5048(II)_Vatican Honours 4 Priests and Religious sister in Dili
Fr Eligio Locatelli among awardees in Dili, 2019
March 26, 2019
Adapted from UCAN
Dili, Timor Leste, 25 March 2019 -- The Holy See has honoured four priests and one religious sister for their distinguished service to the Catholic Church in Timor-Leste. Holy See representative, Monsignor Marco Sprizzi, presented them with the Decoration of Honuor, which is given by the pope to laypeople and clergy for outstanding contributions to the Church on March 19 in the Dili Cathedral of Immaculate Conception.
The recipients were two native-born Timorese Father Francisco dos Santos Fatima Barreto and Father Francisco Tavares, Italian Salesian Fr Eligio Locatelli, Portuguese Jesuit Father Jose Alves Martins, and Canossian Sister Maria Chioda.
"They have dedicated their lives to the Church for decades," Msgr Sprizzi said when he and Bishop Virgilio do Carmo da Silva of Dili presented the medals at the Immaculate Conception Cathedral in Dili on March 19.
Pope Leo XIII introduced the award in 1888 to honour those who participated in his golden sacerdotal jubilee. It later became a permanent papal distinction. “This honour is given so that people continue to believe in the Catholic Church and faithfully follow Christ," the Vatican’s representative said.
Father Barreto, who was ordained in 1977 — two years after Indonesia invaded Timor-Leste — said the award came as a complete surprise. “I just work according to the Gospel, even if it means risking my life,” said Father Barreto who became known for trying to prevent Indonesian soldiers harming people during years of repression prior to RDTL independence in 2002. He is a chaplain at Guido Valdares National Hospital and Becora Prison, both in Dili.
Father Martins arrived in Timor-Leste in 1974 and has spent much of that time helping improve educational standards in the country.
Canossian Sister Chioda, 79, who arrived in Timor-Leste from Italy when she was 27, said she appreciated Pope Francis’s recognition of priests and nuns in the country. Soon after arriving in Manatuto district in 1966, she was instrumental in establishing the Canossian College where she taught various skills to women such as sewing, embroidery and other pastoral skills. "It was not easy because we started from zero, conditions deteriorated during Indonesian rule following the 1975 invasion, but she and her colleagues managed to establish similar colleges in other districts.
Estanislau de Sousa Fatima, who works at Fatumaca College founded by Father Locatelli in Baucau district, 149 kilometers east of Dili, said the Italian priest fully deserved his award. Salesian missionary Father Locatelli arrived in Timor-Leste in 1964 while it was still under Portuguese colonial rule, and Fatumaca College was among his first ventures. Many Timor-Leste priests graduated from this college including Nobel Peace Prize laureate Bishop Emeritus of Dili, Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo and present Bishop of Dili, Virglio do Carmo da Silva,SDB. According to Fatima, the 82-year-old Father Locatelli, has worked tirelessly to help the people of Timor-Leste since his arrival more than fifty years ago. "He helps farmers, such as by giving them tractors to cultivate land where they can plant rice, corn and other crop and routinely visits people by traveling on horseback, even today,” he said.
The whole Salesian Family of Timor Leste rejoices on this occasion and especially the Alumni of Don Bosco are happy to continue the legacy of the first missionaries amidst the fast changing cultural and social situation of today.