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In a very remote section of the Philippines, there is a place called Galilee. Located in Bugwam, Antipas the Oblate Galilee Farm is a self-sustaining farm that features agriculture with a clean, green, pollution-free and chemical-free environment. It also features several agricultural business enterprises, including agro-forestry, dairy and goat production and fish ponds. Oblate Galilee Farm was created by Fr.Yves Caroff, O.M.I. who arrived in the Philippines in 1981. Born and raised in the farming region of France, he combined his missionary evangelical apostolate with efforts to help his flock improve their material quality of life through better farming technology. Father Caroff found his missionary thrust working among the people of the highlands, helping them to make their land more productive for generations. Thereby, starting the Oblate Galilee Farm in June 1993. So Fr. Caroff began with undulating hills and creeks totaling 9.2 hectares. The land had been abandoned for many years and was covered with weeds. Priority at the initial phase was given to the development of the springs. Culverts were buried and the flowing water was channeled through hoses down to a reservoir. Later, an artesian well was dug to provide a safe water supply. Today, about 80 percent of the land is productive with fishponds, rice fields and fruit trees as well as other types of trees and crops. The formerly unproductive dry creeks have been dammed and converted to fishponds where tilapia is raised. Once barren slopes have been planted with hardwood trees (which fills the farm’s own lumber needs) and fruit trees (mango, lemon, banana and papaya). There are two rice fields and several plots for legumes and other cash crops as well as vegetables. Various farm animals are raised on the farm including milking goats, cows, pigs, rabbits, chickens and horses. Produce of the farm are sold in the town market or are bought by people who come to the farm. Lately, the farm has started to engage in food processing of meat and fruit products: ham, sausage, jam and marmalades. Lebh Shomea is a House of Prayer in Sarita, Texas run by the Missionary Oblates. Guests come throughout the year for a contemplative experience among the desert silence. Nature plays a pivotal role in their experience. Lebh Shomea is immersed in the wilderness of south Texas, six miles from the nearest highway. Some of this wilderness is thick brush laced with deer trails, while other areas are rolling sand dunes dotted with buffalo grass. Flowers are everywhere and there is a great diversity of animals milling about. There are over 200 species of birds around Lebh Shomea, making it a bird-watchers paradise. Many birds are migratory, but some stay year-round. Lebh Shomea is home to some birds that are difficult to see elsewhere in the United States, such as Northern Beardless-Tyrannulet, Tropical Parula, Ferruginous Pygmy-Owl, Scott’s and Audubon’s Orioles. Lebh Shomea is also home to animals that are commonly found in Texas, such as deer and armadillos, and less common animals including the nilgai and javelina. The nilgai is the largest Asian antelope. It was brought to south Texas from India in the 1920s and they run wild in small herds at Lebh Shomea. A fully-grown nilgai is about as large as a medium-size horse. Javelinas are wild boars that are vegetarians and run in packs of 10 to 15 at Lebh Shomea. To learn more about the Oblates’ Lebh Shomea House of Prayer, visit lebhshomea.org. (continued on page 4) OUR COMMON HOME News Winter 2017 Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate • 9480 North De Mazenod Drive • Belleville, IL 62223-1160 • oblatesusa.org • facebook.com/oblatesusaorg Lebh Shomea Celebrates Nature Protecting Our Common Home You are partnering with the Missionary Oblates in helping to preserve the Integrity of Creation. As a member of the Our Common Home Club, you are being remembered in the daily Masses and prayers of Missionary Oblates around the world. Thank you for your kindness! Our Common Home News is published four times each year by the Missionary Oblates. Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate 9480 North De Mazenod Drive Belleville, IL 62223-1160 oblatesusa.org/ourcommonhome facebook.com/oblatesusaorg Nearly 40 farmers help to run Oblate Galilee Farm. Seven are regular employees while the others are casual workers. Their families either live on the farm or nearby. They belong to various ethnic groups and have various religious affiliations. There are 15 structures on the farm which include several small barns for the livestock, a schoolhouse, a clinic manned by a mid-wife, a dormitory for visitors, the food processing plant and a small chapel. In recent years Galilee Farm has become a favorite visiting place for farmers and school children from the neighboring areas. There are even a few occasional visitors from much farther, even from foreign countries. The farm also provides for continuous in-service training of its staff either on-site or in other agricultural training centers in the country. There is also a modest college scholarship program (veterinary and agricultural science) for some selected youth to prepare them to assume a leadership role in the project later. The foundation also helps some of its landless cooperators to buy a few hectares of land and develop them in-line with the Galilee Farm methods. For nearly 25 years, the rationale of the Oblate Galilee Farm has remained consistent: “We think that the existence of some kind of low level agricultural center in isolated areas such as Bugwak can contribute a great deal to bring new hope and development to isolated poor farmers who constitute one of the poorest and most neglected social groups in the country.” Creating Self-Sustainability At The Oblate Galilee Farm (continued from page 1) Creating Self-Sustainability At The Oblate Galilee Farm M18E1D_November_Winter_OCH_Newsletter.indd 1 9/21/17 8:39 AM
Transcript
Page 1: Oblate Sister Fights For Environmental Cause In …vmusa.org/oblates/och/M18E1D_November_Winter_OCH...Sister Susan Bolanio is a member of the Oblates of Notre Dame, a congregation

In a very remote section of the Philippines, there is a place called Galilee.

