WORK CAMP 2004: Garden of Saint Anne
by David J. Sheehan
In a corner of the Temple, a gray-haired woman
is praying. She is asking God for the impossible,
to have a child in her old age. She promises to
raise up the child in the way of the Law. No answer.
She promises to teach the child about the great
love that God has for His people. No answer. Finally,
she promises to give the child back to God when
the child is weaned. Voices call to her, it is
time to go. No, she is going to continue to pray
and to wait on the Lord. Then, she hears a strange
voice, a child's voice teasing her, "Woman, how
does this concern of yours involve me?" She is
puzzled, but then continues to pursue God to give
life to her barren womb. After a time, she hears
a more mature voice, "I am going to settle in
her favor or she will end by doing me violence!"
The voices outside call to her louder, but no,
she will not leave now, she has clutched the outer
garment of the Lord and will not be denied. Her
request is answered, "Woman, you have great faith!
Your wish will come to pass". The words that
she has heard will be told again by her grandson
in half a century. Our beloved Anne, Saint Anne,
Grandma Anne, has gotten her wish. God has heard
the cry of the poor.
In another part of the world, at a time in the
future, God heard voices crying to Him for peace,
for a decent livelihood, and the voices of little
children who needed a school in their village.
In June 2004, Saint David's Relief Foundation
answered a call from children in central Bosnia.
The war had destroyed their school and they wanted
it back. I was fortunate to be one of the volunteers
of St. David's Relief for its sixth summer workcamp.
This trip, we have Father Glenn Sudano of the
Franciscan Friars of the Renewal. He comes with
four of his merry band of friars. After working
in the Bronx, coming to war-ravaged Bosnia must
be like coming to the French Riviera for the friars.
We arrive at the village late Sunday night. None
of us have been to Sunday Mass yet for we have
been traveling for twenty-four hours. So, we unload
our bags from the bus, put them into a barn and
head on down to the worksite. We are losing light
fast. There is an overcast and a threat of showers
for the morning. We have Mass in a tent that the
Dutch army provided. It is enough to cover the
27 volunteers and about 10 of the people of the
village. The local Franciscan priest gets the
altar ready for Father and amid candlelight and
one light bulb we celebrate the Sacred Mystery.
There is no church in the village. For this week,
this tent will become Church and Our Lord in the
Blessed Sacrament must fire us up to do our work.
We are willing but after modern air travel, the
flesh is weak. After Mass, we walk back to the
village. The distance is about three fourths of
a mile. We have dinner in a converted home. There
is a bathroom around the side of the building
with running cold water. There is no water system
in the village. This water is delivered by tank
truck and pumped into a well. From the well, an
electric pump raises it up to a storage tank.
Electricity in the village has been recently installed
about a year ago. For that, we are very grateful.
We eat our first meal as a group. I recognize
many of the old faces and we have some new ones.
I always talk to the new faces and find out how
they got the "call" to make this trip. The answers
always are varied, this one, his wife was looking
on the Internet for an adventure for him. That
one, found out about the trip from a friend of
a friend. Over the years, I have become convinced
that Our Lady calls them; she has a certain quiet
style about her that gets the job done, even if
it means pulling along rascals like myself. We
finish dinner and Mr. Jeff Reed, Executive Director
of St. David's, informs us that there will be
three tasks at hand. The most important task is
the building of the grammar school. Second to
that, will be a fence for the school, and third,
there will be constructed a shrine to Saint Anne
for she is the protector of the village. The last
one hits me personally very hard as Saint Anne
has had a hand on my life and has saved my bacon
innumerable times.
After dinner, we are split up among the villagers
by the mayor. How they work this "lottery" is
unknown to me, but Bill House and I end up in
a small house about a mile from the center of
the village. The woman of the house is a red-headed
lady named Manda. She and her teenage son Ivan
show us our sleeping room and also indicate to
us where the bathroom is. They have all the fixtures,
but there is no running water yet, so they show
us their system. Drinking water is kept in the
blue plastic jug. Water for washing is kept in
the clear plastic jug. And use whatever is necessary
to flush the commode. We all laugh and turn in
for the night. As I lay down on a nice soft cot,
I put the memory of the plane ride with its "comfortable
seating" behind me. I dream of my nice hot shower
at home. Never will I take pressurized water for
granted again!
Our workweek begins. Our room faces the southeast
and we have light by 4:30 AM. Our windup clocks
go off by 6:00 AM and we do our best with the
facilities, juggling the plastic containers, shaving,
brushing teeth, etc. Mass will be at 8:00 AM in
the same tent, so we must hustle a bit for the
two mile walk. After Mass, we have breakfast and
then go back to the jobsite. There will be Eucharistic
Adoration each day through out the week in the
tent after Mass until 7:00 PM and all are encouraged
to sign up for an hour with Our Lord. The day
starts out cloudy with a little bit of rain. On
the jobsite, the slab has been poured and cured.
