His Mission, Our Mission

25 Years of Witnessing to the Word in Thailand 207 “I came to Laos for home leave in December last year and planned to stay at home for three months while also waiting for a working visa in Thailand,” he says. “And then everything changed. The virus broke out and the borders were closed.” Toub, who is the SVD’s first priest to come from Laos, had a little money with him, from the time of his ordination in Australia last year and shared it with a local widow by building a new shelter for her to sleep in after her husband passed away. “The poor helps the poorest,” he says. “I also conducted retreats for the seminarians and the sisters here and I’ve been looking for donors to donate rice to the poor communities during the pandemic. “It keeps me busy and I feel rewarded.” Even though Laos has comparatively few cases of COVID-19, Toub says he has no idea when the borders will open or his working visa will arrive and so he continues to keep busy while he waits. “The virus itself is bad and no-one wants to be infected by it,” he says. “However, this has been a time for humans to reflect about the will of God. “Probably it is a time for people to stay closer to family and friends; it is a time for factories to produce less emissions; it is a time for nature to relax from human disturbance. “Above all, we have to acknowledge that God is good all the time and God has a perfect plan for humanity.”

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