Saturday, October 6, 2012

Death is...


Death is feelingless, Death is thinkingless

Death is futureless, Death is timeless

Death is adjectiveless, Death is experienceless

Death is talkless, Death is worldless

Death is worryless, Death is presentless

Death is Death…within and without

Death takes our breath away 

Death takes our family away

Death takes our happiness away

Death takes our relationships away

Death is always destined to makes it way

Forever in one’s life to stay

Death creates a sense of dryness and decay

Death is Death...within or withou


Thursday, September 13, 2012

Networking...

I always had my belief in believing in 4 C's - Convictions, Commitments, Challenges, Confidence; but now I am not only confronted with a truth that I discovered today but also carefronted with the uncertainty of this certain persisting trend of 4 C's - Collaborations, Culturization, Conviences, Civilizations. This is the sign I think that we are marked and forced to let our spirit filled life to live in structures bound in chains of NETWORKING. 

Mentioned here about chained in or webbed in NETWORKING because we are living in an age of networking. Right now I am seated in on the back row seats of a Hall in Divyadaan - Salesian Institute of Philosophy, Nashik - India, attending/participating in the Seminar called, "Networking: Philosophical Basis and Applications. It is already a day past but I must say that I was made to reflect and stress my thinking only after hearing the speaker of the day, a certain Mr Conrad Saldanha. He shared his views and reflection on Media and Networking. My mind did appreciate his thought on the same topic. 

Monday, August 20, 2012

l'amante di fiore - dedicated to Fr Ashley Miranda SDB


I have never seen a person so fallen in love with flowers. When asked, “Since when you had the interest in flowers?” He replied,”Since I was a brother, but even more after I became a Priest.”

The discovery of fascinas for flowers was seen when we went for our picnic to Igatpuri the other day. Where we had a long walk between mountains and landscapes.

















A scene where he is engrossed taking and saving the image of a peculiar flower on his Nokia…..

Whether to call it a hobby or a passion I leave it to you reading this…… I would often wonder why people like to bring nature at home with planting and potting of fruits and flowers. I think it is because of only one thing- that is LOVE. I would often think that they are killing or destroying life of a plant/tree/fruit/flower but maybe I was wrong. It is to bring and give life to the world around them.

His eyes are always racing just like his mind to pick on things (nature-flowers) which we don’t see around. He is a person living in the present, the now, the moment- he enjoys living life to the full. By this I mean that whatever he is at be it - Celebrating Mass (Priest), taking class (professor), marketing for us (Administrator), talking to brothers (Formation in-charge of the Provincial Councillor), when he walks there is energy, when he talks there’s fire within.

You might be thinking why such praise and flattery or rather a query ticking as to why I am pleasing this chap. Well, you are free to think as you like. All I have done is expressed what I have seen and only seen, thought and only thought about this “top chap, top there”. Who has touched the lives of many youngsters (brothers), including myself. He is fondly called ‘Papa’. Loving yet firm, kind yet demanding. He believes in doing things well with energy, and whole heartedness. The Lover of Flowers has got a lot to give each one of us. Let us also be lovers of flowerz…

ENT or TNT



ENT or TNT I don’t know what to call him guy/friend/brother/dude??? – Amazing Superman or as his batchmaids would call him (say going back to 2005-2006) Pokemon (this is because of his skills in football). He’s got the nack to grab attention without even making attempt or seeking by his appearance. I must say that he is a mood swinger.  For me, I often call him hey Rickz/Ricky Boy, he’s really a gem of a person life full of Energy, Enthusiasm and E……. (Guess what). He is really a blessing to be with. Though at times which is very rare one might experience fuming flames getting oneself burnt when he’s around but this is surely only a personified exaggeration of him He is a person loved by all (till date whomsoever I’ve seen him with/come across with). His physic appears to be as one who is thin and tall which also brings out his frankness of being straightforward and standing for right, truth, justice, equality. This is not a subject of economics or sociology but a scientific mind and logical being who speaks his heart and mind. Speaking of science and logic, presently he is earning his degree in computer science I wander what I should say with regard to his looks with spectacles or glares, he has a charm of a prince which can easily pierce the hearts of many princess. His sense of humour and love for people around him is beyond measure. He is person filled with qualities such as caring, loving, sharing, generous, and helpful which has super passes all qualification. I must also add that he is a man of principles and rules. Well, he does remind me of one great Salesian, a successor of Don Bosco – Michael Rua…U (Salesians) might think of this as WHAT?!?! But this is what I think…Ah…ya…I didn’t tell you who he is…He is a Salesian..& his name is…well catch him on Facebook for his identity…R....

