Home » Projects » Help for the formation of 34 young Carmelite friars in India

Help for the formation of 34 young Carmelite friars in India

In Northeast India the Church is still relatively young. In 2016 in fact it celebrated just 120 years in this region, which is still one of the poorest and most inaccessible parts of India, plagued by poverty, unrest and social problems. It is an isolated and underdeveloped area.

Today around 2 million of the total population of 45 million in the region are Catholics. And whereas once it was European missionaries who brought the Gospel message here, today the Church in the region can boast a growing number of indigenous vocations.

 

Holy communion. India
Holy communion. India

 

The Carmelite Order is particularly rich in new vocations, and at the present time 34 young men are in various stages of their priestly formation. In fact there was great joy last year, when four Carmelite brothers – the first in Northeast India – were ordained to the priesthood. At the same time five young men were ordained to the diaconate and are now already looking forward to ordination as priests. The Carmelite Fathers first began their mission in the region in 2003 with a simple bamboo-clad house. But by now they have several monasteries in the seven federal states of Northeast India and are pursuing a fruitful apostolate in the region.

The Carmelite Order wants to be able to offer the best possible training to its young members. However, generally speaking the parents of these young men are very poor – just like the majority of the population in this part of the world. For the most part they are small peasant farmers or landless day labourers, living from hand to mouth and trying to support their children. Consequently, the Carmelites cannot expect any financial contribution from their families and so have to provide everything themselves – board and lodging, study costs, travel costs, medical care and even clothing for the seminarians, plus of course the salaries of the teaching staff. But costs are also rising, and so the Order is dependent on outside help to cover the cost of training the young brothers.

Don't miss the latest updates!

Rome to host official launch of Religious Freedom Report 2025

Religious and public leaders will be gathering on October 21…

Papal envoy carries solidarity to the Christians of war-torn Sudan

Archbishop Séamus Patrick Horgan, Apostolic Nuncio to South Sudan, has…

In the east of Burkina Faso, still many problems as term starts

While the security situation in Burkina Faso has improved slightly,…

From Angola to Vietnam, enthusiasm with “One million children praying the Rosary” campaign

ACN’s yearly campaign, added to the Holy Father’s appeal to…

Church clings to life amid chaos in Gaza

Aid to the Church in Need echoes Pope Leo XIV’s…

Children prepare to send “tidal wave of prayer” around the world

Responds to the ever-pressing yearning for peace and unity in…

Iraq: Ecumenical festival points to future for persecuted Church

Today, the very same communities will raise the Cross high…

List of News

Rome to host official launch of Religious Freedom Report 2025

Religious and public leaders will be gathering on October 21 at the Pontifical Patristic Institute Augustinianum in Rome for the worldwide presentation of the latest edition of the Report on...

Papal envoy carries solidarity to the Christians of war-torn Sudan

Archbishop Séamus Patrick Horgan, Apostolic Nuncio to South Sudan, has just completed a diplomatic mission through the region’s most badly affected by the current civil war in Sudan. Over several...

In the east of Burkina Faso, still many problems as term starts

While the security situation in Burkina Faso has improved slightly, some regions are still suffering from terrorism and misery. On the eve of the new school term, young people are...