Friday, October 27, 2017

Take a pilgrimage, volunteer your time

Can you imagine opening your doors to anyone who comes to your home looking for a place to stay, no matter their health condition or legal status? Every day the Sisters of Divine Providence welcome strangers into their emergency shelter — La Posada Providencia in San Benito.
When answering the telephone or opening her door, Sister Zita Telkamp, who has served as the shelter’s executive director for 13 years, never knows who will need her assistance. “We never turn anyone away,” she said.

Since the sisters opened in the center 28 years ago in 1989 they and volunteers have served more than 9,000 people from 81 countries. Many of their clients arrive with only the clothes on their backs, and “with hope in their pockets,” said Sister Telkamp. The stories recounted by the men, women and children overflow with hardships from their long journeys in search of safety and a better life.

Pope Francis is asking us to share the journey with our migrant and immigrant brothers and sisters. But long before he announced the international campaign on Sept. 27, Sister Telkamp and so many others in our diocese have been answering the call, witnessing to the power of accompanying others.

The campaign draws us to ask ourselves the question, “How are we sharing the journey?”

When considering this month’s Close to Home pilgrimage, I felt a prompting to do more than visit a traditional religious site. St. John Paul II reminded us a pilgrimage is “a process of conversion, a yearning for intimacy with God.” He said it is a gift of grace.

When we reach out to others and share our time, that is also a part of the pilgrimage, one the sisters and volunteers at La Posada Providencia live daily. I went to the shelter in August to report on the visit from Catholic Extension and Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, and was drawn to return in September. This time I made some time to volunteer.

Sister Telkamp always has something for volunteers to do, whether it’s for an hour, a weekend or more. Help is needed with the vegetable garden, inputting data or tutoring a student, among other activities. Elvira Canales of La Feria has been volunteering every Tuesday for the past five years, and has recruited other volunteers to join her. She said she draws great joy from her work.

On the Tuesday I visited, I tutored three young girls with their English lesson for the day. I confess I was nervous as I did not know in advance what I would be doing. Sister Therese Cunningham of the Sisters of the Holy Spirit and Mary Immaculate put me at ease reminding me of the essentials — love and patience. As the young girls practiced their English we shared some stories. Yuriel from Honduras also instructed me on how to make tajadas, fried bananas. Another highlight: holding a one-month old baby, Hilda, born on the Feast of the Assumption.

Sister Cunningham, who has been at La Posada Providencia for 12 years, said her time at the shelter has been a learning experience and one that has enriched her life. “I feel privileged to be a part of this wonderful ministry here at La Posada.”

“Their faith inspires me; their faith in divine providence that God is going to be there for them,” she said. “Sure they have anxiety and moments when their down and depressed,” she added, “but underneath that they have a real trust and a real faith.”

She said sometimes it can be a challenge on how to serve “our immigrant brothers and sisters” who are at the shelter for just a short period of time. “It may just be to be compassionate at heart, to be a compassionate presence, to listen to their story. It might be to give them a hug, a smile, just to be there to tend to their needs in this particular moment and show them they are valued, that they are reverenced because they are God’s creation, that we are all brothers and sisters on a journey.”

“While we’re here on earth,” she said, “we have this opportunity to be God’s hands and feet and heart for one another.”


To visit or volunteer, call (956) 399-3826.

(Originally published in October 2017 edition of The Valley Catholic newspaper)

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