Offering helps Missionary take Church to the Streets

Eliad serves breakfast in the community with a young volunteer. (Photo: Courtesy of Eliad Dias dos Santos)
Eliad serves breakfast in the community with a young volunteer. (Photo: Courtesy of Eliad Dias dos Santos)

The Rev. Eliad Dias dos Santos served members of very poor and unwelcome communities for a decade in her home country of Brazil before becoming a United Methodist missionary in Rome, Italy.

After she entered missionary service, dos Santos traveled to Rome, Italy, to work with migrants coming into Italy from African countries, South America, Syria, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Often, they too end up in the streets.

“The difference in Italy from Brazil is that here in Rome, there are associations for the distribution of food. People have breakfast, lunch and dinner. In Rome there are now 12 associations that do this, but, only for food. There are no other services offered,” dos Santos noted.

The Federation of Evangelical Churches in Italy, of which the Methodist Church of Italy and the Waldensian Church, also affiliated with the Methodist Church, are members, received a grant from the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) to build on this project. The church dos Santos works with, called 20th of September Methodist Church, offered a breakfast project for six years, but the congregation only distributed food for the homeless on Sundays…in the church.

Your gifts on UMCOR Sunday helps support the foundation for the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) to share God’s love with communities everywhere.

An Easter meal brings together church and community in celebration. (Photo: Courtesy of Eliad Dias dos Santos) 
An Easter meal brings together church and community in celebration. (Photo: Courtesy of Eliad Dias dos Santos).

“When I arrived here, after I learned about the process for services in Rome, I asked to have a space outside the church to distribute the food, so we could talk to the people, look into their eyes, listen to their histories. We began to build relationships with the migrants we met.” And so, dos Santos began the long-term process of building a social service program that would answer the needs of the people seeking assistance.

“The idea is to create a place of service all day – people have food but they no place to stay, no space for work,” said dos Santos. “People stay in the parks, in the bus station. We needed a space for the people to stay together to learn things and to form a supportive community – learn Italian and apply for the documents they need in Italy. People often have to wait a year for documents and they cannot work without them.”

She got to know women who had turned to prostitution to feed themselves and their families, and the situations of their children, and other women who had been trafficked or were assaulted and left with no support. When she describes them as unwelcome, she means particularly unwelcome in the church.

“I think it is not possible to stay in the church building and create services for people in the streets,” dos Santos explained. “Normally, the church waits for these people to come to the church, but they do not come. And if they do, they are often not welcomed. They are not even invited into the church. So, I decided to serve the people in the streets.”

The children on the streets are of special concern to her. They may be used to make money for the family or trafficked to another place while their parents think they are working or being taught a trade as an apprentice. But instead, they enter the very worst of circumstances with no way out. Eliad also worked to overcome these situations, even if it meant breaking down a dangerous trafficking circle. She found teenagers but also children as young as six and eight years abused in this way.

“Some of these people come from generations of people who lived in the street,” she said. “These children were born in the street, they grow up in the street, they don’t go to school, and their parents and grandparents have done the same. They don’t have documents or ID.”

Today the church in Rome helps people with their documents, referring them to the correct office and checking to see what is missing. “And we have a space to teach them Italian, because Italian is not offered in many places in the world – it is used in Italy only and a small section of Switzerland. Sometimes violence erupts against immigrants who don’t speak Italian. I visit them in the hospitals and accompany them to social services.”

“I have worked with people who believe that Jesus continues to walk with his people and with the excluded. As Christians, we are the presence of God in these people’s lives, not only helping them materially, but fighting for a more just and safe world.”

excerpt from a story by Christie R. House, consultant writer and editor with Global Ministries and UMCOR.

One of six churchwide Special Sundays with offerings of The United Methodist Church, UMCOR Sunday calls United Methodists to share the goodness of life with those who hurt. Your gifts to UMCOR Sunday lay the foundation for the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) to share God’s love with communities everywhere. The special offering underwrites UMCOR’s “costs of doing business.” This helps UMCOR to keep the promise that 100 percent of any gift to a specific UMCOR project will go toward that project, not administrative costs.

When you give generously on UMCOR Sunday, you make a difference in the lives of people who hurt. Give now.

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