FEBRUARY 2014
FEATURED
Celebrating Mary
Ward Week
Pastoral Activities
News from our
schools
Intercultural expe-
rience in Peru
Syrian Refugees in
Morocco
Nº 9
From 28th January to 2nd February, we celebrated our Provincial Congrega-
tion in Castilleja, Sevilla. We were 32 religious women, coming from Spain,
Ecuador and Morocco. It was a big joy to see each other and to share this
time together.
Josune Arregui, ccv sister, was our Facilitator, and she helped us in our pro-
cess.
We began with a solemn ritual, using the symbols of Land, Water, Air and
Fire. After that, we started our PC.
First of all, Isabel Gortázar presented the Report about the last 8 years of life
and ministries in the Province, followed by table conversations and ques-
tions. We followed the same process concerning the Finance Report, pre-
PROVINCIAL CONGREGATION 2014
CONECTA
sented by Elena Cerdeiras, Juan Carlos Ballesteros
and Myriam Benito.
Next day, we had an open panel about the differ-
ent ministries in the Province.
Asilah: Mary Burkart and Macarena Fdez. de Boba-
dilla talked about their projects, state of the mis-
sion, capacity building for teachers, literacy pro-
jects…
Ecuador: Isabel Peche y Louise Latín talked about
the culture and History of the country, about the
work of the schools Fe y Alegría, the teaching…
Schools: Josefina de Miguel talked about the six
schools in the Spanish Province, their Pastoral
work, the new technologies, bilingualism…
Other ministries: Beatriz Martín explained the vol-
untary work others sisters do: prayer groups, voca-
tion ministries, parish work, Caritas, social work
with migrants, visit to the prisons, working with
homeless…
Mary Ward International: Elena Cerdeiras provid-
ed a good an updated information about Funda-
2
Opening prayer in Castilleja.
ción Mary Ward International. We will here more
after the Toronto meeting.
With all this information, we can know what’s going
on in the Province and how everything is evolving.
On the 30th January, we celebrated Mary Ward’s
day: we worked hard in the morning, and in the
afternoon we had a meeting with teachers in
Loreto School. We had a great time because it
was a moment for sharing and enjoying all to-
gether. Later, we went to Bami School, where we
first gatherd around the new MARY WARD
STREET. A lay collaborator talked about Mary
Ward and connected her words to the Tree.
We celebrated Eucharist and we had something
together. The atmosphere was really amazing.
At night time, we had a great time thanks to Beat-
riz Martin, who prepared this social time.
Delegates election
We voted the delegates and the Spanish delega-
tion will be: Macarena Fernández de Bobadilla,
Elena Cerdeiras, and Isabel Gortázar.
Victoria Lassaletta
3
Celebrating Mary Ward Week with lay people in Loreto school (Seville).
Ecuador
Image by
Blanca Bergareche
As every year, the Province celebrates Mary
Ward Week. There have been celebrations all
around the country carried out by different
members and lay collaborators of the Institute.
We started on the 23th January with an Eucharist
in Leioa (Bilbao) organized by Past Pupils of the
School.
IN Seville, Mary Ward Mission kept open our
Mary Ward Centre, and there were meetings and
prayers.
Finally, on the 30th January, IBVM sisters, who
were attending to the Provincial Congregation in
Castilleja de la Cuesta, had a time to share and
enjoy with teachers, pupils and friends in Seville,
visiting the schools and the recently inaugurated
Mary Ward Street.
4
CELEBRATING MARY WARD WEEK
Prayer time in Mary Ward Centre in Seville
In the schools we have also had lots of
activities to celebrate Mary Ward’s
Week.
In Bami, they decorated the walls with
collages and icons dedicated to Mary
Ward, they organized a Music Festival
and they even prepared a Mary Ward’s
Trivial.
In Cullera (Madrid), they have created
a multidisciplinary Project: videos,
texts, web info… where they combined
Mary Ward’s History and new technol-
ogies. You can see the videos at http://
maryward.colegioirlandesascullera.org/
In Loreto School, they created an origi-
nal photocall, so all pupils could take a
picture with Mary Ward.
In Castilleja, we could see a beautiful
tree representing the whole Mary
Ward Family (photo in the previous
page) and in El Soto they organized
different activities reflecting about the
Institute Tree.
5
MARY WARD WEEK IN OUR SCHOOLS
The IBVM schools
organize, as every
year, their Pastoral
activities for children
and youth.
We will have our
summer camps in
Chipiona, as well as
the traditional
Camino de Santiago.
In 2014, for the first
time, we will have a new experience: Urban
Camp in our Cullera School (in Madrid), for
those who want to dedicate some of their time
to the others.
Of course, we will have our traditional Easter
preparation for young students, and University
students.
We will also participate in the work camp in
our mission
in Asilah
(Morocco)
with young
adults.
