A father to the children no
one wants
Fr.Renato Chiera has dedicated his life to the street children of Rio de Janeiro |
Fr Renato Chiera has been working in the favelas, or
depressed areas, of Brazil since 1978. An Italian missionary, he calls himself
a street priest who tries to be a Christian in the peripheries of the world
alongside those no one loves. In 1986, he founded the "Casa do
minor".
By Silvonei Protz - Vatican City
Renato Chiera is first and foremost a farmer, the son of
farmers. He was born 77 years ago in a poor family of eight children.
He comes from Roracco, a small town in Piedmont, Italy. When
he was 8 years old, he says he dreamed of being like Saint John Bosco. At 12
years of age, he entered the seminary to become a priest. He wanted to live his
life for others. As soon as he was ordained, he felt that his heart was
"restless", that he wanted to "go out into the world". He
says he had the privilege of living before, during, and after the Second
Vatican Council. “I felt a little compressed in my diocese”, he says. “I dreamt
of wider horizons".
The Bishop of Mondovì suggested he go as a missionary to
Brazil, to the Diocese of Nova Iguaçu, a large and often violent suburb of Rio.
That was in 1978. Since then, Fr Renato's heart has been dedicated to Brazil,
and to those discarded by society.
Fr Renato resigned from the philosophy department where he
was teaching, and entered the geographical and existential peripheries of the
Baixada Fluminense. He says he was "attracted by Jesus, who suffers and
cries out his abandonment in an uprooted, hopeless and unloved people".
Here he felt he had found his place and his Church.
Life-changing events
"I discovered the drama and tragedy of children who
were unloved, wounded, condemned to a life of violence, drugs and an early
death", he says. Certain events marked him deeply: like the story of the
teenager he calls “the Pirate”. Fr Renato had offered him refuge when the boy
was being chased by the police. But they found him anyway, and shot him down on
the wall of the priest’s house. "I did not come to Brazil as a priest to
dig graves”, says Fr Renato, “but to save lives”.
He made up his mind some time later, when another boy
visited him and told him how 36 children had been murdered in the parish that
month alone. The boy said that he was next on the killers’ list: one of the
"marcados para morrer" or "candidates for death".
With no one else offering to help them, Fr Renato felt he
could see the face of Jesus in the faces of these children and that he had to
do something. He had to be the father, mother, and family they never had. He
had to be the loving presence of God for those who were unloved and alone. And
so his new adventure began.
Fr Chiera with some
children of the “Casa do menor”
Abandoned children
These children have been abandoned so often and by so many:
their families, schools, society itself, those in power, even the Churches.
They wander the streets, their eyes staring at nothing, like the living dead.
Everyone has rejected them; they are foreigners in their own land, uprooted,
with no points of reference, no sense of direction, no dreams and no future.
For them, the street is everything, and nothing. They are the result of a cruel
and exclusive society, which has forgotten how to love, ignores their basic
humanity, and prefers to eliminate them, rather than suffer the accusatory tone
of their silent voices.
Everything has been stolen from them: their right to be
children, to have a bed, or food, to play and dream, to have prospects and a
future. They are the mirror of a society with deeply twisted relationships.
They are a cry of pain and horror. The sight of them is like a photograph that
reveals the dark side of society. Nowadays they no longer even live on the
streets as before: they seek the safety, sense of belonging, and visibility of
the world of drug dealing. There they are ready to give their lives, to kill
and to be killed: because that is what the law of these criminal environments
demands.
When Fr Renato looked at this tragic “photograph”, he
understood he had to act, to offer them an alternative, a community where they
could find a family, love, education, a profession, a future and, above all,
dignity. That is how the "Casa do menor" was born.
On the streets of Rio
making the presence of God felt to young victims of trafficking and violence
No regrets
Father Renato Chiera doesn't regret leaving the chair of
philosophy, on the contrary. Along his chosen journey, he sits on another chair
and learns another philosophy. He feels realized as a street priest, as a
priest of the "cracolandie" (ndr: city of crac, of drugs) that are
his new cathedrals.
It was there that he met God, who embraced the living flesh
of Christ, put himself in adoration of "bleeding hosts" who cried out
for abandonment and sought a presence of love, of prospects, of the future.
Sometimes they are satisfied with even just a hug or a candy. In the street and
in the "cracolandie" they recognize daily the result and the
consequences of a split society, of the decline of a civilization.
The "Casa do menor"
The "Casa di menor" is now present in four states
in Brazil. It is a community that will not abandon its children. Instead, it
reminds them they are beloved children of God.
In the 33 years of its existence, more than 100,000 children
have been welcomed, 70,000 have found a job and can look forward to a future.
Fr Renato often says he would give his life "to save even one child or
adolescent". The "Casa do menor" has already inspired a
family of consecrated persons called "Familia Vida". A family for
those who do not have one. Several members of this "Familia Vida"
were once abandoned street children themselves. This new community represents a
guarantee for the future, "but it cannot be reduced to a simple NGO",
says Fr Renato, in a reference to the many speeches Pope Francis has given
regarding on the role and mission of the Church.
Love given is also
returned
An act of love
The greatest need of the children and young people there is
the need to feel loved. Those who lack it are unable to love one another. They
are ready to destroy everything, including themselves. Which is why they cannot
be parents or build a future for themselves.
The "Casa do menor" responds to this need by
giving these children and young people a home, a family, a job, and the
opportunity to fit into society and the world of work. Many of them are
regenerated in their relationship with God. They rediscover Him as a faithful
presence in their lives, one that never abandons.
Fr Renato recalls a young man who arrived at the “Casa do
menor” with head wounds after his father tried to kill him by closing him in a
manhole in the street. On Mother's Day, he asked Fr Renato if he could go and
visit his mother. "I bought her a shirt to show her I love her”, he said
proudly. When he returned home, he was devastated: his mother was dead. After a
moment’s thought, the young man turned to Fr Renato and handed the shirt to him
instead: "You are my mother now", he said.
When you ask Fr Renato to talk about the children who have
entered the "Casa do menor", he becomes an inexhaustible source of
stories. He can talk to you for hours about the young people he has helped on
the streets of Rio.
One story involves a boy involved in drug dealing. Fr Renato
used to encounter him on and off for six years in the drug infested
neighborhood where the boy lived. Then suddenly one day the boy turned up at
the "Casa do menor". "Father, I'm here”, he said. “I want to
help you and I want to start a new life". Today he too is a member of the
"Familia Vida", where he is in charge of a community of
"moradores de rua", the homeless victims of drug abuse.
The children,
families and volunteers of the “Casa do menor”
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