• African Proverbs, Sayings and Stories
  • Home
  • Resources
    • African Proverbs Calendars
    • African Proverb of the Month
    • African Stories by Season
    • African Stories Database
    • Bibliography
    • Book Reviews
    • Meetings
    • Maps of Africa
    • Poll
    • Poll Archives
    • Seminars and Workshops
    • Sukuma Legacy Project
    • Weekly African Proverbs
  • eResources
    • CDs
    • eBooks
    • Songs
    • Videos
  • Services
    • Regional Centers
  • Archive
  • FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)
  • Contact Us
  • Donate
  • Home
  • The Ultimate Compliment to a Maryknoller

The Ultimate Compliment to a Maryknoller

The Ultimate Compliment to a Maryknoller


Author Country :Tanzania
Genre Type :True Story
Location :Sar es Salaam, Tanzania
Year of Publication :NULL/
Publication :NULL
Sub Theme :Education, Missionary Ministry, Using One's Talents, Witness/
Author Name :Father Joseph Healey, M.M./
Author City :Dar es Salaam
============================================================

    Bishop Castor Sekwa
was sitting alone in the dining room at the Bishop’s Residence at Buhangija in
Shinyanga, Tanzania.  When he heard two priests speaking the local language
Sukuma in the adjoining sitting room he told the cook, “Tell one of the Sukuma
priests to come here so that I can talk with him.”   So in walks one of the
local Tanzanian diocesan priests.  Bishop Sekwa says, “I don’t want to see you,
I want the other Sukuma priest.”  To which the Tanzanian priest replies, “But
the other priest is Father Liberatore” (a Maryknoll priest from the United
States).  That the bishop thought that Father Charles Liberatore was a native
Sukuma speaker is indeed the ultimate compliment to a Maryknoll missionary.

 

    On another
occasion I was showing Maryknoll Father Ed Hayes around in Dar es Salaam.  He
began speaking with the security guard in the parking lot of St. Joseph’s
Cathedral in perfect Kuria, the language that he has used all his missionary
life in Musoma Diocese. The give and take was like the pleasant conversation
between two old friends.  The next time I saw the security guard he asked me
about Ed: “Has your Kuria visitor gone back to Musoma yet?”


Share

African Proverbs, Sayings and Stories is proudly powered by WordPress