Sunday, May 03, 2026

Sister Emmanuelle

At 63, she walked into Egypt's largest garbage dump. And stayed for two decades.
Cairo. 1971. The smell hit you a mile away.
The Moqattam slum. Where Egypt's capital dumped everything it threw away. And where 40,000 people lived.
They called them the zabaleen. "Garbage people."
They sorted Cairo's trash by hand. Seven million people's waste. Every day. Plastic. Glass. Bone. Metal. Food scraps for the pigs.
No schools. No hospitals. No running water. No electricity.
The city pretended they didn't exist.
Sister Emmanuelle was 63 years old. A French nun in a gray habit. She'd spent 40 years teaching literature to the daughters of diplomats.
Safe schools. Respectable work. Comfortable retirement waiting.
She walked away from all of it.
She asked one question: "Where are the poorest people in Egypt?"
Everyone pointed to the dump.
She went there. Asked if she could move in.
The zabaleen stared at her. Nobody had ever asked to live there.
They built her a concrete room. One bed. A cross. A Bible.
She moved in.
Here's what she found.
Girls giving birth at twelve. Again at thirteen. Again at fourteen. Dead by twenty-five.
Children dying from infections that cost pennies to cure.
Men slicing their hands on broken glass daily with no way to clean wounds.
Zero literacy. Nobody could sign their own name.
She didn't come to preach. Most were already Christian. She didn't come to convert.
She came to stay.
She started teaching children to read. Writing letters for mothers. Bandaging wounds.
Then she went bigger.
She realized something. These people weren't poor because they were lazy. They were trapped. The system paid them nothing. Society treated them as invisible.
So she started asking for money.
Letters to France. To Europe. To wealthy Egyptians.
She became relentless.
By 1980, she'd raised enough to build.
First: a primary school. Free. For any zabaleen child.
Then: a clinic. Nurses. Vaccines. Basic medicine.
Then: a women's center. Literacy. Skills training. Hope.
Then something brilliant: She found an engineer. Built a composting plant. Turned mountains of pig manure into fertilizer. Sold it to farms.
The zabaleen had income.
She also handed out birth control. To girls as young as twelve.
The Vatican was furious.
She didn't blink.
"I am with the poor," she said. "I will do what the poor need."
She lived in that slum for twenty years. Through Egyptian summers. Through disease outbreaks. Through political chaos.
No running water. No electricity. A bucket for a toilet.
She aged there. Hair white. Face weathered. Same gray habit for years.
The zabaleen called her Om Emmanuelle. "Mother Emmanuelle."
She wrote books about them. The books sold in France. She became famous accidentally.
By the late 1980s, she was a household name. On national TV. Meeting presidents.
She used every second of fame to raise money.
In 1993, at age 84, her religious order forced her home.
She'd been in Egypt for 22 years. In the slum for twenty.
She was exhausted.
But she didn't stop.
She spent her last fifteen years fundraising. TV. Radio. Lectures. Books.
Raised millions. Expanded to eight countries. Lebanon. Sudan. Burkina Faso. Philippines.
Lived simply in a French retirement home. Owned nothing. Sent every euro to the projects.
She died in her sleep on October 20, 2008.
Twenty-seven days before her 100th birthday.
Egypt mourned harder than France.
The zabaleen held a memorial. Hundreds came. Former garbage pickers now doctors, teachers, nurses.
Their children living completely different lives.
Because of her.
The schools still stand. The clinics. The women's center. The composting plant.
Here's what haunts me about this story.
She started at 63.
Most people retire at 63.
She spent forty years teaching rich kids. Then walked into a garbage dump and spent the next twenty years teaching the forgotten.
Then fifteen more raising money for them.
She wasn't trained in social work. Wasn't a doctor. Wasn't young.
She was a 63-year-old teacher who decided the second half of her life would matter more than the first.
She found the most invisible people in Cairo and refused to look away.
Ate with them. Slept among them. Washed their wounds. Learned their names.
Didn't try to convert them. Said her job was to love, not preach.
She lived 99 years.
Spent the last 37 serving people nobody wanted to see.
Sister Emmanuelle. French nun. Lived in a garbage slum until she was 84. Died at 99.
Her crime? Noticing people everyone else ignored.
Her legacy? Thousands of children who grew up able to read. To work. To dream.
All because one woman walked into a dump at 63.
And refused to leave

The Way to the Father

May 3, 2026
Fifth Sunday of Easter (Year A)
Readings for Today

NateBergin, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Video

“Where I am going you know the way.” Thomas said to him, “Master, we do not know where you are going; how can we know the way?” Jesus said to him, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” John 14:4–6

In addition to His parables and moral teachings, Jesus revealed to His disciples deep mysteries in a direct way that they did not immediately comprehend, especially when He spoke to the Twelve in intimate settings, such as the Last Supper, the context for today’s Gospel. In this discourse, