Friday, November 21, 2008 

News > Daily Service > CAMBODIA Print This Post Print This Post    

Mail Report





Mail Report     Comment
CAMBODIA  Young Catholics Return Gift Of Faith Through Catechetical Ministry
March 17, 2008  |  CA04605.1489  |  568 words     Text size  

PHNOM PENH (UCAN) -- A youth wave is changing the face of the Church in Cambodia, where the vast majority of catechists countrywide are young people.

"I like to do Church work, especially ministry, especially as a catechist," Choeung Phana, 26, told UCA News recently. "I want to share my belief with my Cambodian brothers and sisters."

The catechist of St. Joseph Parish in Phnom Penh acknowledged the work is not easy. "We do not merely provide lessons to catechumens, " she explained. "We also give them good examples through our daily lives."

Phana became a catechist 11 years ago, after being baptized at the age of 15. Over the course of more than a decade, she has spent free time and even holidays working as a catechist. "Jesus' life has made me very passionate and happy," she said.

The Catholic Church in Cambodia has been rebuilding since the 1990s, after the devastating rule of the Khmer Rouge from 1975 to 1979, which no native priest or Religious in the country survived. But this revival has depended largely on foreign missioners.

That is changing as a wave of new Catholics, especially youth, get involved in many fields of ministry such as liturgy groups, charity and social work, and catechism.

Of the 160 catechists currently serving the Church, 130 are aged 18-35. Most have no formal catechetical degree, because the local Church has no official catechism school.

Sun Nin, 25, one of Phana's fellow catechists at St. Joseph, told UCA News after two years' experience as a catechist that the service "is difficult, but it gives me strength and reaffirms my belief in Christ." In order to do his job better, he added, he has read the Gospels many times, reflected carefully and prepared classes with his parish priest.

His classes are based on the Bible, publications from Cambodia Catholic Culture Center (CCCC) and his own experiences in the Church, he added.

Since Cambodian society is 95 percent Buddhist, becoming Christian is not easy, Nin observed. The words "love and respect one another" are easy to say, but difficult to put into action, he remarked. "To fulfill our ministry, we must believe."

Chur Damo, a catechist at Prey Veng Parish in Kompong Cham apostolic prefecture, agreed that being a catechist is very difficult. Yet, because of his faith, he said, "I am happy to do it." He added, "I received the best gift from God: love and happiness." In return he wants to bring these to other Cambodians.

To help catechists across the country in their work, CCCC set up training this year on teaching methods.

CCCC director Father Francois Ponchaud, 69, considers catechesis in Cambodia weak, the Paris Foreign Missions priest told UCA News. Hence the center arranged the training open to catechists in all three Church jurisdictions -- Phnom Penh vicariate, and Battambang and Kompong Cham vicariates.

The first program was held March 8-11 with 85 participants from all three jurisdictions. Four nuns attended that program at Kompong Cham parish. The next training will be held at Chamcar Teang Church in Phnom Penh vicariate April 4-8. Thereafter, sessions will be held two or three days every month at rotating locations.

According to Church data, about 19,000 of Cambodia's 12 million people are Catholics.

Estimates of the number of people who were killed by the Khmer Rouge or died from its misrule range from 500,000 to 2 million.

END

Rate this article: 
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Leave a Comment

   All comments are subject to approval before appearing.

Contact  for questions on UCAN website.
Copyright © UCA News. All rights reserved.