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Sweep...Sweep...Sweep


…Sweeping a room where there is dust collected, or a corridor where there are footprints, marks, remains, cobwebs, or a long path (drive) where there are dried leaves fallen from the trees. Whether we like or not dust keeps collecting, leaves keep falling. So the question which I asked myself, “is it necessary to SWEEP?” Yes/No, this depends on you if it were you.

…A thought racing through my mind gripped my attention as I was reflecting on the issue of sweeping. But a parallel line was also running, that of, life. I guess, it’s the same with life, filled with – worries, anxieties, insults, hardships, taunts, wickedness, shamefulness, jealously, hatred, harshness, durgeness, dreadful, deadfulness, threats, cowardice, either within self or with the self, or with the self other than the self. And so the same question which I asked myself “is it necessary to SWEEP?” Yes/No, this depends on you if it were you.

It is the question that makes the two thoughts one which shows two implications that apply to the situation: one is to make it look pleasant, clean and pleasing to the eye; the other to see and show others, a façade to put on. One brings out the element of heart full of love and primary need; the other the element of head out of shear order, command and secondary need.

I am not saying that one is right or the other is wrong neither am I saying that one is good or the other is bad. It is only an expression of what my head was feeling and my heart thinking. What I was attempting at was only SWEEPING…
  
 

Sunday, May 27, 2012

As you see...


Peeping from the window pale,

Lo and slow sway the yellow dale,

Seated at the desk I am dazed,

Looking at the sunset up in the sky, I gaze,

The whirling sound of the fan,

Brings me back to the room,

Where I am to assist,

All holy novices with halo above their heads,

Busy with their books at their study desks,

It reminded me of my Novice Master once said –

Your Study desk is the altar of your life,

Remember for it is scared and holy,

So worship with all your heart and soul,

In all that you do on for today and forever.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Oh! My, My, my…


The expression often heard by her is the title I began with,

She likes to show up in jeans and shorts which suite her

The way she walks is simple yet complicated

She’s got a cute smile with a dimple chin

Her favorite color is blue…

But I see her wearing green & yellow

And imagined her in brown & pink

Her eye reminds me of the people from Japan & China…

But she is all Indian

She’s got attitude but that of humility & simplicity & kindness & helpfulness

She likes to be with her cell all time

May be talking,

Or may be chatting

Or perhaps only looking all the time at the time

God knows whether she’s fallen in love

Though after asking her, the reply is NO, No, no, no, no

But she has definitely left her scent on many

I bet U might be thinking who this gal iz…

She is none other than…my…A…

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

SWEEPING MY (MIND) - philosophy Part - 3#

What is the aim and goal of education?
This question doesn’t serve the purpose of itself but definitely it sets certainties as to what one feels and thinks about one’s own aim and goal of education but for me it is simply living the life with love and in love and being passionate about what is happening and being done. It is living one’s own life but for me it more than this since I am a Salesian and the Spirit of Don Bosco I believe is with and in me, I think the aim and goal of Education is to save souls and for me to save souls – S-sincerity, O-openness, U-understanding, L-love. The Window of MY SOUL
                       
All this will come to surface only when this can be lived with depth and when one gives witness to it first to oneself and then to others.

Conversion of St Paul - DB: Instrument of God’s compassion and forgiveness



On this 4th day of the novena, we reflect on the theme of DB, being instrument of God’s compassion and forgiveness to the young expressed concretely in the sacrament of confession. The church too reminds us of the feast of St Paul’s conversion. It is right and fitting that these two themes should come together on this day as we also conclude the unity octave. True unity will come through only if people are ready to be compassionate, to be understanding and be ready to forgive and be forgiven, ready to change one’s heart and life, and everything.
The readings of this evening invite us to reflect on these following lines: having a forgiving attitude towards oneself and towards one another: forgiving past hurts, unconditional love and acceptance of one another and concern for one another. Paul’s conversion shows how the most difficult person has the possibility of becoming the greatest saint.

DB became a great instrument of compassion and forgiveness especially through the ministry of the sacrament of confession or reconciliation or penance. That is why he is called the Apostle of Confession because of his lifelong dedication to this special ministry. At the age of 9, he was given the mission of transforming the wild animals into gentle lambs. And the great means to achieve this was through this beautiful sacrament of penance or confession. Don Bosco's great zeal and love to the formation to the youth of his day summed up in his own words "Kindness under all conditions and an open chapel with facilities for confession and communion.”

