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Friday, April 22, 2011

Springtime in Guatemala, Fr. Paul Aumen

"Violence must be told and retold so that no one will ever forget how horrible it is and how little is accomplished by it.  There must be a better way for all people to live together.  As India's Ghandi so truthfully said, 'There is room on this earth for each one of us.'"
This book was a Christmas gift from my aunt and uncle - and a beautiful gift it was!  I saved it for a Lenten read, which turned into a Holy Week read when Mansfield Park took longer than expected.

Springtime in Guatemala is a memoir of sorts, written by Fr. Paul Aumen, a missionary of the Precious Blood.  He served for 20 years in Chilean missions, then moved on to serve an additional 18 years in Guatemalan missions.  The book is a collection of stories and experiences, about several parishes, the Guatemalan people, and Guatemala's 36-year civil war and genocide.  It's not an overly complex book, and is an (intellectually) easy and quick read.  However, the memoir is full of pain.  Through Fr. Aumen's stories, we see how, through pain, suffering, and death - there is beauty and truth and life.

As I read, I could picture so many of his experiences.  The magnificence of climbing a volcano.  The absolute poverty and violence that  has caused (and causes) so many good, innocent people to suffer.  How alive Antigua is during Cuaresma and Semana Santa.  Words cannot express how beautiful this book was for me, in its heart-wrenching, simple truth.

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