Sr. Helen Palacay, Former Social Communication Head of FMIJ (courtesy of Sr. Helen Palacay)
By Rechilda Estores
Jun 8 2023
Sister Helen Palacay, a Filipina former social communication head of FMIJ in the Philippines, shares the importance of giving service of charity in the lives of people and discusses how Franciscan mission helps the society in strengthening people’s faith towards the Church.
Sr. Helen Palacay, a Filipina former social communication head of Franciscan Missionary Sisters of the Infant Jesus (FMIJ), in Quezon City, Philippines, has expressed the importance of charity and educational works of the Franciscan sisters by immersing with the people and helping the society.
“Our congregation is answering the needs just like what our Mother Foundress Barbara Micarelli did during her time,” she continued. “Trying to help others whether it is in emotional or psychological growth, academics, helping the needy, guiding the young, forming people in different forms of evangelization and so on.”
She recalled that the congregation in the country “started in 1982 and the congregation delegation in the Philippines was established in June 1998.”
Sr. Palacay said that the service of the Franciscan sisters is “by answering to the needs of the Church and the society with the high regard for the virtue of charity, doing everything in a Christocentric and Franciscan way, remembering that we are instruments of God’s love and compassion.”
In her 11 years of practice as a professed Franciscan sister, she also shared that the FMIJ “seeks to respond to the needs of the society in the mission of the educational and charitable sphere of the children, and evangelization through catechesis, pastoral care in parishes in collaboration with priests and lay people as well as with service to the sick, including within hospitals.”
She emphasized that the Franciscan congregation is participating in teaching young people.
“It should be noted that the FMIJ is currently engaged in a process of reorganization which has led to the closure of educational structures and still in progress of collaboration with dioceses or cooperatives of lay people entrusting some of our structures for a continuity of the educational mission.” Sr. Palacay said.