Don Bosco's advice to young people was to make frequent and sincere confession and to put into practice their resolutions, for he would often say "By their fruits you shall know them" (Mt 7, 16). He abhorred the taking of the sacrament of Confession for granted.

On 8 Dec 1841, when he met Bartholomew Garelli in the sacristy, one of the questions he asked was: Did you make your first communion? which implied, did you make your first confession as well?

During DB’s time, the priests would hear confession only in the churches. But DB was felt that this was limiting God’s compassion and forgiveness especially to the young. He got the ecclesiastical approval to hear confessions in the playground, in streets, in carriages, in trains, on river banks – anywhere. 

DB became a great instrument of compassion and forgiveness when he made available for his boys the beautiful practice of the monthly ‘exercise for a happy death’ which in today’s terminology we call ‘monthly recollection’. We feel a dread at the thought of ‘death’. We recall Dominic Savio’s motto: ‘Death but not sin’.

Let me share with you some concrete ways in which one can experience compassion and forgiveness in one’s life.

i)First and foremost is the ‘a deep awareness of one’s sinfulness’: unless one is aware of this, one cannot proceed to the path of conversion which is exemplified in the prodigal son, in Paul, and in the life of DB. He would often tell his boys: ‘Avoid sin like a plague’. He had this caption put up in his oratory: God sees me… so that the boys would be aware of God’s presence and avoid sin. 

Compassion and forgiveness, conversion and change of heart have meaning and relevance only in the context of being aware of sin. Only if we are aware that we are sinners, can we avail ourselves of God’s compassion and forgiveness.

ii) After one is aware of sin, one requires the will to change, to convert, to ask for forgiveness. This is called ‘metanoia’ – a total change, inside out.  We receives God’s compassion and forgiveness in the sacrament of confession.

BUT what is the stark reality of this sacrament today?

It is really unfortunate that today there are long lines for communion, and short lines for confession. This is the result of relativistic mentality of our generation. The problem is more grave than we think. The great danger (we may even call it ‘true danger’) is that many priests themselves are unavailable for this. Administration takes up almost all the time, energy and what nots.

Wayback in 1946, in Boston, Pope Pius XII admitted that the “most grave sin in the world today is the loss of sense of sin”. And history shows that this has taken place throughout the Church’s life: greater/lesser sense of sin.  Pope John Paul II was very emphatic about this ‘loss’ in his various writings on confession. Even the present pope Benedict XVI laments and warns: ‘We are losing the notion of sin’, as attendance at confession plummets.

Therefore, when there is no sin at all, compassion and forgiveness do not find any place in our life.

Let me now share with something from an article from Time Magazine, 24 Mar 2008, p.60, an essay written by Nancy Gibbs entitled: ‘The New Road to Hell: The Vatican reflects on its mortal sins for the modern age. Want salvation? Pick up your trash.’

She writes thus:
Our catechism teaches us that there are 7 deadly sins: pride, gluttony, melancholy (which was dropped in the 17thc in favour of sloth), lust, greed, envy and anger. Anger gives rise to violence; gluttony to waste, pride to every manner of tragedy and hurt. They were judged sufficient for the past 15 centuries, ever since they were catalogued by Pope Gregory the Great, with an assist from Thomas Aquinas and Dante.

The culture celebrates what once it sanctioned: parents encourage pride as essential to self-esteem; (a group of self-rising French chefs has petitioned the Vatican that being a gourmand is no sin). Envy is the engine of tabloid culture. Lust is an advertising strategy; anger, the righteous province of the aggrieved. Most days I’d give anything for some sloth. Moral philosopher Mae West observed: ‘To err is human, but it feels divine’. She also advised: ‘When choosing between two evils, I always like to try the one I never tried before’.
Now there is the broader range of sins from Vatican for the modern age. Gianfrano Girotti, the no 2 Catholic official in charge of confessions and penitence told the Vatican’s newspaper: ‘You offend God not only by stealing, blaspheming or coveting your neighbour’s wife,’ but also by polluting, cloning, taking drugs, promoting social injustice or becoming obscenely rich. Where the standard sins are individual failings, in a global culture, sin is social. ‘Attention to sin is a more urgent task today’, Girotti said, ‘precisely because its consequence are more abundant and more destructive’.

