Calling it a “sign of the times”, a Catholic diocese in Ireland has appointed two priests from Kerala to address a shortage and the growing age of its clerical population, adding another Indian dimension to Christianity in the West. The two priests included in the latest round of appointments announced by Bishop Fintan Monahan of Killaloe in southwest Ireland are Rev Francis Xavier Kochuveettil and Rev Rexon Chullickal, to be based in Shannon and Nenagh. Reports from Ireland said the two priests had been working in the diocese for several months. More priests from India are expected to be appointed soon, reflecting a reversal of the path trekked by Irish and otherWestern missionaries to India over the centuries.
As reported by Hindustan Times, The parish priest of Shannon, Father Tom Ryan remarked that “There are more (Indian priests) on the way. It is a sign of the times. This is history repeating itself but in reverse. When Ireland had an over-supply of priests in the 1950s, Irish priests traveled across the world and there is an over-supply of priests in India right now and they are helping out here.”
In churches in neighboring Britain too, Indian participation has been growing in recent years. The Vatican established a new eparchy or province for the Syro-Malabar community in 2016, with the ancient Ignatius Church in Preston, north England, as its cathedral. Holy Father Pope Francis appointed Kottayam-born Father Joseph Srampickal as the first bishop of the eparchy. Members of the Syro-Malabar community in Britain number nearly 40,000, most of Kerala origin. Services in the church in Preston are held in Malayalam.
Source: Hindustan Times