| Meet Erisa Lee | |
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Erisa
Lee from Seoul in South Korea is the second
eldest in a
family of three daughters. Before joining the Columban Sisters
she
qualified and worked as a Social
Worker in her own country. She also worked with Korean Airlines for
three years. She spent a year with Mother Teresa's Mission in Calcutta, India as a volunteer and six months in Cambodia and Nepal. She started her Novitiate formation in Seoul
in
December 2004.
A three month experience of mission in the Phillipines was part of this
programme.
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Another month was spent with the Aetas tribe in Tarlac on the island fo Luzon. Erisa shares with us some of what she learned during that time: "As
part of my preparation to become a Columban Sister I
recently spent a few months in the Philippines.
While there, I had the privilege of living among
the Aetas people. Some
years ago these people were displaced from their
ancestoral lands by the eruption of Mount Penatubo and
they now live in a nearby province. During
my time there I stayed with the family of Daisy who is 8
years old. Together
with her parents she has two brothers and one little
sister. They
live in a bamboo house that has a roof of banana leaves.
In front of their house is a big tree from which they get
leaves for their soup. When the people first came
to this area there was no water in the village but some
Protestant missionaries from Korea installed pipes that
now bring water from the nearby river. There is still no electricity and the people have to depend
on the moonlight and the starlight during the long, quiet
nights. During
our orientation to the area we were asked to bring
candles, rice, sugar, noodles, dried fish, sardines,
cooking oil and salt to be shared with the families who
were hosting us. In
return, they shared with us a place in which to stay.
We cooked the meals that we then all shared
together. This
whole experience was one that touched me deeply.
Having grown up in the city of Seoul and I was used
to the city lights. When I found myself in this place
where there were no lights, I felt for the first time very
close to nature: particularly the moon and the stars. With
the stars and the moon above us, we gathered together one
evening to share with each other what this experience
meant to us. We
were unable to see each other’s faces clearly; we were
enveloped in the darkness of the night.
But I knew that my companions were there with me
surrounded by a kind of pale light coming from the moon.
But amazingly, there was enough light to guide all
of us back to the houses where we were staying!
This scenario reminded me of the Easter Vigil when
the priest sings: “Christ
is our Light.” It helped me to realize that in the past
I had been trying to see things clearly on my journey, but
that very often things in life unfold to us without total
clarity. And
yet it is still all right to see things as they are in a
given moment. Whatever
light I can find around me, little though it be, will be
enough to guide and lead me along the way, The
Aetas, a people who were displaced from their land, the
source of their livelihood and the future of the coming
generations, have taught me what is essential in life.
Courageously, they face life as it comes each day,
living in a place full of uncertainties, but trusting in
the Providence of God and in the goodness of those they
meet along the road". |
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To contact the Columban Sisters, ssc1922@yahoo.co.uk (Korea) colphvocprom@yahoo.com (Philippines)
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