Realm of biotechnology was especially dangerous, which reflects church teaching that destroying an embryo equates with murder. But the original mortal sins had as much to do with attitudes as with acts. Greed might lead to theft, lust to adultery, but the sin began in the heart. Yet modern research does not seem wicked to many suffering patients or the doctors who hope to cure them; the church’s sins is their salvation. Likewise the accumulation of excessive wealth: leave aside the historical irony of this charge issuing from the Vatican. What do we make of Bill Gates, the great acquisitor, who as a philanthropist, is now arguably the greatest individual force for good around the world? Does it not seem as if he has grasped the eternal somewhere along the way?

The writer adds 7 other modern age deadly sins:
i) genetic modification, 
ii) human experiments such as cloning,
iii) polluting the environment – adding to global warming,
iv) causing social injustice, 
v) causing poverty, 
vi) becoming obscenely wealthy and 
vii) taking drugs.

Dear friends, may this feast of the conversion of St Paul and the DB novena make us aware that there are deadly sins existing in our world and that we need to change our life and receive compassion and forgiveness from the Lord.

I place on record Fr Alu for sharing his thoughts with regards to this theme on Conversion which is well articulated and worthwhile to be reflected upon.

Sweeping mu mind - philosophy 3#



What is the aim and goal of education?
This question doesn’t serve the purpose of itself but definitely it sets certainties as to what one feels and thinks about one’s own aim and goal of education but for me it is simply living the life with love and in love and being passionate about what is happening and being done. It is living one’s own life but for me it more than this since I am a Salesian and the Spirit of Don Bosco I believe is with and in me, I think the aim and goal of Education is to save souls and for me to save souls – S-sincerity, O-openness, U-understanding, L-love. The Window of MY SOUL

All this will come to surface only when this can be lived with depth and when one gives witness to it first to oneself and then to others. 

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

U…Swthrt R the Red Rose…


Looking at the red bloomed Rose,
Standing tall in the lawn,
Reminds me of your smiling face,
In the crowds of people walking by,

As I walked close to the Rose,
Felt as though, walking towards you,
My fingers feeling every petal,
Seemed like the smoothness of you,

I held the Rose in my hand,
As if holding your face,
And giving a gentle kiss –
Saying: I’ll always love you

Suddenly a thorn pricked my finger,
Showing me where I am,
Though you are close to me,
Yet far away from me

There are some
Who look at you and marvel “Oh! What a beauty,”
There are some
Who make their way and take delight in touching you,
There are some
 Who come so close that they want every breathe of your scent,
There are some who wants every part of you,

I turn to them and say:
 She is mine, she is mine,
She is my only sweetheart…

I held the Rose in my hand,
As if holding your face,
And giving a gentle kiss – Saying: I’ll always love you

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Hey Buddy!



Lovingly he calls all of us, “Hey Buddy! How’s life?”  And in return I like to call him the same. I also call him a postmodernist. Why do I call Fr Tony D’Souza – A Postmodernist? it’s because I feel, think, and see him as a postmodernist. Always “young at heart,” especially when he’s speaking. Oh! Yes, the speaking makes me think of him as a person who is not an orator, or a maestro, or as an extempore speaker but I believe it is much more than these. A person who speaks not only from his mind but also from his heart. I am simply mesmerized and encapsulated by his sermons, good nights, a word in my ear or when I hear him call someone or me…”Hey Buddy!!!”

I’ve heard the staff and brothers speaking of Fr Tony as an experienced person with many years (graces) lived by – be it – in Formation or Missions, in Position or Authority and all this is very much true. His creativity and optimism is the key with which he unlocks our (my) little minds in manner of putting things across to us (me).

This year in our community we will be celebrating Fr Tony’s Golden Jubilee of Profession and I acclaim here by saying that it is indeed a ‘Gift of Grace’ for us to have him or rather for us to be a part of this community with his presence. An exemplary Salesian, Priest and Religious to live with and to share a life of love and moments filled with blessings.

The blend of his fatherly concern and motherly care can be felt in the sacrament of Reconciliation. The magnetic pull of his holiness can be felt whenever Fr Tony is celebrating the holy Eucharist or is spending quality time with the Lord in the chapel.

One of Fr Tony’s famous quotation is: “Are you a Convinced or Conditioned Salesian/Religious ?”
A great visionary and zealous missionary is a combo factor of his Salesian lived life.

This is what I got back when I asked a few of my companions to say something about Fr Tony….
·        Clarence – I like Fr Tony’s Humility (being in position earlier, he is able to respect his superiors).
·        Nelson – Fr Tony is great when it comes to cracking jokes (right jokes at the right time) and how can one miss his one liners.
·        Bryce – I appreciate the quality of Holiness in Fr Tony (homilies, confessions, and spiritual direction).