Rev. Joseph Uhen a native of Milwaukee,
who grew up in Oklahoma and graduated from Notre Dame '80 has been a
diocesan priest incardinated in the Archdiocese of Piura, Peru for 11 years.
He is the pastor and only priest at Santísimo Sacramento Parish in Piura and
cares for 30,000 faithful. There are 24 different chapels throughout the
parish and besides the 6 Masses every weekend at the main church there are 7
or 8 more Masses in those village chapels – standing room only. Two retired
priests and two Jesuits from the local school help him do the 13 or 14
weekend Masses. About 10,000 faithful attend Sunday Mass according to a
recent census. Though the monthly pastoral council is made up of more than
70 catechists and group leaders throughout the parish, a solid team of 20
key staff members has been assembled to fulfill the impressive work of
reaching out to the most needy in this poor desert region 600 miles north of
Lima and about 25 miles from the Pacific Ocean.
When the Shining Path guerillas were
threatening the Church as they brought terror and death to more than 45,000
Peruvians (including a dozen priests and religious), Fr. Uhen felt the call
to serve in Peru. After finishing biblical studies in Jerusalem and
theological studies in Rome he landed in Piura. Fr. Uhen has taken
advantage of his grade school, high school and university ties to involve
people in the United States with the work among the poor in Peru. For the
past 7 years 6 high school youth groups, 7 medical missions, 15 parish
mission groups, numerous university volunteers, and several families have
journeyed to Piura to help build homes, breakfast kitchens, chapels and
class rooms in poor barrios. Together with the parish workers they have
delivered food to the needy, clothing to the poor and joy to orphans.
Thirty five homes were built for the neediest families last year (a bamboo
grass home costs about $250.00 to build). Twelve hundred children receive
oatmeal and bread 6 days a week from the 13 parish breakfast kitchens.
About 40 elderly shut ins are brought food supplies (and the Eucharist) each
week. Two dozen students of all ages receive scholarships to continue their
studies. Medical treatment, wheel chairs and crutches are provided
constantly.
Perhaps the most interesting program
that has been established is the Family to Family Program. More than
750 families in the United States have been connected to a family in a poor
barrio in Piura and the number keeps on growing. The North American family
provides $25.00 worth of rice and lentils and blankets, etc. each month to
the needy family in Piura. Letters are exchanged, photos are sent, a
relationship is established. Prayer, hope, courage, triumph, communion
transcend the cultural, geographical and economic differences. Essentially,
a life giving Eucharistic bond is established. Some North American family
members have traveled to Piura to meet their Peruvian family and some have
even slept in their humble homes.
After the events of 9/11 2001 some of
the parishioners in Piura bought a roll of black cloth and arranged it like
a huge black ribbon across the front of a village chapel. Sorrow and
mourning were the sentiments of the people in Piura and that Sunday every
chapel sent up prayers to God that the United States be protected from the
evil of terror. A strong prayer from those who not long ago had suffered
ten years of terror and death.
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