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Fr. Alfred Puccinelli |
Fr. Puccinelli, right,
is associate pastor of the Newman center at the Pontifical
Catholic University of Parana, a
grueling six-hour trip from Sao Paolo, Brazil. He is also
involved in Marist vocation formation there, guiding 11 seminarians
and staying in touch with some 65 potential candidates. And
there’s more. He prefers to spend his free time in
a favela (slum) several blocks away helping a group of Franciscan
sisters.
Close to his
heart is the 20,000 Afro-Brazilian Catholics in and around
Urandi and Sebastiao Laranjeiras,
and outback areas in the northeast state of Bagia, where
he has also served. “I was in each parish two weeks
a month, but I spent more time in a pickup truck than in
church.”
“The people are poor and they struggle
to survive,” he describes. “Their faith is extremely
simple and fragile, due to the lack of priests.”
A native Californian, Fr. Puccinelli was ordained
in 1966. He was a teacher, high school principal, seminary
rector, nursing home chaplain, pastor and retreat master
before being asked to become a missionary. When he was asked
in 1988 by the General of the Society in Rome to consider
working in Brazil, Fr. Puccinelli had never considered missionary
service.
“This is another stage in my Marist life,” he
says. “It’s unexpectedly rewarding to be able
to bring Mary to the people of another country.”
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