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Reflection ~ RSCJ Uganda~Kenya Province ~ summer 2006
by Deborah Farrington Padilla
Joy… Dignity… I keep coming back to these two words when the images of my summer in Uganda play in
my mind. My memories are filled with smiles sincerely shared, with
music pounding from tribal drums and angelically sung from young
ladies, with prayer from deeply thankful believers, with long
conversations around the community table, and with the faces of poised,
determined, hopeful young ladies trying to make a future for
themselves. It was truly a transformative experience… joy… dignity… I
continue to be uplifted by the joy with which my new Ugandan friends
live their lives. I am humbled by the dignity that is the essence of
the young ladies, men, and women that welcomed me into their community
at Kalungu.
The Religious of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (RSCJ) is an international
religious order of Sisters with teaching as their primary ministry. The
RSCJ have shared their teaching ministry in Uganda since the 1960s, and
the RSCJ have taught at the parish school, St. Charles Lwanga Girls’
Training Center, Kalungu (GTC, Kalungu), since the 1970s. Ever since
1984, the school’s headmistress has been a Ugandan RSCJ. Under the
guidance of the RSCJ, the 450 secondary boarding school girls are now
receiving a strong Sacred Heart, college preparatory education. Their
school motto is “Dare to be true.” The school is nestled next to the
tiny village of Kalungu, near Masaka, a four-hour drive from Kampala,
Uganda’s capital. The O-level students (“ordinary” curriculum) study
fifteen nationally required courses including Math, English Language,
English Literature, History, Geography, Fine Arts, Christian Religious
Education, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Typing, Business, Economics,
Luganda, and Kiswahili. They study these subjects concurrently for four
years, culminating in national exams that qualify them for further
study at A-level. The A-level students (“advanced” specialized
curriculum) concentrate for two years on four subject areas of their
choosing. Again, this intense academic preparation culminates in the
national exams that will qualify them for university and the precious
government scholarships.
It was within this context that I spent my month of June, 2006 volunteer-teaching math to one hundred girls
in Senior-1. These girls are the equivalent age as our American 8th
grade. Despite the fact that the girls do not have textbooks, they sit
50 to a classroom, they must copy every lesson from the chalkboard, few
have luxuries such as calculators, and most struggle to afford the pens
and exercise books, they are learning algebra and geometry that would
match the standards of our California curriculum. Despite the fact that
the village was without electricity for months so they studied by a few
dim generator bulbs, the rain water reserves were depleted because the
well water couldn’t be pumped without electricity, the health threat of
unsanitary water and malaria was constant, and they live in dormitories
of one hundred students each with only a bunk bed for personal space,
these students were thriving in their academic and spiritual education.
The contrast of so few resources yet such a strong desire to learn made
the task of teaching both daunting and fulfilling. In addition to my
teaching math to Senior-1, I substituted every time there was a need,
held supplemental evening math sessions, tutored older students,
proctored and graded mid-term exams, and worked through any and all
math problems with girls who brought their homework and tests to me.
But this was just the “official” part of my experience; math teaching
was the skill I could give to the young ladies of GTC, Kalungu.
What I did not expect were the gifts that were showered upon me. The seven Ugandan RSCJ Sisters
welcomed me to live with them in community in their convent at the
school. These women shared their home, meals, prayer, stories,
concerns, music, and love with me. We lingered long after dinner
talking about our cultures and our families. Sr. Betty and Restie
taught me drumming late in the evenings (the lay teachers living nearby
couldn’t understand why they were hearing drumming into the wee hours
of the night); Sr. Mary taught me to shake my “cabina” in tribal
Ugandan dancing; Sr. Flo welcomed me to her dairy farm; Sr. Seco
modeled graceful professionalism with her dedication to the school;
Grace shared late-night conversation with me; and Sr. Noellina inspired
me with her vitality, her deep faith, and her wit (and she taught me to
peel a mango). These Sisters became my sisters.
The lay teachers welcomed me into their community. They shared their
mid-morning tea and cassava doughnuts, they invited me into their
classes, they taught me Uganda history and politics, they shared their
family hardships caused by HIV/AIDS and poverty, they showed me where
to wash my chalk-covered hands, they invited me to evening rosary
prayer. The men and women lay teachers became my friends.
The young ladies of GTC, Kalungu eagerly welcomed me into their choir (I’m a lousy singer!) to share in
their joyous liturgical music. They taught me drumming, they shared
their family photos and stories often punctuated with death or illness
due to HIV/AIDS, and they shared their matoke (cooked banana), posha
(corn porridge), sweet potatoes, avocados, and sugar cane. I was able
to hug Bridget, Jennifer, Hannifah and several others who are being
sponsored by Sacred Heart, Atherton and let them know first hand that
they are loved by students and families in California. The girls
welcomed me into their dormitories late in the evening as they washed
their clothes, pumped water from the well, and finally had a moment to
relax (wake up bell rings at 4:00 am!). They talked, danced, sang, and
giggled with me. These young ladies became my daughters.
St. Charles Lwanga Girls’ Training Center, Kalungu is just one gem in
the RSCJ Uganda-Kenya Province. Five miles down the road is
Kyamusansala where the Sacred Heart Primary School is another gem
flourishing after it’s opening in 2003. Their school motto is “Open to
learn, love and share.” Srs. Annette, Susan, Lucy, and Priscilian are
educating 350 girls with a Sacred Heart primary education that will
give these girls greatly improved opportunities for their lives. After
my month in Uganda, my husband joined me and we were off to Kenya. We
visited Sr. Rosemary and the RSCJ health clinic and handicapped
children’s school in Chekalini, Bishop Njenga Parish. I spent a day
with Sr. Jennifer in Kibera Slum, Nairobi where we witnessed the RSCJs
teaching in the Laini Saba Primary School, a Catholic parish school in
the heart of one of Africa’s largest slums. The RSCJ Uganda-Kenya
Province is very much alive with communities that are doing God’s work
despite terrific hardships and lack of resources. What I experienced in
my six weeks with the RSCJ in the Uganda-Kenya Province is that with
joy and dignity the Sacred Heart of Jesus can and does create a better
world.
Gracious God… loving Jesus… thank you with all my heart for the gift you gave me. Thank you for the joy
Thank you for the blessed dignity that I witnessed despite the enormous
hardships caused by poverty, the legacy of colonialism and
dictatorship, the scourge of HIV/AIDS, and the evils of contemporary
civil war. I experienced in the smiles, the song, and the love of our
sisters and brothers in Uganda.
Gracious God… loving Jesus… please bless my friends in Uganda. Please
bless the RSCJ Sisters who minister to teach, guide, and love these
young women with a Sacred Heart education. Please bless the many
families who struggle to send their daughters to school. Please bless
the lay teachers who educate these young women who will be the future
leaders of Uganda. Please bless the hungry, the sick, the illiterate,
the laborer, the orphan, and the refugee.
Gracious God… loving Jesus… I witnessed your grace in Uganda. Please let your Holy Spirit protect my friends in Uganda.
Deborah Farrington Padilla
dfarrington@shschools.org
Sacred Heart Preparatory 830 Tolman Drive
150 Valparaiso Avenue Stanford, CA 94305
Atherton, CA 94027
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