By Kathleen Gerace, Maryknoll Lay Missioners alum
In a way I was multi-tasking. While unpacking , one part of my mind was deliberating where to put this & that and muttering disgustedly, “ Why have you accumulated so much stuff? And all these books…it’s a sickness, that’s what it is,” while the other part of my brain was processing my experience of living in Bolivia— the poorest country in the western hemisphere—for over a year.
As the Easter story unfolded in the liturgical year and all my worldly possessions were being unpacked, an articulation of that reality was forming in my mind. The reality of the meaning of Jesus’s life and message was making itself known to me in a deeper way. I became awed by the beautiful truth his life spoke to. That responding to suffering and serving the needs of others with commitment & compassion is the transforming work of grace. To embrace the powerlessness of the poor & marginalized is to embrace the cross.
It was gut wrenching to see the rows of infants in their cribs in the orphanage having their bottles propped up because no one had time to hold them; to see old women & children picking through the dumpsters in the “better” neighborhoods looking for plastic bottles to redeem; young mothers with nursing babies & toddlers begging on the city sidewalks. It was equally disconcerting to see church goers carrying their heirloom baby Jesus statues to the altar to be blessed, walking past indigenous women with infants begging at the church door, and being invited to admire a classic antique car (a white ’37 year old Mercedes) –one of ten owned by a wealthy relative of my host family. A chair was set at the dinner table for his little dog that he fed food by hand from his dinner plate.
