austraLasia

?

Shortcut

PrevPrev Article

NextNext Article

Larger Font Smaller Font Up Down Go comment Print Attachment

20170427_VIE.jpg


Interview with Salesian missionary volunteers in the EAO (2)


By Nicholas Ynami, (SUO) - Salesian Lay Missioner


Balat, Vietnam, 27 April 2017 --


Your motivation to embark on the SLM journey?


My SLM journey really started with my love for the Salesians. I went to a Salesian elementary and middle school in California run by the FMA sisters and the SDB priests. My school was on the outskirts of the city and serviced many poor families, most of whom (including my own) had parents who were immigrants. My class consisted of 35 people who had at least one immigrant parent and belonged to working class families. We all paid a cheap tuition to go to school, but amazingly, we all managed to get university degrees and have respectable jobs.


Fast forward to my time after graduating university, I worked in the hospitality industry for 4 years (1 year for Singapore Airlines, and 3 years for Sheraton Hotels) where I was quite good and successful in my job, but was not happy with what was doing. As I was contemplating a career change, I remembered my 9 years (Kindergarten-8th grade) in a Salesian school, and how I owe a lot of my success to the Salesians. I decided to help the Salesians in any way I could, and as I was searching for short-term volunteer opportunities (maybe help with a summer camp or volunteer part time at a school for one semester), I came across the SLM program, which I saw as a great opportunity to give back my service to the order.


So I would say my motivation to embark on my SLM journey was my Salesian background, it is a motivation that has continued with me throughout my mission life. When I enter a Salesian house, I feel like I am home, and I am taken back to the day when I was a poor inner-city boy. I remember Fr. Al, one of the SDB priests who taught me, telling me when I graduated 8th grade and went to high school: "You are part of the Salesian familiy, once a Salesian, always a Salesian", that attitude has always stuck with me.


Your preparation before departure and how do you feel about it now (adequate, missing)?


The SLM program has a very good and organized preparation program. As part of our application process, we are required to attend one "discernment weekend", where we are given a crash course on Salesian spirituality. Once, accepted into the program through "mutual discernment", we have a training and orientation roughly one month before we embark on our missions. The training consists of three weeks, which is broken down as such: week 1- cultural sensitivity and awareness training, week 2- service week, and week 3- spiritual growth and retreat.


It is very difficult to really train everyone in a specific or personalized sense, because there are many SLMs that go to many different sites around the world. However, the broad training is so general that it applies to all Salesian sites and also helps us with adjusting from our American culture to a different culture in the world. It is also very difficult to generally train about specific community problems and challenges, because each community has its unique set of challenges. That being said, I believe the preparation process for us is as good as it could be due to the limitations of the diversity of sites we send people to.


The SLM program has one of the best preparation programs for any Salesian volunteer organization that I know of. It is organized, it gives us the basic tools that will help us in common situations, and answers a lot of general questions. Beyond that, the things that lack are the logistics of a community to community basis. Having volunteered in South Sudan last year and Vietnam this year, I can confidently say that I currently feel as if the preparation has applied to general aspects of both diverse countries and situations. There is always room for improvement, but overall, it is a very solid preparation program.


The best of your Dalat experience as Don Rua community member


The best of my Da Lat experience as a Don Rua community member is being with the brothers. We are all roughly around the same age, so it is no surprise that we act like friends and colleagues. One brother mentioned to me that between the current volunteers and the brothers, he sees no difference among us. We participate in the community life events because we love to be there, and the community has been more than accommodating to us to make sure we know we are a part of the community. I remember one time I went out for one week to get my visa renewed and upon my return, I was asked if I missed my family, I proudly told them that I did not miss my family in the U.S. because I knew that I was not going to see them for a while, but that I missed my family in Da Lat!


The brothers, who are my main focus of my service, are what makes this mission so special to me. I think they are the best of my Da Lat experience because they not only study diligently but also help me in anyway they could. Some brothers take it upon themselves to take me out to sight see, teach me how to ride a motorbike, and take me out to drink coffee once in a while so we can share.


Aside from the fun activities, the brothers also find a way to impress me as a teacher. My proudest moments in the Don Rua community are speaking to (now talkative) brothers, who before did not speak a single word of English to me when I first arrived. I remember having them in class and seeing them participate after months of hesitation, whereas before they could not speak a single word. I am so touched to see that some of these brothers who used to run away from me to not practice English, are now the same brothers who look for me and scope me out eager to practice their English.


What do you think about possible SLM Vietnamese version (maybe first domestic, then also international)?


I think a possible SLM Vietnamese program is a great idea! I teach a lot of university students, who have expressed to me their desire to volunteer like I do when they graduate college. Furthermore, some are already volunteering or will volunteer this summer in the various camps and activities that happen in the community and out in the other more rural mission communities. The university students are the key demographic of the age group you would be looking for in terms of a volunteer program. I know that the majority of Salesian volunteer organizations around the world are comprised of mainly young people who recently graduated university, so the mere fact that a lot of current university students (target audience age) are contemplating this idea of volunteering and actually doing it, is already a step in the right direction!


