Last Christmas Fr Frank Hoare took a break from life in the Fijian capital, Suva, to return to a rural parish where he had worked previously. But his attempt at Santa Claus did not get the reaction he expected.
Maybe it was because I wasn’t wearing the required red robes or lacked a white beard but as I drew a soft toy out of my sack and offered it to a little boy I was surprised by the suspicious look, the turning away in disdain or the clinging to his parent’s neck in utter rejection. The children’s reaction to the soft toy animals I offered was not what I expected. Perhaps these items were too esoteric to the small boys in Tamaquto village in the interior hills of Ba Parish.
It was the Sunday before Christmas. I had offered to help Fr Pat Colgan who was on his own in the large extensive parish of Ba in the west of Fiji. For me, it was a break from life in the capital, Suva and a return to a parish in which I had worked years before.
I was happy to get the opportunity to return to Tamaquto in the hills, which I had happy memories from my previous stay. This village had Mass only once in three or four months and sometimes even less when the rivers flooded in the rainy season.
In the absence of a priest, their catechist, Semesa, led the liturgy of the Word and distributed Holy Communion on Sundays. A couple of catechists from other villages would help out when needed. Catechists are very important in Fiji. They prepare couples for marriage and the baptism of their children. They often instruct children in preparation for the sacraments of the Eucharist and Confirmation.
Catechists are unpaid volunteers who give their time willingly to God and the Church. Their wives are a big support to them and assist them in their work. The local archbishop has recently begun to commission female catechists, but it is taking a while for them to be fully accepted. I was delighted to meet four catechists in Tamaquto after Mass and sit and chat with them.
Someone, who came from overseas, had given Fr Pat a large bag full of soft toys for distribution among the children for Christmas. Pat suggested that I take them to the small village of Tamaquto rather than leave a lot of disappointed children in one of the larger villages.
I believed that I would be a very popular priest by playing the role of Santa Claus. Not so! At least not among the male children. The reaction of the young girls was different. They directed a big smile and outreaching arms my way. That was more like what I had expected. It seems to me that the children’s different responses had more to do with genetics than environmental conditioning. Well, maybe from both!
Fr Frank Hoare is from Ireland. He is a member of the Regional Council and Student Formation team in Fiji where he has been working since 1973.
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