“Every story has three sides. Yours, mine and the facts.”
Remembering Father Rene Fumoleau, a social activist and well known northern priest.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/rene-fumoleau-obituary-1.5238116
Blog
“Every story has three sides. Yours, mine and the facts.”
Remembering Father Rene Fumoleau, a social activist and well known northern priest.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/rene-fumoleau-obituary-1.5238116
My favorite Christmas story is from Father René Fumoleau, a Catholic priest in Lutselk’e, Northwest Territories (NWT), Canada. As a young man, Father Fumoleau was sent to a small Dene community in the NWT for his first assignment as priest for a local congregation there. One of the first things he decided he wanted to do was make the church more reflective of local Dene culture.
As part of this exercise he went to visit a local Dene artist. Fumoleau said to the painter, “I’d like to put a painting of the Nativity Scene into the church; but I’d like the painting to be done with references to Dene culture.”
The painter nodded and so Fumoleau went on: “I was thinking we could paint the Nativity Scene as if it took place up here. Maybe having Joseph and Mary–instead of going into Bethlehem– paint them coming into a Dene village maybe by dog team? And they went from door to door being turned away until they come to the Dene equivalent of the manger, a barn, the building where Jesus is born. What do you think?”
The painter nodded noncommittally.
So Fumoleau said, “Well it’s summer time now, it’s a long ways to go before Christmas. Think about it and I’ll come back and check out on you later.”
A few months later, in the autumn, Fumoleau went back to visit the painter.
“How’s the Nativity Scene going? Have you painted it?” The painter shook his head, and said, “No.”
Fumoleau said, “Well there’s still some time. I’ll check back later.”
A few weeks before Christmas, he visited the painter again.
He asked, “How’s it going? Have you made any progress in painting the Dene Nativity Scene?” The painter shook his head, and said, “No.” Fumoleau said, “You’re not going to paint one are you?” The painter said, “No.” Fumoleau sighed and asked, “Why not?” And the Dene painter answered, “Because I can’t paint it the way you ask Father. If Joseph and Mary came to a Dene village, the first door they knocked on would take them in.”
Shared by Sister Mabel St. Louis