WYD Panama: Swaziland youth
challenges elders to listen to Pope
Young pilgrims from Swaziland. |
On the sidelines of WYD in Panama, 28-year-old Thoba says
the reality in Swaziland is that young people are afraid of following their
calling, and he wants to help.
By Francesca Merlo
“I’m Thoba from Swaziland, now known as eSwatini, since the
king has changed the name”.
It took Thoba and another 6 fellow pilgrims three days and
four flights to reach Panama. Here’s their itinerary: Swaziland to South
Africa, then to Kenya, from there to New York, an onward connection to
Colombia, and from there to Panama.
Thoba says 18 pilgrims from his country attended WYD in
Poland in 2016. This year only 7 of them could come because, as he explains,
“Panama is too far”. But mostly the problem was ”finances”, he says. “People in
Swaziland are not financially stable. Those of us who are able to come to such
events are lucky, and we thank God for that.”
From Panama to parish
“In my parish, they are waiting for me”, says Thoba. They
want to hear everything that has been happening here in Panama. “This World
Youth Day teaches us unity”, he explains, and he wants his parish and whole
diocese to be a part of that, too.
He says he has learnt a lot, studiously taking notes during
the sessions of catechesis. But he was struck most by what Pope Francis said
about what the people in the Church are doing for young people: how they can
help our youth grow spiritually.
Follow your calling
Thoba explains why these words of the Pope stood out to him.
“Some of our parents, at home, don’t support the youth”, he
says. “So”, he continues, “I will tell them: ‘the Pope is saying you have to
support the youth in order for them to grow spiritually.’”
A Bishop from Australia, who presented one of the
catecheses, “taught us that we must follow our callings”, he adds. This is what
Thoba wants to help others understand. Because, “the majority of young people,
especially in my country”, he says, “run away from priesthood”, from becoming
nuns: “they have to listen to what God is saying to us”.
What Pope Francis said
Thoba describes his own calling: to help other young people
follow their vocation and grow spiritually, and “to be a leader to them”. He is
already a leader in his parish at home. When the young people from his parish
look at him, he says, they see someone who is “a brother to them”, a role
model.
So, even if no one else wants to support young people,
Thoba, encouraged by the words of Pope Francis, says he will.
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