Life on a platter

by Guest Contributor

Marisol Rojas, Columban Mission Centre Coordinator and Co-worker in Peru, shares details of a workshop she and Fr. Erl Tabaco organised, centred on the Columban Mission priority to care for Migrants. She describes how the workshop has served as a place of refuge and support for migrant mothers and children.

Columban Fr. Erl Dylan Tabaco and Columban Co-worker Marisol Rojas (kneeling) with Venezuelan migrants and Peruvian internal migrants during the pastry workshop held at the Columban Centre for Missionary Studies
Columban Fr. Erl Dylan Tabaco and Columban Co-worker Marisol Rojas (kneeling) with Venezuelan migrants and Peruvian internal migrants during the pastry workshop

Among the seventeen women who had come to live in the city of Lima, Peru, several were migrants from Ecuador, while others had arrived from Venezuela. Some were Peruvians who had travelled from remote towns or villages to the capital city in search of a better life for themselves and their families. And one was a Peruvian who, after spending eight years in Mexico, now felt like a foreigner back in her home country.

Almost all of them felt overwhelmed by the frantic pace of city life, and though they were surrounded by over eleven million people, frequently felt isolated and lonely without the support of their extended family, neighbours and friends,

Since more than one quarter of the people of Lima live in poverty, it is a major challenge for new arrivals to find suitable accommodation and regular employment. Besides, many of those seventeen women struggled to find work due to their low level of formal education, or were unable to take on certain kinds of jobs due to family commitments.

They came together, therefore, at the Columban Mission Centre in Lima to attend a series of ten workshops on making pastries, in the hope of equipping themselves to start a small business in their own home, which would enable them to provide additional financial support for their families.

However, the pastry-making workshops were intended not just to enable those seventeen women to support their families, but also to grow as persons in their new surroundings.” Mrs. Marisol Rojas, the Coordinator of the Columban Mission Centre, emphasizes. Elaborating on this broader vision, she explains, “The sessions, which took place twice a week, were led by Elena, an experienced confectioner, so the participants learned the craft of pastry making and explored their own creativity by experimenting with new recipes. At the same time, they grew in trust and in friendship with one another. Over the course of ten weeks, they gradually found the courage to talk with one another about their personal struggles in this huge city, developed the ability to laugh about their mistakes around the oven, and discovered the confidence to share about their dreams for themselves and their families. Moreover, as they listened to one another, they affirmed each other’s courage and resilience. And the gratitude they felt for the ongoing nurturing of their skills and spirits frequently found expression in their spontaneous prayers at the beginning of each session.”

Reflecting on his experience of supporting Mrs. Marisol Rojas and accompanying another group of women who had participated in a similar workshop series at the Columban Mission Centre some months previously, Fr. Dylan Tabaco, a Columban missionary from the Philippines, said, “Creating and baking, learning and relating together enabled the women from various backgrounds to understand and respect each other. Since all of them had experienced the prejudice and pain of being an outsider, they understood the importance of stretching one’s mind and heart in order to go beyond superficial perceptions and come to know one another at a deeper level. The pastry-making workshops provided them with opportunities to make new friends, gave them confidence and skills to explore new ways to support their families; and deepened their faith in God who accompanies them through all the ups and downs of life.”

While none of the women who have participated in the pastry-making workshops envisage their future as ‘life on a platter,’ all of them have discovered how a platter of delicious pastries nurtures their taste buds, their spirits and their dreams.

This ministry features in the Society's Annual Report 2025
Top