Located in Bugwam, Antipas the Oblate Galilee Farm is a self-sustaining farm that features agriculture with a clean, green, pollution-free and chemical-free environment. It also features several agricultural business enterprises, including agro-forestry, dairy and goat production and fish ponds.

Oblate Galilee Farm was created by Fr. Yves Caroff, O.M.I. who arrived in the Philippines in 1981. Born and raised in the farming region of France, he combined his missionary evangelical apostolate with efforts to help his flock improve their material quality of life through better farming technology.

Father Caroff found his missionary thrust working among the people of the highlands, helping them to make their land more productive for generations. Thereby, starting the Oblate Galilee Farm in June 1993.

So Fr. Caroff began with undulating hills and creeks totaling 9.2 hectares. The land had been abandoned for many years and was covered with weeds. Priority at the

initial phase was given to the development of the springs. Culverts were buried and the flowing water was channeled through hoses down to a reservoir. Later, an artesian well was dug to provide a safe water supply.

Today, about 80 percent of the land is productive with fishponds, rice fields and fruit trees as well as

other types of trees and crops. The formerly unproductive dry creeks have been dammed and converted to fishponds where tilapia is raised. Once barren slopes have been planted with hardwood trees (which fills the farm’s own lumber needs) and fruit trees (mango, lemon, banana and papaya). There are two rice fields and several plots for legumes and other cash crops as well as vegetables.

Various farm animals are raised on the farm including milking goats, cows, pigs, rabbits, chickens and horses. Produce of the farm are sold in the town market or are bought by people who come to the farm. Lately, the farm has

started to engage in food processing of meat and fruit products: ham, sausage, jam and marmalades.

Lebh Shomea is a House of Prayer in Sarita, Texas run by the Missionary Oblates. Guests come throughout the year for a contemplative experience among the desert silence. Nature plays a pivotal role in their experience.

Lebh Shomea is immersed in the wilderness of south Texas, six miles from the nearest highway. Some of this wilderness is thick brush laced with deer trails, while other areas are rolling sand dunes dotted with buffalo grass. Flowers are everywhere and there is a great diversity of animals milling about.

There are over 200 species of birds around Lebh Shomea, making it a bird-watchers paradise. Many birds are migratory, but some stay year-round. Lebh Shomea is home to some birds that are difficult to see elsewhere in the United States, such as Northern

Beardless-Tyrannulet, Tropical Parula, Ferruginous Pygmy-Owl, Scott’s and Audubon’s Orioles.

Lebh Shomea is also home to animals that are commonly found in Texas, such as deer and armadillos, and less common animals including the nilgai and javelina.

The nilgai is the largest Asian antelope. It was brought to south Texas from India in the 1920s and they run wild in small herds at Lebh Shomea. A fully-grown nilgai is about as large as a medium-size horse. Javelinas are wild boars that are vegetarians and run in packs of 10 to 15 at Lebh Shomea.

To learn more about the Oblates’ Lebh Shomea House of Prayer, visit lebhshomea.org.

(continued on page 4)

OUR COMMON HOME News

Winter 2017

Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate

Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate • 9480 North De Mazenod Drive • Belleville, IL 62223-1160 • oblatesusa.org • facebook.com/oblatesusaorg

Lebh Shomea Celebrates Nature

Protecting Our Common Home

You are partnering with the Missionary Oblates in helping to preserve the

Integrity of Creation. As a member of the Our Common Home Club, you are

being remembered in the daily Masses and prayers of Missionary Oblates around the world. Thank you for

your kindness!

Our Common Home News is published four times each year by

the Missionary Oblates.

Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate9480 North De Mazenod Drive

Belleville, IL 62223-1160 oblatesusa.org/ourcommonhome

facebook.com/oblatesusaorg

Nearly 40 farmers help to run Oblate Galilee Farm. Seven are regular employees while the others are casual workers. Their families either live on the farm or nearby. They belong to various ethnic groups and have various religious affiliations.

There are 15 structures on the farm which include several small barns for the livestock, a schoolhouse, a clinic manned by a mid-wife, a dormitory for visitors, the food processing plant and a small chapel.

In recent years Galilee Farm has become a favorite visiting place for farmers and school children from the neighboring areas. There are even a few occasional visitors from much farther, even from foreign countries.

The farm also provides for continuous in-service training of

its staff either on-site or in other agricultural training centers in the country. There is also a modest college scholarship program (veterinary and agricultural science) for some selected youth to prepare them to assume a leadership role in the project later. The foundation also helps some of its landless cooperators to buy a few hectares of land and develop them in-line with the Galilee Farm methods.

