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“The poor possess a joy that is pure and highly contagious, for it
doesn’t come from material comfort and prosperity but from the very
gift of being alive each day.”
-Fr.
Richard Ho Lung |
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The
religious order known as the "Missionaries of the Poor" (MOP) was founded by Father Richard Ho
Lung, a Catholic priest, in 1981, in Kingston, Jamaica.
Fr. Richard
Ho Lung is a Jamaican,
born to Chinese parents on September 17,
1939 in Richmond, St Mary. His father
and mother were born in Hong Kong, but came over to Jamaica as immigrants. His
family was so poor that as a child he
remembers one small cup of rice being passed
around for dinner to be shared by him, his
parents and his two sisters and brother.
He was
educated by the Franciscan sisters in
Kingston and then by the Jesuits at St
George’s College. After completing his studies at St.
George’s, on August 15, 1959, he joined the
Society of Jesus, the most respected of
religious orders and certainly the most
intellectually acclaimed in the Roman
Catholic Church. He was ordained to the
priesthood on July 4, 1971 and diligently
studied,
earning Master’s
degrees in Philosophy, English Literature
and Theology, along with a Licentiate in Theology and a
Doctorate in Humanities. He taught at
St. George’s College, at the University of
the West Indies and at Boston College in the
USA.
It was during
his tenure as
assistant parish priest at the Aquinas Center
(1972-1980) that spiritual
awakening occurred . He recalls that time,
saying, “I felt that everything that I
had done up until that time had been somehow
hypocritical. I was preaching the Word of
God but not really living it.”. He felt the call to respond
more radically to the Gospel challenge. Surrounded by desperate poverty in Kingston
where the poor suffered greatly, he had a
strong sense that God was calling him to
respond to their cry and to be with them in
their suffering. He was reluctant to take up
the challenge but he knew he must obey God’s
command. In 1980, Father Ho Lung made the difficult
decision of leaving the Society of Jesus,
which he loved, and founded a religious
community of men who dedicated their lives
to the service of the rejected and the
destitute.
In July 19, 1981, Fr. Richard Ho Lung
started the Brothers of the Poor (BOP). Hayden Augustine,
Gregory Ramkissoon, and Brian Kerr were the first to join Fr. Ho
Lung, sharing his vision of dedicating their lives for the poor.
Together they set about the task of sharing and relying only on
God’s love. At that time they were busily engaged in apostolic
works. They reached out to the very poor in the slums in the
ghettoes of Kingston, serving the neediest people, the most
forgotten and abandoned of peoples. They provided Kingston
with a voice of justice, a voice of peace, a voice for conversion
within the Christian community in Jamaica.
On March 26,
1982, Fr. Ho Lung and the Brothers passed a
letter to the Most Reverend Samuel E.
Carter, formally requesting approval that
the Brothers of the Poor be recognized as a
Pious Union, and on April 20, 1982 this
request was approved according to the Canon
708 of the then Code of Canon Law. |
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