Showing posts with label Boystowns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boystowns. Show all posts

Saturday, August 14, 2021

A Blessed Solemnity of the Assumption of the BVM 2021

As we celebrate the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, a feast very dear to our hearts, we are reminded once again how blessed we are to be given the opportunity to experience the life inside the Sisters of Mary's Boystowns and Girlstowns and to witness God's miracles unfold in our own lives.

As Pope Francis reminds us in today's feast, "Taken up into heaven, Mary shows us the way to God. The way to heaven. The way to life." May our Blessed Mother be our model of generosity and faithfulness from birth to death. She learned to surrender everything to God and trust God's plan for her. May our lives be a living witness as well to God's faithfulness and generosity especially in this time of the pandemic, a sign of hope for a world marred by sin and aggravated by poverty and calamities (both natural and man-made). May the Blessed Virgin Mary continue to intercede for us.

And so, with grateful hearts, we continue to remember the many graces and blessings we received from God through the intercession of Our Lady, the Virgin of the Poor. We thank our ever-caring and ever-loving Sisters of Mary and our beloved Fr. Al, who founded this great institution 57 years ago today.

God bless us all and Happy Birthday to everyone! Cheers! 

***

"All praise, honor, glory and thanksgiving to the Virgin of the Poor."

- Venerable Aloysius Schwartz (1930 - 1992)


Wednesday, April 15, 2020

WATCH: Heart to Heart: Fr. Al Speaks to his Friends

Heart to Heart Video: A Memento for His Friends
(c) The Sisters of Mary & World Villages for Children
No copyright infringement intended.

***
Fr. Aloysius Schwartz speaks to his loyal friends and generous benefactors on behalf of his beloved children and the Sisters of Mary. Heart to Heart speaks volume of GRATITUDE, FAITH, HOPE and TRUST in GOD, His Divine Providence and MAN'S GOODNESS & GENEROSITY. This is his last gift and living memento to his dear friends in the Lord.
***
"This is the secret of constant joy: Unselfishness, which means love. You must be unselfish to practice charity. You must go out to others and think of them. "
- Venerable Father Aloysius Schwartz

If you wish to get in touch with the Sisters of Mary and the World Villages for Children to know more about their programs and how you can help, feel free to visit the following websites:

If you wish to donate, especially to those in the Philippines, below are the bank account details of Fr. Al's Children Foundation, Inc. (FACFI), the local funding arm of the Sisters of Mary and World Villages for Children. They are authorized to receive and accept donations or contributions, and gifts of any kind from donors for the benefit of children from the poorest of the poor families in the Philippines through The Sisters of Mary Boystowns and Girlstowns in Cavite and Cebu.

Account Name: Fr. Al's Children Foundation, Inc.
  • UCPB Pasong Tamo Ext. Makati - Acct. no. 167-000716-1
  • PNB Silang Cavite - Acct. no. 243-87000128-7                                
  • Metrobank (MBTC) Dasma Cavite - Acct. no. 235-3-23533455-1 (online)
  • BDO Dasma Cavite - Acct. no. 001-90060225-1
  • Union Bank QC - Acct. no. 001-64000161-2
  • BPI Dasma Cavite - Acct. no. 000963-2851-08
Online Donation thru PAYPAL: 
http://www.facfi.org.ph/online-donation

Always demand for receipt when you give donation to FACFI.
Email: info@facfi.org.ph

Thank you very much!

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

WATCH: Oh! My Papa - Retracing Fr. Al's Charitable Mission


Video Documentary on Retracing Fr. Al's Charitable Mission
Oh! My Papa (c) 2016 World Villages for Children
No copyright infringement intended.

**
"Oh! My Papa" is a documentary film about American priest Monsignor Aloysius Schwartz’s charity and relief activities across Korea, the Philippines, Mexico, Guatemala, Brazil and Honduras. Recently, the Sisters of Mary and World Villages for Children ventured into another foreign land, Tanzania in Africa.

Father Aloysius Schwartz was the founder of World Villages for Children and the congregation "The Sisters of Mary". Father Al, as he is fondly called, is now one step closer to sainthood as Pope Francis declared him VENERABLE in 2015, a title given to those who lived a life of heroic virtue. This is the second step toward Father Al one day being declared a Saint by the Catholic Church.

Monday, April 13, 2020

WATCH: Sr. Maria Cho, SM on COVID-19 and the World Villages for Children


Sr. Maria Cho, SM Superior General of the Sisters of Mary and
Chair of the Board of World Villages for Children

***

CORONAVIRUS UPDATE:

Please know of our continued efforts to provide for the boys and girls around the world who are in our programs. During this time of uncertainty, it is our priority to keep these children safe and healthy.
Thank you for your ongoing support, especially during this time of upheaval and health concerns around the world.
- World Villages for Children

Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Sisters of Mary @ 54: God's Miracles Abound


Today, 54 years ago (Aug. 15, 1964), Fr. Aloysius Schwartz founded the Religious Congregation of the Sisters of Mary in Korea to serve the Lord through the poorest of the poor, with the mind and heart of Christ. These young women profess the vows of poverty, chastity, obedience, and service to the poor after successfully completing their formation.