For nearly 25 years, the rationale of the Oblate Galilee Farm has remained consistent: “We think that the existence of some kind of low level agricultural center in isolated areas such as Bugwak can contribute a great deal to bring new hope and development to isolated poor farmers who constitute one of the poorest and most neglected social groups in the country.”

Creating Self-Sustainability At The Oblate Galilee Farm (continued from page 1)

Creating Self-Sustainability At The Oblate Galilee Farm

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Page 2: Oblate Sister Fights For Environmental Cause In …vmusa.org/oblates/och/M18E1D_November_Winter_OCH...Sister Susan Bolanio is a member of the Oblates of Notre Dame, a congregation

Sister Susan Bolanio is a member of the Oblates of Notre Dame, a congregation that was started in 1956 in the Philippines by the Missionary

Oblates. There are currently about 200 Sisters in the order.

Oblate Sister Fights For Environmental Cause

In Philippines

The Missionary Oblates, novices and friends took part in a fundraiser in support of a pollinator garden located at the Oblate Novitiate in Godfrey, Illinois. In addition to raising funds for the garden, the event was also an opportunity for people to learn about Oblate initiatives to protect the environment.

The pollinator garden is one of three restoration projects created by the Oblates on the novitiate’s grounds. It aims to offset threats to the monarch butterfly migration, assure a diverse food source throughout the season and produce herbicide-free nectar for a variety of pollinators.

The pollinator garden was created in 2014 in response to threats to the monarch butterfly migration and bee colony collapse. Volunteers weeded and seeded a 6,000 square foot area, and an Eagle Scout troop made four benches for the garden.

“Since pollinators are responsible for every third bite of food we eat, and because their disappearance creates a hole in the ecosystem, we consider this effort important in contributing to the integrity of creation,” said Fr. Jack Lau, O.M.I.

Read more about the work of the Oblates’ ecological initiatives at lavistaelc.org.

Originally Published by The Herald Malaysia Online

Her work with tribal communities earned her the tags “leftist” and “communist” from the military that has battled a communist insurgency in Mindanao for the past 50 years. Sister Susan had to explain to soldiers that she is a “religious person working for the welfare of the poor.” She said she could be killed or sued for fighting big companies and influential people.

“I have fears, but I don’t allow it to paralyze me because of my love for the poor,” she said. “I think I have not been sued because my advocacies are based on legal and moral frameworks.”

In 2010 Sr. Susan was one of the leading forces behind a campaign to ban open-pit mining in the province of South Cotabato, an area known for huge mineral deposits. The open-pit ban was approved by the government and continues to be in effect. In recent years Sr. Susan’s engagement with the poor has included work with small business fishermen and their families.

She also established a center, Stella Maris Seafarers’ Center, in General Santos City, the country’s “tuna capital.” The center assists tuna fishermen who have been arrested for illegal fishing in neighboring countries such as Indonesia.

“So many poor Filipino tuna fishermen are still languishing in various jails there,” said Sr. Susan. “Marginalized people deserve love and compassion and I have vowed to journey and fight with them and their cause.”

Sister Susan Bolanio, a nun of the Oblates of Notre Dame congregation, can usually be found at the center of any protest action that concerns the environment and tribal people in southern Philippines. The nun describes her work with the poor as dangerous. There have often been times when she has felt fear, but her religion gives her the strength to continue her journey with the people.

Sister Susan’s desire to dedicate her life to the Lord was awakened back in her high school years in the sleepy little town of Pigcawayan, a North Cotabato province in the south of the Philippines. The nuns who walked the trails to poor mountain villages first piqued young Susan’s interest. She decided to find out more and to follow them.

In 1971 she took her religious vows to join the Oblates of Notre Dame. The community has been Sr. Susan’s family for 46 years now.

Founded by two missionaries of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, the congregation’s primary apostolate is pastoral catechesis. While the sisters are known to work in parishes and schools, there are those like Sr. Susan who are actively engaged in social ministry, including the promotion of the rights of indigenous peoples.

Sister Susan has climbed the mountains and walked the lowlands of Mindanao in her many fights, especially against big mining corporations. Her greatest “crusade” with the tribal people was against the operation of a mining project in the province of South Cotabato.

She has worked at the forefront of protests against the displacement of tribal communities and the destruction of the environment. She also stood with the tribes against coal mining in the picturesque town of Lake Sebu, also in South Cotabato. For the tribal people Sr. Susan is a brave defender of their rights.

Bishop Dinualdo Gutierrez of Marbel describes the nun as a “feisty religious who has amassed a significant track record fighting progressive causes dating back from martial law era.”

Sister Susan said she was “conscienticized” during the dictatorship years in the 1970s.

“I ran for my life as the government went after activists during that difficult period,” said Sr. Susan. “The Church needs to intervene in the struggles of the poor because God hears the cries of poor people.”

The tribal people of Mindanao, many of whom are poor and have no access to education, have a soft spot in the nun’s heart. “These indigenous people are mostly illiterate, and I am only helping them assert their rights in their ancestral domains,” she said.

“I have fears, but I don’t allow it to paralyze me because of my love for the poor.”

Fundraiser Held for Pollinator Garden

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