Today, we begin building the walls with red brick.
There is a local construction company working
also on the site. We will work with them. First,
we begin with prayer that God will bless us and
help us do our work and keep the injuries to a
minimal.
We begin with getting the bricks off the pallets
and as close as possible to the walls. Our friars
work one of the mixers and begin making mortar
for the bricks. Some volunteers work on sweeping
the rain off the slab while others engage the
wheelbarrows and begin delivering mortar. There
are several walls going up at once. We are to
get the walls 11 bricks high and that will be
the first floor. The construction men begin working
on the walls with us. We are the "new help". Although
there is a language barrier, we communicate by
sign language, pick up a few words of Croatian
and we keep the work moving. This is the universal
language of construction. Bòzo is our construction
chief and he delegates out the work so that we
and the construction crew work as a team. The
construction crew has the technical skill and
we are able to fill in the cracks, just like mortar
in a brick wall. By the end of the first day,
most of the walls are up.
As the week progresses, God blesses us and holds
back the rain. In His wisdom, He dumps it all
on my lawn in Texas so that I have a "fine harvest"
on my return! There are children everywhere. I
know that the village gets snowbound during the
winter and I am tempted to ask these children
if they all have August and September birth dates,
but good sense prevails! When some of the children
come on the jobsite, Bòzo does not yell at them.
Instead, he gives them orders and they snap to
and begin working, carrying light things, and
sweeping up. In fact, one of the little guys got
after me when I was too slow with a broom! The
village is isolated and about 4,700 feet above
sea level. There is a beautiful range of mountains
covered with trees that serves as a backdrop to
the village. For the kids, this is paradise as
they are able to play from dawn to dusk without
the worries we have in our "modern day" society.
If a stranger comes into the village by its one
road, the villagers would be upon him in short
order in their friendly but persuasive manner
to find out his business. This is one place where
the village will help raise the children to respect
God and their parents.
The shrine to Saint Anne begins construction at
the entrance to the village. I help out a little
bit with mortar delivery but the lion's share
of the work is done by Bòzo and Adam, one of our
new volunteers. Seeing Bòzo's intensity with getting
the shrine just right, I imagine that Saint Anne
saved his bacon also.
In mid-week, we have a bonfire at night. Wreckage
from the old school that could not be salvaged
is thrown into the pile. The local well that will
service the school with drinking water is also
cleaned out and unidentifiable objects from the
well are heaped into the pile. That night, we
set the wreckage ablaze in a safe area. The children
watch intently. It is the end of one chapter in
their lives and the beginning of another.
On Thursday, we are busy building steel reinforcements.
These will be used in several places. First, they
will be used inside the columns that will reach
up from the first floor to the second. Also, they
will be used in the fabrication of the second
floor. That night, after building these things
all day, I settle down for a nice dinner and relax.
My back is killing me. As the meal ends, my stalwart
companion Bill House and another volunteer, Eugene
Siani, decide to go back to the jobsite while
it is still light and finish off the last reinforcement
that we were working on. I would rather stay in
the village, joke around and drink a cold beer,
but duty calls and I join my comrades in their
mad quest back at the jobsite. When we return
about thirty minutes later, everyone is gone!
My first impression is they are all gone in "The
Rapture" and the Protestants had it right all
along; we are "Left Behind"! Then, someone informs
me that they have gone to see a wild bear in the
next village in the Republik Srpska about seven
kilometers away. You see, when you don't have
cable TV, you are reduced to chasing wild bears
for kicks! Anyhow, I settle down with the local
villagers to watch some European football on TV.
Croatia is playing France in the Euro 2004 contest.
I know a little about the game and the young men
in the village are quick to increase my knowledge
about the game, about the players, about the coaches,
etc. My Croatian is not that good, but I think
I understand the "spirit" of the comments of the
young men, when their team did well and… when
some of the players did not do so well. The Croatian
language can be very colorful, almost as colorful
as the beautiful Bosnian countryside. The game
ends in a tie, so Croatia still gets a point in
the tournament. A win would be nice, but a tie
is okay and hey, as long as I am not chasing a
wild bear, I'm happy.
Saturday arrives; we are at the climax of our
workweek. Today will be special. The construction
crew has put fresh timbers on the first floor
to support the ceiling we are going to pour. A
ramp has been built. We are going to have three
concrete mixers going at the same time and numerous
wheel barrow teams. We are going to mix concrete,
dump it into the wheel barrows, run the wheel
barrows up to the second floor via the ramp and
begin filling the top of the building. This will
solidify the ceiling of the first floor and create
the base for the second floor. To help get the
wheelbarrows up the ramp, there are steel hooks
like long S's to be used to pull the wheel barrow
up. One man pushes and the second man pulls. Hey,
it looks like a system to me! So we start. I get
lucky in the beginning rotation of three men on
a concrete mixer. The first man takes a full load,
the second man takes a full load, and to empty
out the mixer, my load is one-half. I don't let
on to the young guys that I have a light load
and instead I charge up the ramp by myself "to
show them how it's done". When I get to the top
to the area where I am to pour, the supervisor
yells "Malo!" which means a small amount. We laugh,
and I head back again. Lucky for me, this happens
about three or four times in a row where I get
the "shakings of the bag" and it becomes a joke
with the supervisor when he sees me. Meanwhile,
honest, hardworking volunteers are working as
teams to haul up the concrete as quickly as possible.
