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Notices and upcoming events

  • serenity_01b.jpgSteps2Serenity, a weekend retreat for people on a 12-step programme of recovery, will take place from 17-19 April in Manresa, the Jesuit Centre of Spirituality, Dollymount. Participants are asked to book in advance by contacting Manresa at (01) 8331352, by email at manresa@jesuit.ie or through the website www.manresa.ie.  Cost: €140 (Residential) or €70 (Non-residential).  Concessions available. Directors: Fr. Ciary Quirke, S.J., and Sr. Avril O’Regan, RLR.
  • To celebrate the year of St. Paul, Manresa will host seven evening talks on the life, letters and theology of St. Paul. These talks will examine the issues and problems which prompted these letters and will give an overview of Paul’s theology.  Talks will take place from 8.00pm to 9.30pm on Wednesday evenings, 22 and 29 April; 6, 13, 20 and 27 May; and 3 June.  No advance booking is required and contributions are discretionary. Speaker: Fr. Brendan Comerford, S.J.
  • Brian Grogan SJ has been helping the Slí Eile team over the last six weeks to consider, discuss and digest the contents of the 6 Decrees from the 35th General Congregation. The objective was to learn more about The Society of Jesus and to see what light the decrees might throw on the meaning of collaboration between lay people and Jesuits.
  • Slí Eile is holding a ‘Surfing and Turfing’ Ecumenical Retreat at the Old Rectory, Camp Village, Co. Kerry on 24th-26th April. “The intensity of surfing,” they say, “forces you to be in the moment, live in the present and let go of any cares of worries. It is also a sport that cannot be ventured alone, so it is a community experience.”  Cost: €100 incl full board & accommodation (Early booking is essential). For application form please contact debbie.moore@sli-eile.com  Tel; 01 8943165
  • Crescent College Comprehensive are celebrating 150 years of Jesuit Education in Limerick. As part of this Sesquicentenary year, Most Reverend Donal Murray Bishop of Limerick will Celebrate Mass in St. John’s Cathedral in Limerick on Sunday 26th April at 3.00pm. Fr. Provincial John Dardis S.J. will preach the homily. Everyone is welcome. The School Chaplain, Gráinne Delaney would be grateful to hear if people intend to be there. Email her at gradelgee@eircom.net.
  • The Irish Times had a lengthy obituary for John Dunne SJ on Saturday 4 April under the headline ‘A Jesuit of learning who chose a life of love and service’. Read it online.

FR PROVINCIAL’S DIARY

Fr Dardis is visiting our brethren in the Far East. His movements are:

  • Singapore until 10 April
  • Returning to Dublin on 11 April

The Acting Provincial during Fr Dardis’s absence is Noel Barber SJ.

Added Tuesday 7 April 2009 :: Category: General ::

A respectable scholar

denis_leonard_01b.jpgWhen Denis Leonard (pictured left) was a student at Crescent in the 1950s, his mother received a letter from Fr O’Beirne, Prefect of Studies, noting that Denis had improved of late, but remarking that “being the ordinary boy with his usual faults of inattention and disinclination to work, I have to use every weapon with him and his likes to get all I can out of him”. “Between us,” he concluded, “we will make him a respectable scholar”. On his final day at school Denis took the risk of ‘borrowing’ the sign ‘Prefect of Studies’ from Fr. O’Beirne’s door. He recently returned it to Dermot Cowhey of the Crescent Sesquicentenary Committee. Earlier this year the University of Limerick presented Denis with a Doctorate in recognition of his scholarly work at the Limerick Civic Trust, and Fr. O’Beirne’s wish was thus fulfilled.

Added Tuesday 7 April 2009 :: Category: General ::

Crescent celebrates on the double

crescent_01b.jpgLimerick’s Crescent College Comprehensive SJ had double cause for celebration on the weekend of 28th and 29th March, 2009. As it continued its celebrations for its sesquicentenary, it also emerged dominant in the Under-14 Rugby competition and was crowned champions receiving the Murray cup for its endeavours. The competition featured all the Jesuit colleges in the country, with Belvedere and Gonzaga travelling from Dublin. Clongowes, from Kildare, was the eventual winner of the second division competition, while Colaiste Iognáid represented Connacht. Cistercian College from Roscrea and Glenstal from Co. Limerick also participated while Ard Scoil Rís offered local support. In the photo here, Dermot Murray SJ presents the cup. Read on for a fuller description of the event. Read more »

Added Tuesday 7 April 2009 :: Category: General ::

