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Mid-life crisis leads Frank Bird to find new purpose on Thai-Burma border

Thai-Burma border health clinic
One of the Marist Asia Foundation Thai-Burma border Marist team members talks to young women about health

A minor mid-life crisis led Fr Frank Bird to Ranong, on the Thai-Burma border, where he found new purpose in life.

He was 40 at the time, and working in one of the New Zealand Marist province’s priority missions in Okaihau.

“I was getting too comfortable,” he told the Wellingtonian newspaper.

He said he could have continued his education work with children in the north of New Zealand and watch TV every night, but thought he had more to offer.

Fr Bird has worked with the Marist Asia Foundation for three years and was back in Wellington recently to visit the Foundation’s supporters.

Education

There are 140,000 migrants living on the Thai-Burma border and the Marist Asia Foundation’s three priests and 15 local staff run three education programmes, pre-school, secondary and online university through the ACU.

Fr Bird says that with poverty such a major problem, immigrant workers are likely to get what he calls “3D” jobs; difficult, dangerous or dirty, but that education provides hope.

Fr Bird thinks the Marist Asia Foundation is making a difference.

“All of our pre-school students go to primary school.”

And he observes, that each year of secondary education improves their future chanced by around 10%, but alas few get the chance.

“There are only 13 Burmese teenagers in all of the Thai state schools in the area.”

HIV/AIDS

Ranong is a fishing village where prostitution is common. Prostitution goes hand in hand with HIV/AIDS.

“They avoid being tested and carry on as if they haven’t got it,” Fr Bird told the Wellingtonian.

The Marist Asia Foundation works hard in the community to help people with HIV/AIDS.

As well as regular visits to people suffering from HIV/AIDS, the Foundation puts translators in into the hospitals to teach people about HIV. For those at home and who cannot read and write, the Foundation workers, for example, draw a Sun on the calendar to remind them to take a tablet in the morning.

Bird says that working with the Marist Asia Foundation has changed him inside.

It’s a bit like Jesus in the gospel of John taking off his ‘priestly garments’ and picking up a ‘towel and water basin’ to wash dirty feet; moving from the ordered priestly workbench of the altar to more dirty missionary pathways and streets, he said.

“I’ve never been happier,” said Fr Bird.

Sources

  • The Wellingtonian (article currently not available online)
  • Supplied
  • Marist Asia Foundation

 

Related posts:

  1. ACU to fund diploma programme in Ranong Australian Catholic University (ACU) is now funding the costs of its diploma programme run by the Marist Mission in Rangong....
  2. Marist mission in Ranong punching well above its weight The Marist mission in Ranong, on the Thai-Burma border enjoyed and exception 2015. In an area where many experience oppression,...
  3. Marist Ranong secondary school reopens The Marist secondary school programme in Ranong Thailand has re-opened. News of their reopening on a part-time basis was confirmed...
  4. LOGOS raises $5k for Marist Ranong mission Saturday, LOGOS held a quiz evening at the Logos Centre to raise money for the Ranong Mission. About 250 people...
  5. John Larsen awarded Future Justice international award Father John Larsen SM, Director of the Marist Fathers in Ranong, Thailand, has was named 2011 Future Justice International Prize...

January 18, 2016 Filed Under: New Zealand Tagged With: International Mission, Marist mission, Missionaries, Ranong

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