Marist missions - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Tue, 05 Nov 2019 02:24:16 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Marist missions - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Marist Asia school for Burmese migrants reopens https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/10/24/marist-asia-school-migrants-reopens/ Thu, 24 Oct 2019 07:02:25 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=122434 marist asia

A Marist secondary school programme in Ranong Thailand with close links to New Zealand has re-opened. The school was one of 10 Burmese migrant learning centres closed as a result of the 24 August arrest and deportation of 32 Burmese teachers by Thai officials. News of their reopening on a part-time basis was confirmed on Read more

Marist Asia school for Burmese migrants reopens... Read more]]>
A Marist secondary school programme in Ranong Thailand with close links to New Zealand has re-opened.

The school was one of 10 Burmese migrant learning centres closed as a result of the 24 August arrest and deportation of 32 Burmese teachers by Thai officials.

News of their reopening on a part-time basis was confirmed on Monday, by Fr Frank Bird, the Director of the Marist Asia Foundation.

"We have our school programme operating because the Marist Asia Foundation is a registered foundation and we have international volunteers and Thai staff", Frank Bird said.

At present, the school is the only migrant learning centre able to open.

It re-opened after conducting a risk re-assessment and determining that by using only Thai and International volunteers the threat risk was "low".

In making the decision to re-open, the Marist Asia Foundation decided that as well as catering for its secondary school students, the school would welcome students from other secondary schools to come and sit their exams.

"We want to show the students our care and support", said Frank Bird.

"We don't want them to miss out on the opportunity."

While the school has some surplus capacity, it worked in co-operation with a local monastery to provide space for students to sit their exams.

Like others in the region, the Marist Asia Foundation laments its inability to reintroduce its Burmese teachers into their classrooms.

"We feel deeply the pain and anxiety of the Burmese Migrant Community as their children are not able to attend school and their own teachers are not allowed to teach", says Frank Bird.

The Thai Government considers the Burmese learning centres as illegal and their Burmese teachers are also illegal. It is a situation that has been permitted for the past 15-20 years.

While the students are not at school, they are either unsafely wandering the streets, locked up at home while their parents go to work, or follow their parents to work in the unsafe fish and charcoal factories.

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Marist missions hard hit by Fiji cyclone https://cathnews.co.nz/2016/03/01/marist-missions-hard-hit-by-fiji-cyclone/ Mon, 29 Feb 2016 16:03:29 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=80868

Several Marist missions in Fiji were severely affected by Cyclone Winston, according to a report by Fr Pio Fong Waqavotuwale, SM. At the Tutu Rural Training Centre in Taveuni, 22 buildings were either completely or partially destroyed. These were staff houses, dormitories, workshops, hall and kitchens. Tens of thousands of kava and dalo plants, many belonging Read more

Marist missions hard hit by Fiji cyclone... Read more]]>
Several Marist missions in Fiji were severely affected by Cyclone Winston, according to a report by Fr Pio Fong Waqavotuwale, SM.

At the Tutu Rural Training Centre in Taveuni, 22 buildings were either completely or partially destroyed.

These were staff houses, dormitories, workshops, hall and kitchens.

Tens of thousands of kava and dalo plants, many belonging to student farmers, have been damaged.

The urgent needs in Tutu are for building materials, with an estimate cost of $125,000, as well as food for 25 families and 72 course participants.

St John's College in Cawaci, Ovalau, sustained extensive damage to school buildings, girls' dormitories, teachers' and staff quarters, the church, convent and presbytery.

The only buildings that were intact, with minor damage, were six dormitories for the boys.

But the ablutions block for these dormitories was blown down.

The church has half of its roof ripped off, including the roofs of the two steeples.

The presbytery also has half of its roof blown away and its balcony upstairs wrecked.

The convent by the girls' dormitories has its roof completely ripped off as well

Principal Fr ‘Ekuasi Manu said the rebuilding of the school will be administered by Fiji's Ministry of Education.

The heritage group has been to assess the damage to the church and so the urgent need now is the repair of the presbytery and the convent, for which the ministry will not take responsibility.

Loreto primary school in Sacred Heart parish, Levuka, has been completely destroyed.

The Marists' holiday house at Dawasamu has been destroyed.

Cyclone Winston resulted in some 42 deaths in Fiji, and has seen widespread devastation.

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Marist missions hard hit by Fiji cyclone]]>
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