Project 3 – Claretian Mission Day 2025

This project will be implemented in Kingandu, a rural village located 650 km southwest of the capital, Kinshasa. The local population primarily relies on agriculture, fishing, livestock farming, and small-scale trade for their livelihood. The women of Kingandu, who are responsible for harvesting, face significant challenges in processing millet, maize, and cassava. They spend a great deal of time and energy on traditional milling methods for cereals and cassava. The amount to be milled can exceed 50 kilograms per day, requiring several hours of hard labor just to prepare a single meal, as fufu is the staple food for dinner.

This situation prevents women from taking better care of their families and engaging in other activities that could generate income for their self-sufficiency. Through this project grinding mill machines will be provided to the women. The objective of this project is to help them improve their techniques and strengthen their skills, reduce the physical effort required for this task, and ultimately enhance their living conditions.

Project 2 – Claretian Mission Day 2025

This project aims to help break the cycle of extreme poverty through education, awareness, and capacity-building, enabling
women to achieve sustainable livelihoods
and lead a dignified life.

Women in the Nazat region, like many in West Bengal, have limited access to education and, in many cases, lack alternative means to earn a living.

It is extremely difficult for women, especially those from
rural areas, to find paid employment since they often lack
qualifications and/or are the primary caregivers
responsible for household duties.

This project aims to empower 200 women in Nazat by
providing an adult literacy program and implementing
awareness initiatives to educate them about their rights
guaranteed by the Government of India.

Project 1 – Claretian Mission Day 2025

Santa María de Jesús is a community that preserves its native language and traditional clothing. In fact, its population is 99.5% Maya Kaqchikel. Guatemalan Indigenous women are considered transmitters of historical and cultural memory. Today, in Guatemala, it is primarily women who weave and wear traditional garments, crafted using the backstrap loom. The production of Maya textiles, alongside agriculture, is one of the main pillars of the economy in these communities and a crucial source of employment for women.

The women’s weaving group Aj Piecha from Santa María de Jesús actively defends their ancestral textile art against plagiarism, fashion trends, and the decline of traditional Maya clothing. This project aims to empower Guatemalan women and safeguard their identity and socio-economic well-being by providing materials for textile production, organizing classes, workshops, and
events that highlight their ancestral art, culture, and historical significance.

Claretian Mission Day – 2025

We celebrate the Claretian Mission Day every year to bring the universal dimension of the Claretian Mission to those whom we are working with. Also to highlight the Claretian way of working, we choose a different theme every year. For the year 2025, we propose to have the theme of ‘Women: Agents of Evangelization and Empowerment’. In this introductory letter, we wish to bring some highlights of this theme.

Throughout human history, women have sustained humanity in their hands. They have cared, taught, and resisted the silence imposed by the powerful. This world must also listen to their prophetic voice, recognize their work, and allow itself to be transformed by their vision – a vision capable of restoring hope to a humanity lost in the whirlwind of consumerism and indifference.

But it is not enough to trust in women’s abilities; we must also embrace a new form of masculinity. Men can free themselves from the roles imposed by history and society, moving toward a diversity that enriches and fully acknowledges the gifts of the Spirit. This is why we celebrate with hope this Claretian missionary day under the theme “Women: Agents of Evangelization and Empowerment.” In our missions, we gratefully recognize that women often sustain the evangelizing mission, even in the shadows. They are the guardians of the missionary spirit, the defenders of life, and the heralds of faith.

As in the Gospel, women must be protagonists – not as a concession granted by anyone, but as a recognition of their dignity. Mary, by saying “yes” to God, initiated the definitive plan of salvation. She sang of liberation in the Magnificat, surpassing the prophets of old, and sustained the first community with her hope. Elizabeth believed in God’s transformative power. Women stood by Jesus at Calvary and were the first to proclaim His Resurrection.

In a world marked by polarization that builds walls, our mission must seek ways to restore relationships: with God, with others, and with Creation. In this, we must allow ourselves to be transformed by the Spirit, which urges us to recognize the gifts we have received and can share without fear of leaving behind the differences imposed upon us. We must let go of the fears that trap us in frameworks unworthy of the richness and diversity of the Spirit and embrace a new humanity.

Today, as always, the Spirit cries out for a new world. This world cannot be built without women, nor without men who are willing to live in a spirit of conversion. Celebrating this day will be worthwhile if we have the courage to be shaken by the God who entrusted Mary with His life, if we allow the Heart of this strong woman to shape our lives and inspire us to transform the world from its roots.

We welcome all of you to prepare ourselves in a more enthusiastic way to celebrate the forthcoming Claretian Mission Day on 27th April 2025.

CLARETIAN MISSION DAYS

Clartian Mission Day
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Claretian Mission Day
Videos
Posters
Flyers

Claretian Mission Day
Videos
Posters
Flyers