“Acompañamiento”
As I read Global Ministries vision
and mission statement, I identified deeply with the words chosen to describe
the core values of our ministry as an organization. Some of these same words have been chosen to
describe the values of the Shalom Center of the Pentecostal Church of
Chile. The word in Spanish “acompañamiento”
and with the definition “Mutuality - walking
in hope with others in God’s mission,” made me think of Carolina Fernández, my
former Sunday School student from Paraguay who is now coordinating a project
whereby young people are taught to make and play classical musical instruments
(violins, cellos, and flutes) from garbage.
Her life is a living example of “acompañamiento.” She came spend new year´s eve with me this
past week (at our traditional retreat laying on the look out over the waterfall at
the Shalom Center where we watch the “natural
fireworks” of shooting stars and moonrise) and I asked her to share with me, with Global
Ministries, and the readers of my blog, her vision and calling of “acompañamiento.” This is what she answered.
“At camp we have a favorite dance
called the Wee Waltz. I don´t know where
it is from, exactly, but I guess from some European country. Whenever I think of my calling to walk along
side others, I think of this dance that I was taught at the Jack Norment Camp
in Paraguay when I was a young child. I
have used the same dance to teach the young musicians in our Landfillharmonic
program about “acompañamiento.”
“At the beginning of the dance, we
greet each other face to face. So also
begin our relationships. We stretch out
from our own space and hold hands. When the
music starts, we must adjust our rhythm to that of the other person, and we are
aware that we are also coordinating with a whole community dancing around us. Sometimes we lead our partner, and sometimes
we follow. We struggle to adjust our
individual rhythm to that of our partner as well as the whole community. At one point in the dance, we move into our
partner’s space and dance from his or her place, but we are still ourselves and
we have shared our own space, too. We
respect each other’s space, but we also connect holding hands. We are anxious and nervous, trying not to
step on each other, miss a beat or forget the pattern. We laugh feeling a little silly. But everyone else laughs too. Everyone makes mistakes and it is
ok. We are vulnerable in our clumsy
attempts toward gracefulness, reminding each other to not count “one, two,
three” out loud.
“In another part of the dance, we
change partners. We must let go and
adjust again, learning to be flexible and the pattern comes more easily. We change partners with more and more ease,
until we return to our original partner and discover we have both learned. We dance better because we have been with
others, and we have each grown in our individuality as well as flexibility. We celebrate our growing capacity, we stumble
less, we are less tense and begin to enjoy the flow of the dance.
“In “acompañamiento” there is a
strong physical and spiritual sensation of being in the presence of another
person. To walk along side is not only
an emotional or intellectual exercise. “Acompañamiento”
is the experience of being formed and transformed by dancing with another
person, within the circle of a community, to then take the beauty and grace of
that dance to all the other spaces and times where we are called to be present. “Acompañamiento” is the way we let others
know they do not dance alone and we are reminded that we, too, receive the gift
of the presence of others.
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