Some of the native men are in such great shape
that they carry full loads up by themselves. One
of our volunteers, Brian, can't get over how great
a shape these guys are in. When he sees them later
doing their solo run with a lit cigarette hanging
from their mouth, it blows his mind. We run the
concrete all day. My legs give out. I turn the
wheel barrow job over to someone else and decide
to mix concrete for awhile. We follow a simple
formula. First, two buckets of water (provided
by our lady volunteers) are thrown into the mixer.
Then, two shovelfuls of cement are followed by
as much gravel mix as the machine can stand. It
is a simple system and effective. We run the mix
for about two to three minutes and then it is
ready to pour into the wheelbarrow. I continue
to do this until my arms give out. Then, Bill
House asks me if I want relief. I want someone
to shoot me and put me out of my misery, but this
is a Catholic group so that is out of the question.
So, I turn over my shovel to Bill and try to get
my second wind. It is 5:00 PM and my second wind
never comes. Thankfully, the volunteers quit at
7:00 PM and walk back to the village for dinner.
The construction crew stays at it and finishes
the concrete floor under electric lights. The
volunteers gave it all they had. Working with
the construction crew, the job for this week was
completed.
It is Sunday morning. Bill and I are up early
and have our things packed. We share a little
bit of strong coffee with our host, Manda. She
has been great to us during the week. This Sunday
morning before Mass, we have a little bit of "refreshment",
a clear liqueur so that we can hear and understand
Father Glenn's sermon better. It helps the coffee
go down. We tidy up our room and bring our bags
down to the village to the same barn that we had
first used the previous Sunday night. The week
has gone by fast.
We hustle down to the village. There is going
to be Mass outside of the tent for everyone. The
volunteers and the people of the village have
become one family. The children sit together on
some makeshift benches while Father Glenn gives
his sermon. Our translator Milenka interprets
for the locals. The villagers listen intently.
For them to have Mass in their village is a rarity.
They normally must travel a distance for Sunday
Mass. These people know that their help is from
the Lord. We fortunate few have been His instruments
this week. After Mass, a procession begins. First,
the school building is blessed by Father. Then
the procession makes it way through the village
and toward the shrine. The children lead with
a cross on which they have placed flowers. Behind
them, Bòzo our construction boss carries the statute
of Saint Anne with her daughter, our own Blessed
Mary. The statue was once the property of a priest
who lived in the village. He has passed away,
but his memory lives on, and his family has donated
the statue for the shrine. Father Glenn with his
friars comes now in the procession. And we, the
people of the village and the volunteers, bring
up the rearguard. We walk the mile through the
town and then up to the road to the entrance of
the village. There, in the shrine built this week,
the statute of Saint Anne is placed with loving
care. Father Glenn blesses the statue. The village
once again has Saint Anne in her proper place.
Everyone coming into the village must pass by
her, the mother of the village. And Saint Anne
blesses us, we, her grandchildren, who came from
a faraway land in answer to her call.
We have a quick breakfast. The bus is here to
take us to Medjugorje. The mayor comes in and
speaks a few words to us. He is a very strong
man and he speaks from the heart. He thanks us
for coming to help his people. They were driven
out of the village during the war. They are returning
now and are refugees no longer. He tells us that
the people of the village will not forget us and
will keep us in their prayers when they speak
to God. And he also mentions that he hopes to
have a water system in his village in the near
future. I am all for that even if it means taking
cold showers! Heck, give me a shovel, and I will
start digging the line trenches now!
After breakfast, we are all outside. Leaving is
always the hard part. I tease Ivan. He is the
teenager with whom I stayed. I sneak up on him
and take his hat, putting it on my head. When
his mother motions for me to keep the hat as a
gift, I pantomime that if I take the hat, I will
have to look after Ivan's sheep as well. She breaks
up laughing and I return the hat to Ivan. I know
how teenagers are about their things and the hat
means a lot to him. And I don't know a thing about
sheep!
We say our goodbyes and begin to board the bus.
One of the villagers tells us that we are now
the refugees instead of them. It is Croatian humor
at its best. And like them, we may return to the
village if God so wills it. The bus begins to
pull out. We wave goodbye to villagers. Perhaps,
it is goodbye or maybe, it is just "See you later".
God alone knows the answer to whether we will
be back again. God alone knows and of course,
His wise daughter, Saint Anne. |