Sr Hyunjung. “I feel part of their lives”

A Maryknoll sister reaches people with disabilities in East Timor’s remote communities.

At 52, Maryknoll Sister Hyunjung Kim is both youthful-looking and committed to religious life. Yet, in East Timor – a small nation on the island of Timor, north of Australia – people address Sister Hyunjung as a grandparent. “They call me Avo Malae,” she says. “Foreign Grandmother!”

A social worker by profession, Sister Hyunjung has served in community health in the mountainous region of Aileu since 2014. The Maryknoll Sisters were invited there by Bishop Carlos Belo of Dili in 1991, during the nation’s struggle for independence from Indonesia.

Finding few services in the poor, rugged countryside, Maryknoll Sisters Susan Gubbins and Dorothy Mc-Gowan sized up the challenge and set up a health clinic. “We envisioned the far-flung villages and knew that we needed a community-based approach,” Sister Gubbins wrote later.

They trained local people as health promoters, known as “motivators,” in addition to building a centre clinic. “I benefit from the fruits of their work and mission,” Sister Hyunjung says. “I’m working in that clinic, which bears the name Uma Ita Nian, Our Home.”

The Uma Ita Nian clinic enlists a staff of 28 workers, including three government employees: a doctor, a midwife, and a pharmacist. Sister Hyunjung serves in various ministries through the clinic, which provides a wide range of services.

She works particularly closely with its Community-Based Rehabilitation (CBR) team. CBR, which originated with the World Health Organization, is “a strategy that aims to enhance the quality of life for people with disabilities and their families, and ensure their inclusion and participation in the community.”

“Home visits are part of the CBR program – explains Sister Hyunjung -. Two times a week, we visit people with disabilities in remote villages and offer them physical therapy, referrals, medical treatments, supplementary food, equipment, home adaptation aids, hygienic materials and counseling.”

“They live in isolated mountain areas with insufficient food, water or clothing and little or no access to medical care, education or employment opportunities,” the missionary continues. An essential part of the program is ongoing formation for the local people who work as motivators.

“Once a month, the CBR motivators come to the clinic for training. We have 18 motivators,” Sister Hyunjung says. “They help to identify potential CBR clients, facilitate services and communication between the clinic and the clients, and implement their training in the village where they are placed.”

Over the long, bumpy rides to remote villages, the clinic staff get to know one another better, exchanging food and stories. “I feel part of their lives,” the missionary says.

Sister Hyunjung’s mission of service to others started in her country of origin, South Korea. “[It] began … when I saw people’s hunger for hope, meaningful spirituality and a sense of human dignity,” she recalls -. I felt called to walk with them.”

She earned a degree in agricultural economics but afterward began helping survivors of human trafficking and sexual abuse at Magdalena House, located in a red-light district of Seoul. The home was a safe place for sex workers and other exploited women.

This experience, Sister Hyunjung says, motivated her to study a profession that would support people in need. She went back to school and graduated from Soongsil University with a bachelor’s degree in social work, then earned a master’s degree in social welfare from the Catholic University of Korea.

She returned to Magdalena House to work with its founder, Maryknoll Sister Jean Maloney. “I was inspired by her humble and joyful life-sharing with women who are survivors of violence such as sex abuse, domestic violence and human trafficking,” Sister Hyunjung says.

As Hyunjung met more Maryknoll sisters, she became interested in religious life  – and curious about overseas mission. “As a Maryknoll sister, I can share my life and gifts to help create hope with people, and search together for meaning,” she says. After completing the orientation program (novitiate) at the Sisters Centre in New York, Sister Hyunjung professed first vows in 2011. She professed final vows in 2016, while already in her assignment to East Timor.

According to Oxfam, three-quarters of East Timor’s people live in rural areas where they rely on subsistence farming. The small nation with 1.3 million inhabitants, also known as Timor-Leste, is one of the world’s poorest countries. Half of its children are undernourished and display stunted growth, states the United Nations Development Programme. As young Hyunjung had done in South Korea – furthering her studies to better serve people in need – the missionary earned an assistant nursing license in 2020 to use in East Timor.

“I went back with better knowledge of health care – she says -, knowledge that I can apply daily at work. That same year, our centre clinic served over 7,000 people from 12 villages and our mobile clinic served over 6,000 from nine remote villages.” True to her designation in the Tetum language as an honorary grandmother, Sister Hyunjung supports efforts to build a sense of family and community.

Visiting people in their homes, she says, fosters closeness. This can be challenging: “Although I like visiting and listening to their stories, often I felt heavy with worry and concern about where to find hope for them,” she says.

In her heart, Sister Hyunjung says, she knew God was there, present with those children and everyone in the room. “For these people,” she says, “family and home are a safe and nurturing place. (Mary Ellen Manz, M.M.)