In terms of resources, I think that is where we might hit a roadblock of the language. However, it could also be a good experience for them and make some of these young volunteers more open and adept to speaking better English, and learning new cultures without fear. If the English among the young people who chooses to volunteer can improve, there is a great possibility that an international volunteer program could work because without language, it will be very difficult for them. Domestically, there are a lot of works to be done, and with language not being a problem, there is a chance for a very successful domestic program.


My only two cautions would be that the volunteers improve their English, and to be culturally aware and open minded. Knowing English is very important, because it is the language most used as well as the language that will probably be used in their mission site, so I recommend English fluency be a requirement. Being culturally aware and open-minded is also very important, because for someone who has never left their country, finding out that countries in other parts of the world have different customs, morals, and etiquette standards can lead to many unnecessary conflicts, which is where I could see a training program really being useful.


Thanks for your support and your help to us volunteers!


SLM website: https://www.salesianlaymissioners.org/home/




20170427_VIE1.jpg


20170427_VIE2.jpg



Attach

Drag and drop your files here, or Click attach files button.

Maximum File Size : 0MB (Allowed extentsions : *.*)

0 file(s) attached ( / )

  1. 4444(I)_Mekong Delta Orphanage is growing

    Growing Like Pinardi Shed - Can Gio By Fr. Joseph Dang, SDB Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, 22 July 2017 -- The Salesian can't survive without the poor young people. Already the first Salesian work in Hanoi (1952) was an Orphanage of St. Theresa...
    Date2017.07.23 CategoryVIE Reply0 Views620 file
    Read More
  2. 4442(III)_Don Bosco spirit is flourishing in the periphery

    Northern frontier of Vietnam province By Ngan Son Parish Lang Son, Vietnam, 21 July 2017 -- Since last 2011, a small missionary parish of Ngan Son (Lang Son diocese) was entrusted to the care of the Salesians of Don Bosco. Since that time t...
    Date2017.07.21 CategoryVIE Reply0 Views1158 file
    Read More
  3. 4419(I)_Openning the 3rd Football Championship 2017 for the Young

    By Bro. Nguyen Nam, SDB & Minh Fr. Tuan, SDB Hoa An, Viet Nam, 26 June 2017 -- At the artificial football field in Hoa An (Bac Giang Province, Northern Viet Nam) began the 3rd football chapionship 2017 for the young. This football champ...
    Date2017.06.26 CategoryVIE Reply0 Views549 file
    Read More
  4. 4413_Model for the Vocation Training - Dong Thuan

    132 new Bosconians enter the society with full energy By Br. Thien Phong, SDB Dong Thuan, Vietnam -- On June 10, the Dong Thuan Private Vocational Training Center (Director Fr. Thomas Vu Kim Long), was held the closing ceremony of the schoo...
    Date2017.06.21 CategoryVIE Reply0 Views873 file
    Read More
  5. 4410(II)_The Memorable day of graduation ceremony 2017

    By Fr. JB Phat, SDB Bảo Lộc, Vietnam, 10 June 2017 -- At the early morning of June 10, 2017, the atmosphere was a festive day to all Salesians, teachers and students, especially the graduators. It began with the Eucharist at the Salesian ch...
    Date2017.06.16 CategoryVIE Reply0 Views1002 file
    Read More
  6. 4394(II)_Prayers for Fr. Germain Lagger are requested

    By VIE provincial secretary HCM City, Vietnam, 30 May 2017 -- Between 1952 and 1975 some 44 missionaries were sent by the Rector Major of by the Provincial of China to this former Delegation of CIN province. After the revolution and unifica...
    Date2017.05.31 CategoryVIE Reply0 Views691 file
    Read More
  7. 4381(III)_Holy competition to express christian devotion to Our Lady

    By Fr. Jos Phuoc, SDB Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam 13 May 2017 -- As the Church in Vietnam is half-way through May, the month devoted to Mary, the patron Saint under the title Our Lady of Lavang, Help of Christians, the parishioners, the children a...
    Date2017.05.16 CategoryVIE Reply0 Views1040 file
    Read More
  8. 4370(I)_Warming the hearts of Salesian Brother

    Provincial Encounter of the Salesian Brothers in Vietnam By Bro. Dominic Nam, SDB HCM City, Vietnam, 28 April 2017 -- After a six years break was organized a province level encounter of Salesian Brothers in Vietnam on April 28, 2017 in the ...
    Date2017.05.09 CategoryVIE Reply0 Views494 file
    Read More
  9. 4368(I)_EAO Congress preparation (9)

    VIE province report: The most numerous province of ASC in the EAO region By Mr. Peter Le Thanh Bao, ASC Viet Nam ASC Provincial coordinator HCM City, Vietnam, 2 May 2017 -- The Association of Salesian Cooperators in Vietnam was founded in 1...
    Date2017.05.09 CategoryVIE Reply0 Views530 file
    Read More
  10. 4365(IV)_Quo Vadis Salesian Parish in Vietnam?

    The journey is going on! By Our Own Correspondent HCM City, Vietnam, 29 April 2017 -- 42 years ago a variety of small, humble, poor and mainly rural parishes in Vietnam became the first opportunity for the young Vice-province a good chance ...
    Date2017.05.09 CategoryVIE Reply0 Views541 file
    Read More
List
Board Pagination Prev 1 ... 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 ... 38 Next
/ 38