Village marketplace, Timor-Leste
The Timor Leste Story
Since 1999 the Christian Brothers have ministered to the “poorest of the poor” in East Timor. In 2021 however due to an ageing core of brothers, it was decided they should withdraw from the country and pass their ministry into new hands. The Christian Brothers settled on a Josephite organisation called Mary MacKillop Today to take over their ministries.
“One of the big things that came out, particularly in Timor, is that we lived in the village.
People knew you were there – so they trusted you.”
~ Br Frank Hennessy
~ Br Frank Hennessy
Education & Health
One of the Christian Brothers’ major projects was building kindergartens, known locally as “tekas” to improve the educational outcomes for the Timorese, many of whom lived in subsistence farming communities.
Br Frank Hennessy, a Victorian Christian Brother, oversaw the teka system.
Br Hennessy was the ministry leader in Timor Leste for five years up to 2021 before the ministry ended. He said ministering to the poor in East Timor was tough, often unrewarding, but necessary work.
“One of the big things that came out, particularly Timor, is that we lived in the village,” he said.
“When babies were born, or people died, you had an educational function, or a health visit from the clinic, people knew you were there – so they trusted you.”
Br Hennessy said a shared faith united the people, even with stark cultural differences.
Looking forward
The Edmund Rice Foundation continues to provide financial support to the people in Timor-Leste and to the on-going programs which the Christian Brothers first introduced in 1999.
“The joy of it is that the Josephite Sisters picked up three of our programs - preschools, women’s group and growing vanilla,” reports Br Frank Hennessy, who was ministry leader in Timor Leste for the last five years prior to the Christian Brothers ministry ending.
Mary MacKillop Today is working with the poorest communities in Timor Leste in the areas of teacher training, parent training and health literacy.
Timor-Leste is slowly emerging from fragility and rebuilding itself to become a strong and stable nation.
Innovation in Timor-Leste
One of the big innovations Br Frank Hennessy was involved in was the introduction of vanilla crops for the farmers.
With a worldwide shortage of vanilla, Timorese farmers received $57/kg, whereas coffee, which was what the farmers usually grew, was sold for 32 cents/kg.
Vanilla only produces a crop every four years, so the program helped the farmers produce a four-year crop of vanilla while continuing their annual coffee crop – and netting the farmers an extra $1000 every four years.
Cristo Rei, Dili, Timor Leste