Home » Projects » EXISTENCE AID » Brazil: Mass stipends for priests and support for religious sisters in the Amazonian diocese of Humaitá

Brazil: Mass stipends for priests and support for religious sisters in the Amazonian diocese of Humaitá

The diocese of Humaità is situated in northwest Brazil, in the state of Amazonas. It covers a vast area of over 53,000 square miles (almost 136,000 km²) – larger than Greece, but sparsely populated with only 135,000 inhabitants. Around 55,000 of these people are concentrated in the city of Humaità itself, while the rest for the most part live in small settlements bordering the rivers and lakes of the Amazon region.

On the one hand there are many people who are migrating to the cities and towns, where above all the suburban townships are swollen with an influx of people from rural areas, and also people from other countries of Latin America, such as Haiti and Venezuela. This presents huge challenges for the pastoral mission of the Church, and numerous social problems. At the same time, however, there are still many Catholics left behind in the small jungle settlements on the riverbanks and lake shores. They are widely known as „Ribeirinhos“, or „shore dwellers“.

These Ribeirinhos continue to live their traditional lifestyle, which is becoming more and more difficult, however. For the contact with the modern world is causing them to lose the sense of their cultural identity, while at the same time they are confronted with other problems, such as the logging of the rainforest and land grabs by large landowners. On top of this, the pandemic has not only seen many people in the Amazon region fall sick and even die, but has also brought still greater poverty. For with tourism drying up, they have no one to whom to sell their produce – for example their traditional handmade artefacts – and have consequently lost a major source of income. As a result their already precarious situation has been still further undermined by the pandemic.

The Church too has been affected by the increasing poverty. Not only are there more people needing help in their material and spiritual needs, but at the same time a major source of income in the form of the Sunday collection has likewise dried up. The priests, religious and deacons working in the diocese urgently need our help. Their bishop has appealed to us. „This request is an urgent cry for help“, he writes, „since our current income is not enough to support the priests, religious and deacons working in the diocese.“

And so we are proposing to step in, with a contribution of 11,460 Euros for the 17 religious sisters and the two permanent deacons working in the diocese and with Mass stipends for the four priests, and the bishop himself, to a value of 8275 Euros. This help will benefit not only the immediate recipients, but will be an important contribution to helping them to support the people whom they have been sent to serve, especially at this critical time.

Don't miss the latest updates!

Pope is travelling to Lebanon to “heal wounds” and “work for peace”

Lebanon is still recovering from years of conflict and economic…

Nigerian Bishops: “Lasting peace cannot be achieved through silence or delay”

Catholic Bishops of Nigeria warn of escalating violence and call…

New mass abduction of schoolgirls in northern Nigeria

The attack represents “a major blow to the education of…

Four Christians killed, villages razed in fresh attack in Mozambique

An estimated 128,000 people have had to flee the affected…

Nigeria: Priest abducted in the Archdiocese of Kaduna

The west African nation has been classified as suffering from…

Red Week 2025: A global cry for religious freedom

Over half a million people are expected to take part…

ACN expresses solidarity with Cuba after the devastating passage of the hurricane

The organisation Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) expresses…

Burkina Faso: Two dioceses hit by new wave of attacks

The international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need…

Amid a fragile respite, an urgent plea from Gaza before Christmas

The Catholic parish in Gaza prepares for Advent during an unstable ceasefire. From the heart of the devastated city, Fr Gabriel Romanelli of the Holy Family parish describes a disastrous...

Pope is travelling to Lebanon to “heal wounds” and “work for peace”

Lebanon is still recovering from years of conflict and economic turmoil. The Pope’s visit is a sign that the local Church is not forgotten, and highlights the country’s unique role...

Cardinal Kurt Koch appointed president of ACN – “We are grateful to Pope Leo,” says executive president Regina Lynch

Cardinal Koch has been a friend of ACN for many years and brings with him a wealth of experience in the field of ecumenical and inter-religious dialogue. The pontifical foundation...