6
PASTORAL ACTIVITIES 2014
Carmen Torijano is the Latin teacher in
our school El Soto, and she has published
the book “Gramática Latina elemental”, a
very successful volume that has been very
well accepted by the public.
We are very proud of her!
MEETING OUR TEACHERS
IRENE VILLA RELEASED HER BOOK IN CULLERA
On the 28th November, our school in Cullera
(Madrid) had the pleasure to receive the visit of
Irene Villa, past pupil, journalist and an exceptional
woman, for the release of her second book “Nunca
es tarde, princesa”. (It’s never late, Princess).
This book is a master lesson about life and self-
improvement. Because Irene Villa was a victim of a
terrorist attack by ETA in 1991, in which she lost
her two legs. In those days, she was a pupil of our
school, and she has never forgotten her friends,
teachers and sisters who accompanied her during these hard days.
She has now become very popular in Spain, but she always comes back to our school, and has
time to celebrate with us.
7
The Crib made by students,
families and teachers in our
school in Cullera was
awarded by the City Council
of Madrid last December.
The judges pointed to the
originality of the Crib –it
was done with recycled ma-
terials– and the fact of be-
ing an inclusive representa-
tion of Jesus’ birth: with
black and white figures, in
reference to the reality of
the centre, where there are
pupils from 27 nationalities.
The Crib title was: “We are
all the same, we are all
different, but, we are all
next to You”.
More information at:
www.ibvm.es
8
IBVM schools took part in the XXX Congress of Catholic
Schools in Spain, celebrated in Valladolid under the top-
ic: “Creative school”. Time to share and learn about new
experiences about innovation and new technologies.
“Creative school”
Our Crib awarded for inclusive and original
For second time, this summer Fundación Mary Ward organizes a Work
Camp in Peru. An opportuni-
ty to live an intercultural ex-
perience focused on solidarity in which the partici-
pants will see the projects that are being carried out
in the country.
Intercultural experience in Peru
9
Our faith calls us to recognize that where the dig-
nity of the human person is violated, then all
members of Christ’s Body suffer and that we are
all called to see, act and correct this “evil”. Our
globalized structures and processes are both sup-
ports and obstacles to Christian responses to refu-
gee crises.
We are limited in what we can do directly, but not
in our struggle to embody the original justice of
our creation. Our desire is to be part of the free-
dom, integrity, justice and joy with which God
blesses all people. This calls us to challenge all
processes and systems that are not working to-
wards preserving the dignity of all persons in the
integrity of God’s creation.
Syrian Displaced Persons Outside Syria
In January 2014 the UNHCR indicated there were
over 2.3 million registered Syrian refugees and
expect the number to be around 5 million by the
end of the year. The majority of registered Syrian
refugees are in Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan, Iraq and
Egypt. These countries have designated refugee
camps with supports from the host country, UN-
HCR, local and international NGOs.
There are few figures available on refugees that
have not been registered with UNHCR. Some
countries, such as Lebanon and Sweden, register
Syrians as “refugees” or “asylum seekers”. Esti-
mates for North Africa, excluding Egypt, are that
there are about 17,000 Syrian displaced persons.
The number of Syrian Refugees in Morocco is un-
known.
Of the UNHCR registered refugees over 1m are
children, 740,000 of whom are under 11 years of
age. NGOs are working with the UNHCR in the
SYRIAN REFUGEES
Syrian crisis has last for nearly three years and by the end of 2014 there could be nearly 5 million refu-
gees living out of the country. One of these places is Morocco, where two IBVM sisters are dealing with
the situation of three Syrian families. Mary Burkhart, specialist in Middle East, explains the situation of
these refugees and the traumas they are facing.
Citizens being evacuated in Homs, Syrian capital. Photo: © United Nations
camps to set up and maintain health and educa-
tional facilities. The rise of contagious illnesses,
especially tuberculosis and polio, in Syrian refu-
gee camps is a concern, not only in the camps,
prompting WHO to launch of a polio eradication
campaign aimed at 23 million children globally.
UN Funding
Funding for Syrian refugees through the UN has
strong international support. $4.4 billion was
pledged by member states in 2013 and the UN-
HCR is seeking pledges totaling $6.5 billion for
the first half of 2014.
Microcosms of the situation in Syria
The UNHCR and NGOs work with the host coun-
try to provide structured supports through the
initial emergency and the longer term mainte-
nance period of displacement with the objective
of returning refugees to their countries. As with
all populations who flee from war, civil war, gen-
ocide, or political, sectarian or other forms of vio-
lence, refugees bring with them the legacies of
the situations from which they have fled. Among
Most of the Syrian refugees are finding a place in neighbouring countries: Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan, Iraq and Egypt, but
they have also travelled to other Mediterranean countries like Morocco and Spain.
