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Posted by Press release on 4/6/2009, 1:23 pm
Board Administrator
ACN News, Thursday 4th June 2009 – UGANDA
Adoramus te Domine
• Increasing numbers drawn to Eucharistic devotion
• ACN lends help as vocations boom forces convent to expand
By John Newton
ADORATION of the Blessed Sacrament in Uganda is attracting more and more lay people to prayer and encouraging vocations to the religious life.
Speaking to Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need, nuns from two separate contemplative orders described how prayer before the Eucharist was proving increasingly popular.
Sister Consolate Shirima, of the Sisters of Perpetual Adoration, in Arua, on Uganda’s north-west border, described how over the last five years increasing numbers of lay people have been joining the Sisters for adoration.
As well as visitors to the chapel throughout the day – leading the order to appoint a Sister to look after the laity coming to adoration – 3-400 join the monastery for prayers on Sundays.
The nun said: “They come for adoration on their own at any time they want to. There are some hours where you find two or sometimes three people – or even groups of 10.”
Holy Trinity Monastery, where the Sisters of Perpetual Adoration are based, has now become too small to house the increasing number of nuns.
Sr Shirima said: “Still the number is growing, but because of the lack of rooms we have to turn people away, so we are looking to extend the monastery.”
Aid to the Church in Need will be helping with a grant of over $8,500 enabling the Sisters to extend their small monastery, allowing new-comers to join the community including 12 professed nuns and one novice.
The modest size of the community is considered enormous in Africa where contemplative orders are generally very small – most are joining active apostolates instead.
According to the nun, one reason people come is they are seeking solace in prayer because of the difficulties and poverty in the local area.
Sr Shirima said: “When you have problems you are easily drawn to God – through adoration, some of them get consolations, even though these may be small.”
She described how the impact of AIDS in Uganda had contributed to much of the suffering.
The nun said: “Poverty comes because people have died from AIDS leaving children living with their grandparents.
“Usually in Africa we have large families with up to 10 children, now because of deaths from AIDS you find one person bringing up over 20 children.”
Alcohol and drug-taking are also among the problems facing local people.
“They have completed school, but there is a lack of employment, so they get frustrated,” said Sr Shirima, “And out of frustration they turn to drink and drugs.”
Sr Marie Claire who comes from another congregation, the Benedictine Nuns of the Blessed Sacrament, described the calming effect of prayer on worshipers.
She said: “After adoration they feel peace, and when they have been having wrangles they would like to be reunited.
“So after an hour of adoration they feel that they want to make peace with that person. They feel the Eucharist makes them reunited with others and the whole Church – that is what they say they feel when they come before the Blessed Sacrament.
She continued: “Some come afterwards and say, ‘Yes, I am now alright with my brother/husband/wife who has not been talking to me for two or three days’ – they continue with real life in peace.”
Not only in Uganda but across the African continent adoration is growing in popularity and in Kenya and Dar es Salaam, Tanazania new adoration chapels have been built.
In addition to the grant for the extension of Holy Trinity Monastery, ACN has, since 2000, supported 359 projects in Uganda totalling over $5.1 million – including Church-run AIDS awareness programmes.
Last year ACN supported 69 projects across the country with more than $1 million in aid payments.
Editor’s Notes:
Directly under the Holy See, Aid to the Church in Need supports the faithful wherever they are persecuted, oppressed or in pastoral need. ACN is a Catholic charity – helping to bring Christ to the world through prayer, information and action.
Founded in 1947 by Fr Werenfried van Straaten, whom Pope John Paul II named “An outstanding Apostle of Charity”, the organisation is now at work in about 130 countries throughout the world.
The charity undertakes thousands of projects every year including providing transport for clergy and lay Church workers, construction of church buildings, funding for priests and nuns and help to train seminarians. Since the initiative’s launch in 1979, 46.5 million Aid to the Church in Need Child’s Bibles have been distributed worldwide.
For more information, please contact the Australian office of ACN on (02) 9679-1929. e-mail: info@aidtochurch.org or write to Aid to the Church in Need PO Box 6245 Blacktown DC NSW 2148. Web: www.aidtochurch.org

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