The Deaf Development Programme is now under Caritas Cambodia, and every year Caritas has a long retreat with all the staff to build community, share the vision of Caritas, and just allow the staff to enjoy being together outside of work. Today almost 200 project staff traveled to the Catholic center in Sihanoukville for the retreat.
Because there are so many staff attending the retreat, some of us are staying in a guesthouse across the street. This is a view from my fourth-floor room overlooking Cambodia’s only harbor.
There was nothing on the schedule today except arrival at the center and a dinner at 7:00 PM.
After eating, Soknym and Thea who drove us down to the coast took us out to one of Sihanoukville’s beaches. It was the first time I had seen the beach and town at night and it was quite impressive.
The last night of our meeting time, we had a dinner for all the Phnom Penh staff. Here Mano (standing) gives a little gift to Katarina Butera, the representative from the Finnish Association of the Deaf.
The Finnish Association of the Deaf has provided money for community development and also some money for our Education Project so today Katarina Butera visited the two DDP classrooms.
Today our representative and our advisor, both from the Finnish Association of the Deaf, were with us when the Deaf Development Programme met with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP). It was a really good meeting that confirmed UNDP’s commitment to working with us.
In the past the Finnish Association of the Deaf and the Deaf Development Programme would meet together for a week in what was called the Annual Negotiations Meeting. That cycle was disrupted by Covid and we had no ANMs after March, 2019 until this week when Ms. Katarina Butera, our FAD representative, came to resume the yearly meetings.
Our first meetings were just the DDP management and Katarina and Colin Allen, a newly appointed advisor for DDP, and we used the meeting room in the DDP office building. Today, though, we had more staff attending for project reporting and moved our meeting to a larger room (where sometimes things like bicycles for incoming students can be stored.)
Today I met with friends to say goodbye and then packed up for the return to Cambodia early the next morning.
Jenny Lam and I have known each other for more than twenty years, starting when she worked in the sign language program at Chinese University of Hong Kong. This morning we met to catch up.
Sr. Theresa Chien founded the Canossa School for the Deaf in Hong Kong and was its guiding light through its whole history.
Today was the actual celebration for the 50th anniversary of the old Canossa School for the Deaf.
For the mass at 10:30 AM, all former students and staff were invited. I concelebrated with Fr. Lam who is the priest working now with the Catholic deaf community.
Many of the students had not seen Sr. Theresa (L) for more than twenty years.
The dinner after mass was a reunion for most of the students who attended. There were 7 or 8 tables like this one.
After leaving the anniversary celebration, I went to the home of Charlotte and Joseph who married after I left Hong Kong. We had a meal cooked by Joseph and then a delightful evening catching up.
On the way home, I took a wrong turn on some small side street and found myself in a Christmas season festival. The crowd is gathered because snow-making machine is spewing snow into the air.
Day 2 was spent mostly in the room where I am staying, catching up on some work. Then on Day 3, December 29th, I went to Macau to see the Catholic deaf people there.
When we arrived, Rebecca met us and got us to St. Joseph Church were some of the Catholic deaf community had gathered.
The parish has always been most gracious to the deaf group, and today they provided us with a wonderful lunch–a great time to be together.
From the church we drove to the Trappistine Monastery were ten Trappist Sisters minister. Sr. Emmanuela warmly welcomed us and showed us around.
The monastery sits on a hilltop and overlooks the four square miles that comprise the whole area of Macau.
Finally was it was time to go home and we took a jetfoil ferry for the one-hour trip to Hong Kong. We had wanted to experience the bus ride across the new bridge, but because of holiday period, the waiting time for a bus was too long. These ferries are powered by two aircraft jet engines.
Earlier in December I went to Hong Kong for the 30th anniversary of the pastoral center for people with disabilities that I helped to start. Yesterday I returned to Hong Kong for the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Canossa School for the Deaf. That celebration will be on December 30th.
I took the airport bus into town and when I got off, two really good friends were there to meet me–Peggy and Angel. First we went to the apartment I am using this trip–courtesy of another really good friend, Judy in Taiwan.
Then we went to a phone shop to get a Hong Kong SIM card installed in my phone. That took an hour! After that we ate a delicious meal in a nearby restaurant.
After eating we walked to a grocery store in the Wanchai area, to get something for my breakfast in the morning. Our travel took us past a public area beautifully decorated with Christmas lights and scenes.