Throughout National Catholic Sisters Week, Catholic Volunteer Network
will share interviews with volunteers currently serving alongside sisters. In
each post you will hear a little more about how the volunteers found their
program and what they’ve learned from the sisters they work with. Today we
feature Aubrey Kimble from Zebulon, North Carolina, a graduate of UNC Chapel Hill,
volunteering with the Franciscan Mission Service in Carmen Pampa, Bolivia.
How did you
find your volunteer program? What appealed to you about it?
I knew that
I wanted to do mission work after I graduated from college, so I started
researching different international programs on the Catholic Volunteer Network
site. Franciscan Mission Service (FMS) particularly stuck out to me because of
their emphasis on ministry of presence and accompaniment, their 2-year
international commitment, and because they offered a 3-month formation program
that sounded extremely well thought out (it was!).
Where do you serve?
I am
currently serving in Carmen Pampa, Bolivia, which is in the department of La
Paz. I am volunteering at the Catholic University of Bolivia at their Carmen
Pampa site. I am currently the director of the English department of the
university. I’m responsible for coordinating English classes, exams, and
activities. I teach 2 English classes – an English I class for agronomy and
education students, and an English II class for tourism students. I also open
the children’s library on campus. There is a primary school in the area, and
the kids come to the library after school on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
How has service strengthened your
faith and your understanding of vocation?
Although I
am “serving” here in Carmen Pampa as a lay missioner and volunteer, when I talk
about my time here I prefer to use the word “presence.” In fact, this is what I
believe makes missioners different from regular volunteers who come to serve. I
specifically chose a 2-year program because I wanted to live in solidarity with
my community and accompany them. Everything I do on a daily basis is based on
being present to my students, the kids who come to the children’s library, and
my community members. This ministry of presence has strengthened my faith
because it helps me to reflect on what love really is, and how my actions and
words reflect the love that I have to give – which comes from God. The ministry
of presence that I intentionally try to live out has also changed my
understanding of vocation. I’ve realized that we all have a vocation to love
others and to show them God’s love. I believe that our individual vocations
must all start there – we must find where our specific gifts and abilities lay
and where they intersect with the love we have to give.
What have you learned from living
and working with the sisters?
The sisters
here at the university have taught me so much, both implicitly and explicitly.
First, even though I never personally met Sister Damon or Sister Jean, their
spirits are very much alive on campus and in this community. Sister Damon
founded the university in Carmen Pampa with a vision that rural, impoverished
students would have the ability to receive higher education and take back the
skills they learned to their communities. Sister Jean ran the Pastoral group on
campus, which is a religious youth group. Both of these Sisters were beloved –
everybody in the community still talks about their love and generosity. This
has taught me the importance of caring for others and fighting to make
opportunities possible for those people who are marginalized in society.
I have,
however, had the privilege of meeting and working with Sister Chris in Carmen
Pampa. She has taught me the true meaning of presence and accompaniment. She
dedicated her life to serving God, and lived in Bolivia for more than 50 years.
She was a steady, strong presence in Carmen Pampa that everyone looked up to
and admired. She worked hard for the benefit not only of the university, but
also for the community of Carmen Pampa.
What advice would you give to
someone interested in full-time volunteer service?
I would
absolutely encourage them to do it. There is no doubt that this is hard work –
it is incredibly challenging, and there are times when you will want to give
up. However, being present to others and sharing God’s love is always worth it.
Your volunteer experience will also stretch you and force you to grow in ways
you never could have imagined – and that is an amazing gift to receive!
To learn more about CVN's From Service to Sisterhood initiative and discernment resources for volunteers, please click here.
For more information about National Catholic Sisters Week, including details about events taking place all over the U.S. please click here



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