Destabilizing influence in host country
Refugees are often seen as an actual or potential
source of destabilization within a host country. Be-
cause refugees can bring with them different political
outlooks their presence, in large numbers, can influ-
ence internal politics in the host country.
For example, in the mid 1950s Iraq, Saudi Arabia and
Libya expelled striking Palestinian refugees. 1970s the
Palestinian refugees where expelled from Jordan and
Kuwait as the PLO became stronger. Many refugees
went to Lebanon destabilizing the fragile Lebanese
government.
The Rwandan genocide in 1994 drove more refugees
into Tanzania and by December 1996, the number of
Rwandan refugees in Tanzania had tripled to over
883,300. The refugees were blamed, among other
things, for increased crime, environmental degradation
and disruption to the local economy. The Mary Ward
team had been missioned to the camps in 1995 and
where there when the camps were shut down and the
majority of the refugees herded back to Rwanda. One
of the team, Luwanga Katala, IBVM, accompanied the
refugees on part of their journey, accepting the chal-
lenge of solidarity through presence. / M.B.
Syrian refugees, differences of ideologies, sects
and politics are mingled with the simple need to
get out of Syria and stay alive. The refugee popu-
lation is a microcosm of the situation of Syria it-
self.
Status of Displaced Persons
An important issue for displaced persons is their
status in the host country. For instance all Syrian
refugees are welcomed into Morocco. Some Syri-
ans have applied for residency, asylum or refu-
gee status. Few, if any, have been given papers
indicating their legal status in Morocco. Without
papers non-nationals are not eligible to work or
avail of the Moroccan national health or educa-
tion systems. Since government policy and status
of Syrian refugees in Morocco is ambiguous, Syri-
an refugees become ghosts, joining the hundreds
of Sub Saharan migrants, begging on the streets
of Moroccan cities.
Tangier Region
The Syrian Community in Tangiers, is a large,
affluent and established community. Caritas,
Tanger is collaborating with the Syrian Mosque
Association but there is a certain resistance by
the refugees to engaging in formalized relief pro-
cesses.
Dr. Wahiss, MD, the mosque’s Syrian manager,
sees part of the problem as that of fear and dis-
trust. In the Tangier region Dr Wahiss, Cartitas,
Tangiers and ourselves in Asilah, have found that
the refugees are focused on getting money and
are not, generally, interested in being registered
for formal aid. This reluctance seems to be tied
to their concerns over personal security and the
security of relatives still in Syria. The refugees are
afraid, insecure and unsure of the implications of
registering with NGOs, Government Departments
or their Embassy. Political issues, real or per-
ceived, on the part of the refugees, as well as
NGOs and governments make it difficult to effec-
tively intervene in the crisis that has driven so
many Syrians, here in Morocco, to begging.
The need for NGOs and local associations to col-
11
Citizens being evacuated in Homs, Syrian capital. Photo: © United Nations
laborate in helping Syrian refugees is obvious.
However, there is a real fear that information
gathered for humanitarian purposes could be
used for political purposes and this mitigates
against a structured response to the crisis.
Asilah
As far as we know, there are three Syrian families
in Asilah. Most refugees and migrants head to big
cities such as Tangiers. As the numbers of Syrian
Refugees and Sub Saharan migrants grow the
generosity of Moroccans on the street is being
stretched to breaking point. The current situation
is untenable. Sub Saharan migrants and Syrian
refugees who live in Tangiers are going out to
surrounding small towns, like Asilah, to beg.
Limited Response
Our IBVM response is limited. For refugees not
living in Asilah we refer them to Caritas in
Tangiers or the Syrian Mosque. We are com-
mitted to providing emergency help to Syrian
families living in Asilah. Maria Llinas of FMW has
indicated that some emergency funding is availa-
ble. Our collaborators, Association Attadmoun
d’Asilah are looking for support from local health
authorities to allow Syrian Refugees access to
public health and educational facilities. We will
also, as necessary, support accommodation rent-
al, and providing food and prescription medi-
cines, as well as clothing, depending on individu-
al, verified, circumstances.
Within our limitations and those of our repre-
sentative international bodies and governments,
we struggle “to make a commitment to securing
authentic integral human development”.
We rely on our relationships with God:
To help us with our desire to allow the power of
love transform our lives and, through that love,
that we may become “agents of mercy, channels
through which God waters the earth…” To guide
us in our desire to be “vehicles of change” in the
international and national structures that directly
affect the dignity of persons. To enable us to be
agents “changing hatred into love, vengeance
into forgiveness, war into peace”. May Your lov-
ing care and peace hold all
those affected by the vio-
lence, loss and insecurity of
displacement.
All quotes are from: Pastoral
Guidelines – Welcoming
Christ in Refugees and Forci-
bly Displaced Persons, Cor
Unum, Vatican City, 2013
Tánger Mosque.