Pulling Up Poverty by Its Roots

Moved by Sebastian Torres’s stories of growing up in Colombia—stories of internally displaced people and the decades-long armed conflict—and following the historic 2016 peace agreement between the Colombian government and FARC, Andrew Hanna and Torres, students at Tampa’s Jesuit High School, were inspired to act. And with the hope of broadening opportunities for their Colombian peers, Hanna and Torres decided that education was the key.

“We decided to specifically target education because of its sustainability”, they explained. “In our experiences, education has opened the gateway to specialize in the fields that we are most interested in and [those that] consistently feed our intellectual curiosities. Even in the current scheme, education has directly allowed the both of us to flourish and grow in ourselves”.

Once Torres and Hanna’s idea to support education initiatives in Colombia had sparked, it was time to find a partner to work with.

“We came into contact with Fe y Alegría and after countless hours of planning and meeting; we were in the position to put our work into effect”, they said. “We decided to try and use Tampa Jesuit’s Mission Drive Day to help us achieve this goal because of the fundraising capability and student initiative. The Mission Drive is a yearly project for around one month during which the student body of Jesuit Tampa donates toward a specific cause, this year being to education for Colombian children [and youth]”.

Sebastian Torres, Junior (Year 11), 17 years old

Tampa Jesuit’s Mission Drive usually raises over $8,000 each year, but the Mission Drive is an important event because in addition to fundraising, it also helps increase student and community awareness, appealing to the student body, parents and family members of current students, and to school alumni.

“Through the Mission Drive, we are able to spread awareness about the severity of the issue at hand, raise funds, and foster incentive for further action in the student body and even greater Tampa Bay community”, Hanna explained.

Andrew Hanna, Junior (Year 11), 17 years old

Even though their initiative is just starting, the pair already has a few strategies in place well beyond the Mission Drive. They are currently planning a fundraiser to take place over the summer, as well as an immersion trip with other Jesuit Tampa students to Colombia to meet with Fe y Alegría Colombia youth. They also hope to expand ‘By the Roots’—the name they have given to their charter organization—to other schools in the Tampa area, thereby increasing awareness and involvement in their cause.

“As of the focus of eliminating poverty at its source, the inability for future generations to have job opportunities, we decided to name our charter organization ‘By the Roots’, with the goal of pulling up poverty by its roots”, they said.

The duo also has advice to other high school students looking to start initiatives to support Fe y Alegría’s work: if you have a genuine desire to help, speak out and never forget why you are doing the project in the first place. “Odds are there will be someone out there willing to help you help others”, they explained. “There’s a lot of work involved with planning and coordinating an initiative like this, but the amount of people who were more than willing to help us with our cause surprised us”.

For more information on the project that Tampa’s Jesuit High School is supporting this Mission Day, click here.

If you, like Sebastian and Andrew, are encouraged to show your solidarity with children and youth in the Global South, and wish to join us in defending the right to education for all, please get in touch with us!

 

Recently ordained, Fr. Chris Staab SJ shares about how serving at the margins influenced his vocation

 

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Nearly 12 years after entering the Society of Jesus, Christopher Staab, SJ, was ordained a Jesuit priest by Cardinal Blase Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, on June 3, 2017, at Church of the Gesu in Milwaukee. Eleven other Jesuits were ordained with Fr. Staab at the Mass.

“As I embrace this call to serve God and His Church as a priest in the Society of Jesus, I am moved to profound gratitude,” said Fr. Staab. “I am grateful to God for continuing to call me, walk with me, and show me great joy in being a friend and companion to so many.”

A native of Cleveland, Fr. Staab, 40, grew up in a traditional Irish-German Catholic family. At Saint Ignatius High School in Cleveland, Fr. Staab first met the Jesuits and later connected with them at John Carroll University, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in English in 1998.

After graduation, Fr. Staab worked for one year in Ireland with L’Arche, an organization in which volunteers and men and women with disabilities live together in community. He then returned to the United States and earned a master’s degree in English at the University of Pittsburgh. Father Staab served as an editor at West Group, a publishing company in Cleveland, before working for the Detroit Province of the Society of Jesus while discerning his vocation to the priesthood.

In 2005, Fr. Staab entered the Jesuits. As a novice, he taught English at Loyola High School in Detroit and learned Spanish in Cochabamba, Bolivia. In 2010, he studied philosophy for two years in Lima, Perú, at Universidad Antonio Ruiz de Montoya. For one year, he lived in the small city of Jaén, Perú, working in campus ministry at a Fe y Alegría school. Father Staab then spent two years at Cristo Rey Jesuit High School in Chicago, teaching English and Spanish and helping with the soccer and cross country teams.

Missioned next to Belo Horizonte, Brazil, for studies at the Jesuit Faculty for Theology, he earned a bachelor’s degree while working with confirmation and youth groups at São Francisco Xavier parish and serving as a deacon at a Jesuit retreat house near São Paulo.

“I am deeply grateful to my friends in Perú and Brazil, who have shown me the face of Jesus and whose lives of faith have inspired me in my own life,” said Fr. Staab.

Father Staab will spend the summer working at Church of the Gesu in University Heights, Ohio. He will then attend Universidad Pontificia Comillas in Madrid to earn a master’s degree in Ignatian spirituality and a Licentiate in Sacred Theology. Father Staab celebrated his first Mass as a priest at St. Procopius Catholic Parish in Chicago.

Source: Midwest Jesuits

Guillermo: “I’ve known about Fe y Alegría since I was a child in Nicaragua … at school we would always do fundraisers to benefit Fe y Alegría”

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Guillermo Lacayo is not shy about his expectations for the Nicaraguan community in Miami. “I expect the maximum level of support [for Friends of Fe y Alegría] from the Nicaraguan community.” It is with this strong sense of dedication, though, that Lacayo, along with his wife Vilma and a few other friends at the Centro Espiritualidad Ignaciana (CEI)—has spent the last three years developing support for education in his native home of Nicaragua.

According to UNICEF, over 80% of children in Latin America and in the Caribbean live in poverty. Lacayo—like Friends of Fe y Alegría—believes that education, and more importantly support for education, in the region is key to future success in the region. “Support for education in Nicaragua and any other country in Latin America is of the utmost importance to lift our countries out of significant poverty and social inequality.”

And as a former student of the Colegio Centro América in Managua, Lacayo has always had a special place in his heart both for Jesuit education and Fe y Alegría. “I’ve known about Fe y Alegría since I was a child in Nicaragua … at school we would always do fundraisers to benefit Fe y Alegría”.

Replicating what he learned as a child, Lacayo and and his group at the CEI have fundraised over $7,000 for education projects in Nicaragua since 2015, which have improved the learning spaces in three schools directly impacting over 700 boys and girls. (See project reports here). “I decided to support [Friends of Fe y Alegría] because of the commitment I have with Jesuit education and with this great project.”

For more information on becoming a Friends of Fe y Alegría ambassador or organizing a fundraising event in your area, contact Nate Radomski at n.radomski@magisamericas.org