After his demise in 1992, his charitable works and legacy continues, thanks to the ever-faithful, vibrant, and joyful Sisters of Mary whose numbers continue to grow. They are now serving in Korea, Philippines, Mexico, Guatemala, Brazil, Honduras, and very recently in Tanzania, Africa.

Thousands of children had already benefited from the free, high quality education they received from the Sisters of Mary's Boystown and Girlstown campuses. Many are gainfully employed and are now professionals and able to help their families break free from a life of poverty. Thanks to our beloved Fr. Al (now Venerable Aloysius Schwartz) for weaving our lives together in a beautiful tapestry showing how God's grace and love works in willing instruments. We will be forever grateful to God and to our Blessed Mother, the Virgin of the Poor for the gift of your life and the Sisters of Mary in our lives! 
A Sister of Mary prays before the tomb of Fr. Al beneath the altar at the Virgin of the Poor Chapel in Silang, Cavite


More than providing the children with a better education, Fr. Al's vision is to give them a holistic formation and that includes developing their full potentials physically, emotionally, and spiritually. In his own words, "rather than building buildings, and establishing Boystowns and Girlstowns, doing medical works...if I could give God, give the Church just one saint, this would be a greater accomplishment, a greater feat." This is his ambition and he wants each child to have this ambition too. Truly, the glory of God is man fully alive! A motto he adapted from St. Irenaeus which becomes the motto of the children. 







Children at the Sisters of Mary Girlstown Campus in Biga, Silang, Cavite, Philippines enjoying their special day with their Ate/Kuya (Alumni) last Sunday, August 12, 2018
Since its foundation, every year, it has been a tradition for the Sisters to celebrate the children's birthday every August 15. It is a day filled with joy and celebration made more special through special food, games, individual gifts, and birthday cakes making every child the happiest in the world.

Click this photo for the Official Video (54th Foundation Day with the Graduates in Silang, Cavite) courtesy of the Host Batch (2008)

Happy Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary and 
Happy 54th Foundation Day to the Sisters of Mary in Korea, the Philippines, Mexico, Guatemala, Brazil, Honduras, and Tanzania and Happy Birthday to all Fr. Al's children! 

And a million thanks to all our benefactors and friends! To God be the glory!

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Fr. Al: On Helping the Poor-Youth

“...the poor not only must be fed and clothed but also be given the education and skills to enable them to participate fully in the society.” - Servant of God, Fr. Aloysius Schwartz

Friday, December 16, 2011

READ: Monsignor Schwartz, friend of poor children

This article comes out at Baltimore Sun two days after Father Aloysius Schwartz died in Manila, Philippines. Photos courtesy of the Sisters of Mary. Old yet refreshing news - worth reading...:)

***

Monsignor Schwartz, friend of poor children

March 18, 1992|By Robert A. Erlandson | Robert A. Erlandson,Staff Writer


Monsignor Aloysius Schwartz, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee for his ministry to thousands of poor children around the world, died Monday at an orphanage he established in Manila. He was 61.

A member of a Baltimore family, Monsignor Schwartz was diagnosed in October 1989 with Lou Gehrig's disease, a degenerative illness of the nervous system. Undeterred, he continued his work even as his short, slender and once-athletic body weakened. He delivered his final sermon last week, in a voice barely audible beyond the altar.
Monsignor Schwartz's legacy is the orphanages and hospitals he founded for more than 12,000 children in Korea, the Philippines and Mexico.

The children are cared for by the brothers of the Order of Christ and the nuns of the Sisters of Mary, religious orders he founded in Korea in the 1960s to work in his "Boystowns" and "Girlstowns."

Monsignor Schwartz will be buried at his orphanage in Silang, outside Manila, where Philippine primate Jaime Cardinal Sin will celebrate a special Mass next Wednesday.

A memorial Mass will be scheduled later at St. Bernard's Church, Riverdale, Md., said William J. Vita, the priest's brother-in-law and executive director of Asian Relief Inc., the Hyattsville-based fund-raising arm of Monsignor Schwartz's missions.

Determined to expand his mission to the Western Hemisphere, Monsignor Schwartz battled his illness and in October 1991 oversaw dedication of his last orphanage, in Chalco, Mexico. It now cares for between 800 and 1,000 needy children from middle-school through high-school age.

In 1983, Monsignor Schwartz, who eschewed personal publicity, received the Ramon Magsaysay Award, called the Nobel Prize of the Pacific, for his foundation of orphanages in Pusan and Seoul, Korea. He was named a monsignor in 1990.

Despite his reticence, this friend of the lowly was well known to the mighty, who began paying final tributes even before his death.

Rep. Robert K. Dornan, a California Republican, wrote the dying priest last month, calling him "a hero and a saint" for his lifelong commitment to the needy, and saying he had nominated Monsignor Schwartz for the Nobel Prize.

When President and Mrs. Ronald Reagan traveled to Korea in 1983, the first lady visited Monsignor Schwartz's orphanage in Seoul. Last January, Mr. Reagan wrote to the priest, saying he had just learned of his illness and praising his "courage and exemplary dedication to continuing your work with the orphans of the world."

