By Crystal Catalan, Cabrini Mission Corps alum
Today, in celebration of International Volunteer Day, we share this story of one of our recent international volunteers.
Keep us from just singing, move us into action, we must go.
Keep us from just singing, move us into action, we must go.
In the summer of 2005, I journeyed with a group of hopeful,
motivated, passionate college students to Manila, Philippines, as part
of a Christian missions program, collaborating with global-minded
students from all across the United States. This was my first missions
trip, and more specifically, it was to be my first trip as a young
adult, back to my parents’ homeland. In my heart, I had the desire to
learn first-hand more about the injustices faced in the hidden corners
of the communities in the Philippines, and I wanted to see these Filipinos that I had only heard about through stories from my aunts and uncles.
I
was assigned to serve at a foundation that served as a home to young
girls who had been abused, trafficked, abandoned and/or neglected, many
times by their own parents or close relatives. Here is where my life was
forever changed – in listening to the stories of the girls, sharing
meals with the girls,
laughing with them, crying with them, and simply just, being with them. In that moment in time, nothing was expected of me, but to simply just be and to be in solidarity with my sisters in Christ.
To
this day, eight years later, there are still a number of stories and
experiences that still remain fresh in my mind from that mission, and it
is those same experiences, which have greatly influenced where I am
today. I will never forget one of the girls who had been a victim of
sexual exploitation by her uncle. Listening to her openly speak with
vivid details about the life she was forced to live, until help came her
way, nearly broke my heart to pieces. But even more so, it made me
angry. It was too, in that short missions trip, where I had first
learned about the horrors of human trafficking.
In my
yet-to-be-shaken college mind, I could not fathom what human trafficking
was. I remember thinking to myself, “Why would anyone force people,
especially children, to another country, beyond their own will? My mind
could not fathom this reality. It was only upon educating myself with
endless conversations with the social workers in Manila, and hearing
first-hand stories from survivors of human trafficking and prostitution,
that I slowly began to accept that this was occurring all around the
world, unbeknownst to me.
At times, I would find
myself on the roof of the foundation, get an aerial view of the town and
the neighboring communities, and just cry, sing, question, and pray –
something I realized the majority of the girls, too, spent their
afternoons doing. The difference I found, however, was that, my tears
were to account for the sadness I felt from the social injustices that
these girls experienced, but also for the countless others all around
the world, that share these same horrific experiences. The girls, on
the other hand, cried many times because they missed their parents and
wanted a place to call home.
I realized through my
tears, that what I wanted most was for these girls to understand that
they are God’s beloved daughters, and that God has not, and will never
abandon them. I wanted the girls to never give up hope. Having this
experience reminds me of the importance of treating others with the
dignity that God has created them with, but further than that, to be a
part of restoring the dignity of those who have been violated and
mistreated, especially in abusive capacities.
After this
experience, I decided to serve as a missioner with Cabrini Mission Corps
in Baguio City, Philippines, where I worked with 150 indigent families
through Save Our School Children Foundation, Inc. (SOSCFI), one of the
missions of the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus
(“Cabrini Sisters”). Since my first trip to the Philippines in 2005,
the Philippines had forever implanted itself in my heart, and so, my
heart led me to serve alongside the Sisters at their mission here in
Baguio City.
Aside
from leading liturgies and bible studies in the communities and
parishes, I specifically focused on working with the high school girls,
who are vulnerable to influential societal pressures and vices. As a
result, I was able to team up with an NGO in New York, LitWorld, to
start a “Girls Club” here in Baguio City, with the focus on “women and
girls’ empowerment through literacy learning.” It was not enough for me to just cry, sing, question, and pray on the rooftop on those countless days during my mission in Manila – it was important that my heart went to the root of what injustice I felt so strongly about ending, and move myself towards the next step: into action.
Crystal wrote this article towards the end of her two-year mission in the Philippines, and is now working at a college preparatory high school for women in northern California, moderating their community involvement program and coordinating their immersion trips. Her additional mission experiences may be found on her blog at www.crystalcatalan.com.
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