CHABROUH, Lebanon (CNS) — In a pristine
mountain setting in Lebanon, a female volunteer gently takes hold of the hands
of Mohammed, a disabled adult who has trouble communicating. She gazes into his
eyes — still shaded in heart-shaped sunglasses from the dress-up activity a
few hours earlier — as she engages him in a dance to the rhythm of the music
playing in the background.
Smiling contentedly, Mohammed bows his head
to kiss her hand, and she responds with a kiss on his forehead. “By showing acts of love, we are
demonstrating that everyone is made in the image and likeness of God,”
Anton Depiro, a 30-year-old Catholic volunteer from London, told Catholic News
Service during a recent camp for people with disabilities, run by the Order of Malta Lebanon.
As Depiro affectionately put his arm around
Mohammed, he introduced his middle-aged guest like a proud brother, saying, “He’s
very shy and quiet.” He told CNS they were “working together slowly
and getting to know each other, and we’re finding ways we can interact.”
The issue of disability is still somewhat of
a taboo in Lebanon, and families often experience shame when they have a child
with a disability. Because the Lebanese government does not offer support for
people with disabilities, many families resort to putting their family member
into an institution, where there is little connection with the outside world.
The Order of Malta Lebanon addresses this
inadequacy by bringing together disabled people from institutional settings and
volunteers to spend a week together at its center in Chabrouh for a camp. Each
disabled “guest” is paired with a volunteer for complete care and
attention.
One of the aims of the Order of Malta Lebanon camp
is to give guests “the love and respect they deserve and to give them back
their humanity,” Patrick
Jabre, project director for the Chabrouh camp, told Catholic News
Service. Jabre was among the first volunteers when the organization hosted its
first camp there in 1997.
Depiro said volunteering with the guests can
be challenging, for example, waking them to wash and get dressed for the day.
“But it’s simply about sharing love
with our brothers and sisters. After a while, you find the guest starts to look
after you,” he said.
The motto at Chabrouh is, “Our guests
are our lords, and we are here to serve them.”
So, if a guest signals to the volunteer a
desire not to participate in the group activity in progress, the pair might
instead play a quiet game, or just sit together and hold hands while taking in
the spectacular views from the camp. Chabrouh, which is near Faraya, a popular skiing destination,
is 6,200 feet above sea level.
Camp activities include hiking, olive
picking, theatre plays, “Olympic” games as well as an outing to the
beach.
Jack Straker, 25, a Catholic volunteer from
England, said his guest, Charbel, who is mute, “has ups and downs all day.”
Middle-aged Charbel sometimes makes sounds of approval or disapproval. That
morning, Charbel especially enjoyed washing up.
“Charbel likes to receive kisses. He
goes up to people and presents his cheek,” Straker added.
“To see the face of God in the face of
the guest helps to renew a lot of people’s faith,” Straker said, referring
to the Chabrouh camp experience as a “silent evangelization.”
Each day begins and ends with a group prayer.
Mass is celebrated most days, and confession and the anointing of the sick are
available.
Melkite Father Romanos Bou Assi, director of the center, said the
daily schedule “is always engulfed in the grace of the Lord.”
Although the volunteers come from different
paths and an active Christian spiritual life is not a prerequisite, the camp
experience encourages them to “think deeply about the meaning of their
lives,” Father Bou Assi told CNS. Such reflection, while working closely
with the disabled, the priest explained, also can help the volunteers to
understand “the things that sometimes cripple us in life” and the
importance of having a relationship with God.
Chabrouh underwent an extensive renovation
and expansion, whereby two buildings were joined and a new building added in
time for the 2016 camps. Cardinal Bechara Rai, Maronite Catholic patriarch, will
consecrate the center Sept. 3.
This year’s schedule at Chabrouh included
Order of Malta volunteers from four European countries as well as from Lebanon for
18 separate weeklong camps, including two at Christmastime. In all, about 650
volunteers and 500 guests — 15-20 percent of whom are Muslim — will
participate. The organization also hopes to receive delegations from North and
South and America for future camps.
After each camp, volunteers with the Order
of Malta Lebanon visit the former guests where they reside.
The order also sponsors a course for college
students, who spend 10 months in Lebanon learning about the region, faith and
coexistence, while working daily with the disabled in institutions across the
country.
Marwan
Sehnaoui,
president of the Order of Malta Lebanon, fondly refers to the Chabrouh camp as “a
little family” and a “house to learn how to love.”
“When you look around you and see the
state of the world, you understand that something is missing,” Sehnaoui
told CNS, citing murder, suicide and bloodshed rampant in the world today.
“So we decided that the spirituality of this house is to teach how to
love. Because a world without love cannot work.”
Sehnaoui stressed that the experience of the
camp instills in volunteers a hope that “together, they can join hands for
a better world through loving the disabled.” At the same time, the guest
also discovers a capacity to love.
“Christ resides in these suffering people,
and Christ, through these disabled people, is an instrument of peace and
coexistence,” Sehnaoui said, adding that in Lebanon, “all this is
being done on a holy land.”