Cardinal Sin, who persuaded Monsignor Schwartz to open an orphanage in Manila, has compared him with Mother Teresa of Calcutta and other heroic missionaries.


Born in Washington, Aloysius was the third of seven children of Louis and Cedelia Schwartz, who had moved from Baltimore, the father's home town. He grew up in Northeast Washington, attended Holy Name Parochial School and served as an altar boy at the adjacent church.

The young Aloysius discovered his priestly vocation early -- in the third grade -- and soon decided he wanted to be a missionary, Mr. Vita said. He attended high school at St. Charles Seminary in Catonsville, and in 1952 graduated from Maryknoll College in Glen Ellen, Ill.

But fearful that the Maryknolls would make him a teacher, he went to Europe to study theology at Louvain University in Belgium. In June 1957, he returned to Washington long enough to be ordained as a priest before leaving to begin his mission in Korea, a country still recovering from a bitter war. Then, while recovering from hepatitis, Father Schwartz preached at parishes around the U.S. to raise money for his mission. Before leaving for Korea, he went on retreat to a Trappist Monastery at Berryville, Va.

There he met a man who was expert in direct-mail solicitation. The man persuaded Father Schwartz to give him more than $30,000 he had raised preaching to launch a nationwide fund-raising drive.

Fr. Aloysius Schwartz in Korea

That was the start of Korean Relief Inc., which in 1985 became Asian Relief Inc. as the orphanage network expanded to the Philippines and then to Mexico. It now has a multimillion-dollar operating budget, Mr. Vita said.

The expansion from Korea, Mr. Vita said, arose from Cardinal Sin's intervention during Pope John Paul II's 1983 visit to Korea. Cardinal Sin joined the pontiff, met Monsignor Schwartz and begged him to establish refuges for children in the Philippines.

After resisting initially, Monsignor Schwartz agreed to a feasibility study in 1984. The sight of so much poverty moved him, and the next year the first Boystown/Girlstown was opened in Manila, with others to follow in Cebu and Silang. They serve more than 7,000 children and adults in the homes and hospitals.

Monsignor Schwartz is survived by six brothers and sisters: Mary Flanagan of Princeton, N.J.; Louis Schwartz Jr. of Bethesda; Rose Herold of Atlanta; Dolores Vita of Lanham; Margaret Mercier of Vienna, Va.; and Joan Baur of Calverton, Md.

Mr. Vita said memorial contributions to further the work of Asian Relief Inc. may be sent to 4815 Edmonston Road, Hyattsville, Md. 20781.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

READ: One of Fr. Al's Last Homilies to his Children at Girlstown in Sta. Mesa, Manila


On March 1, 1992, two weeks before the demise of Msgr. Aloysius Schwartz, founder of the congregations of the Sisters of Mary and Brothers of Christ, and the holy priest behind the establishment of Boystowns and Girlstowns, he still managed to offer the sacrifice of the Holy Eucharist and deliver this one of his last homilies to the students of Girlstown in Sta. Mesa, Manila, Philippines.

* * *

The homily this morning will even be briefer than usual. God speaks to us in many ways. One way is through our body. Each day, my body grows weaker and weaker. It is becoming more and more difficult to breathe and to speak. So, God is telling me, “My child, my son, you have done enough. Take it easy. Take a rest for a while.” This is what I intend to do. Someone else will preach these homilies to you and someone else will say Mass for you. Unless God chooses to heal me and restore me to health, I will continue to pray for you, but in the solitude of my room and in the silence of my heart. I will continue to offer, along with my prayer, through Jesus, for you and your intentions, my sacrifices and sufferings.
 
St. Paul writes, “I must make up in my own body the sufferings which are lacking to Christ.” As a priest, I now, in a sense, must make up in my own body, my own flesh and blood, the suffering and pain which is lacking in the body of Jesus.

At the Last Supper, when Jesus said farewell to His disciples, again and again, He spoke of love. He said, "Abide in My love. Dwell in My love." In a word, Jesus is saying, "Love Me as I love you." My little children, my daughters in Christ, I ask you in the name of Jesus, to abide in my love, to remain in my love, to continue to love me as I love you. No doubt in your heart, you are saying, "But Father Al, we do love you!" But what is true love?

True love, as I have said many times before, is not expressed by warm tears, romantic feelings, or sentimental words. True love is in the will, and above all else, true love is obedience. Jesus expresses this sentiment at the Last Supper when He said, "If you love Me, keep my commandments." My little children, my daughters in Christ, if you truly love me, keep , my commandments. Observe what I have told you and follow the spirit of the Sisters of Mary which is the spirit of Christ, the spirit of the Gospels. Obey me for Jesus and obey cheerfully, joyfully, and completely. Obey the rules and regulations of the Sisters of Mary Girlstown and Boystown. Obey my representatives who are the Sisters and the teachers. And if you do this, I will know that you truly love me and that our hearts are united in Jesus.

So that’s it. Let us continue to love each other in Jesus. I express my love for you by constant prayer and by offering for you my little sacrifices and sufferings. You, in turn, express your love for me by your spirit of loving, cheerful, and complete obedience.

Thank you and God bless you! Amen.

* * *