills before,
during and after the trip. I found Kolkata to be a safe city, even
at night. So there is nothing to worry about except the food you eat and
the water you drink. We always drank imported bottled water (not tap water)
and found a few restaurants that were safe to eat in. Transportation is
easy there; there are a lot of taxis, and streets are named and numbered.
Everything in India is really cheap as well.
Serving the poor in Kolkata can be
a very hard and tough experience – I don’t think everyone who would like
to volunteer can survive it. The work is very tiring, but once you
get used to it, it is a great and rewarding experience. This experience
has taught me a lot. First, I learned a new culture I didn’t know before.
Second, I now better realize how blessed and fortunate I am and how much
I really have compared to those who lack so much here. Third, I learned
how to adapt to a new style of living there (walk from place to place,
use public transportation, helping people and learning from them, as well
as being able to teach and encourage them...). Fourth, I was able to meet
people from many cultures around the world. We became friends with volunteers
from Italy, Japan, and America... We also got to go out to lunch and dinner
in our free times. We were all there for the same reason: to help and love
the way Mother Theresa did, to make a little change in people's lives and
give them some hope to go on.
If anyone reading my testimony has
any interest in serving with the Missionaries of Charity, I would encourage
you to go even if it is only for a week. There isn't much tourism you can
do there, but it won't be boring. And you will be blessed and inspired,
as I was, with the opportunity to serve and be blessed by the Missionaries
of Charity and the people they care for.
[Marc Barbara is from the
People of God community in Lebanon, where he serves with the youth program
and is an active member of University Christian Outreach. He is completing
his bachelor's degree in business at the American University of Beirut.] |