Young people and Jesuits go ‘Nationwide’

nationwide_01b.jpgRTE 1 TV will broadcast a special Holy Week feature on their popular Nationwide programme on Wed 8 April ’09 at 7pm. Young people working on Jesuit projects with prisoners, immigrants, the homeless and people going back to college are interviewed in the programme which explores how they are living out their faith in modern Ireland. Slí Eile, Jesuit University Support & Training (JUST) in Ballymun, and students from Clongowes who are teaching English to immigrants as part of a Jesuit Refugee Service project all feature. Gerry O’Hanlon SJ, acting director of the Jesuit Centre for Faith and Justice, gives an overview of the work of the young adults in the context of a ‘faith that does justice, finding God in all things’.

Added Tuesday 7 April 2009 :: Category: Media ::

From ‘Sir’ with love

alex_ferguson_02b.jpgFive hundred people turned up in Croagh Park on Wednesday 1 April to enjoy an evening with Sir Alex Ferguson and raise funds for the Belvedere Social Integration Scheme. The SIS covers the costs of secondary school education for boys not otherwise in a position to attend.  The Manchester United manager gave his time (and wonderful anecdotes and insights from down the years) free of charge, so financially the evening was a great success. The first rugby jersey signed by every member of the Grand Slam team ’09 was presented by former Belvedere student and rugby great, Ollie Campbell. It raised  a further €13,000 at auction. To top it all off, those present watched Ireland beat Italy one-all (!)  in the World Cup qualifier match shown on big screens at either end of the dining hall.  ’The boys done good!”

Added Tuesday 7 April 2009 :: Category: Education ::

Lisburn Churches come together

lisburn_01b.jpgMore than thirty lay people and clergy from the Church of Ireland, the Methodists, the Presbyterians, the Catholic parish, and the Plymouth Brethren in Lisburn, Co Antrim, have been on a five-week programme of getting to know and understand each other better. Michael Bingham SJ, a member of the Portadown Jesuit community, was one of three facilitators from the churches mediation group. The programme was supported by the Lisburn branch of Churches Together, and Lisburn City Council provided facilities and funding. One feature of the course was personal testimonies on faith and politics from SDLP, Ulster Unionist, DUP and Alliance city councillors. There was also a session on forgiveness and a conversation with community centre leaders from YMCA and a republican area. The course ended with a meal together – pictured here.

Added Tuesday 7 April 2009 :: Category: General ::

JRS Homework Club in Clondalkin

homework_club_01b.jpgTo mark the end of its second term, Jesuit Refugee Service (Ireland) held a quiz last Thursday for asylum-seeking children who attend the JRS Homework Club. The Club is held in Clondalkin Towers, a state-provided accommodation centre for people seeking asylum, and is available to the students on two afternoons each week. Proceedings start with a chat and a snack; then the children are given assistance with school work for an hour; and the afternoon is usually rounded off with some board games. It is coordinated by JRS Ireland’s Integration Officer, Elizabeth O’Rourke (pictured here), upon whom it falls to be the disciplinarian, and co-lead by JVC Volunteer Steve Hayes, who can afford to be the fun-guy. Three other volunteers help out with the education and the crowd control. Read more »

Added Tuesday 7 April 2009 :: Category: General ::

JESUITICA: A brilliant botanist

camellia_01.jpgGeorg Kamel (1661-1706), a Moravian Jesuit, worked as a missionary-pharmacist in the Philippines, and would send newly discovered plant specimens back to Europe to be studied and classified. The great Carl Linnaeus, in recognition of Kamel’s contribution to botany, named the camellia after him. And as the plant from which tea leaves are taken is of the camellia genus (Camellia Sinensis), this Jesuit brother of high renown might be respectfully remembered as we wash down our morning toast with a hot cuppa. The camellia pictured here was planted in the Crescent, Limerick, in 1969 by William Troddyn SJ.

Added Tuesday 7 April 2009 :: Category: General ::

David Down Under

le_cheile_01.jpgDavid Tuohy SJ has just returned from a visit to Australia, where he was working with the Australian Council of Education Research (an institution somewhat comparable to the ESRI here) on a project commissioned by the Catholic Education Office of the Archdiocese of Brisbane. The project is entitled “Who is Coming to Our Schools?” and is the first phase of a major study of students, teachers and parents in Catholic schools in the archdiocese. Back home, David is currently working at the final stages of establishing the Le Chéile Schools Trust which establishes a new collaborative governance model for fourteen religious congregations.

Read more »

Added Tuesday 7 April 2009 :: Category: General ::