SALESIAN MISSIONARY IN FOCUS
BY: FR. ROEL SOTO SDB
A home visitation to the family of one of our student boarders in Prey Veng
Province with two of our lay youth volunteers and a teacher last April 17,
2010 during the Khmer New Year celebration.
The blessing of the semi-parish church in honor of Mary, Our Help by his
Excellency Bishop Emile Destombes last December 8, 2009. Present in the
occasion were Fr. Thepharat Pitisant, Provincial of Thai Province, and some
clergy of the diocese of Phnom Penh.
1. What is the story of your missionary vocation?
ver since I started entertaining the thought of
E
becoming a priest I also had in mind going to the
mission. The initial spark started when I was a kid. I
had the chance of watching the movie of Fr. Damien,
the leper priest. The movie left a strong impression in
Dmy mind of a priest’s total dedication, service and life offering to
those neglected in society. My vocation became clearer as I
entered Don Bosco Academy, Bacolor Pampanga. The story of
Don Bosco, taking care of marginalized youth, the stories of
missionaries visiting our school, the dedication of the Salesians in
Ttheir teaching, work in DBYC and their presence among us as
friends and guide made me realized that this is the kind of life and
mission I’ve been looking for. The late Fr. Felix Glowicki was an
instrument in allowing me to experience in concrete the joy, hard
work and fatherliness of Don Bosco. So, when I entered the
seminary and later professed as a Salesian I always kept the
intention of going to the mission someday. The irresistible and
persistent call came after I attended the First Asian Youth Day in
Hua Hin, Thailand in 1999. The youth in my group were all from
Laos and Cambodia. My encounter with them made me realized
the great need of Asian youth to be evangelized and have
someone to journey with them.
2. What are your joys and hurts in the mission?
I’ve been in Cambodia for a year and a half now. The
greatest difficulty I encountered was the adjustment to the culture:
language, mentality, value system and ways of doing things. I
had to give up my expectations, take things as they are patiently,
understand the people and learn from them. The joys are the
people who support me: my confreres, volunteers, lay mission
partners, and the slow, but gradual response of the people to our
mission.
3. What is Ecclesiology of mission for you?
My ecclesiology of mission is a total immersion into the
life of the people we serve. It is incarnation into the life and
culture of the people in order to be one with them, like Jesus who
humbled himself to become man. Only through this can a
missionary become relevant and effective in forming and guiding
the lives of the people he serves.
4. A simple message for aspiring religious and lay
missionaries on how to nurture or discover a missionary
vocation
A life of dedication, service, generosity and self-sacrifice
is necessary and important in the mission. Whereas how one can
discover the vocation to missionary life, God has His very unique
way of showing us individually the way. One has to be open and
sensitive to His promptings. Time will come when the call can’t be
resisted and what God just asks of us is to abandon our will to
Him and say: “I am all yours.” With prayers we will find ourselves
giving up everything daringly, even to the point of overcoming our
fears and anxiety.
5. What is the future of the mission work in Cambodia? How
do you assess the Salesian work in Cambodia?
The Salesian work in Cambodia is abundant and
challenging. The marginalized youth is growing bigger as the
country’s development, in the midst of poverty, goes by leaps and
bounds together with other neighboring countries in the Sub-
Mekong region. Despite our few in number (8 Salesians with 7
settings) we work in the technical and literacy schools, oratories,
boarding houses, Children Fund projects, and in a semi-parish (a
new pastoral work because of the need of a growing church).
Aside from our local staff we rely so much on many foreign
volunteers who help us in our mission. We also try different
approaches in sowing and nurturing the seed of vocation in the
hearts of our young people, and are looking forward to having our
own formation center in the future. We would be happy if some
young Salesians would come and share in our life and mission in
Cambodia.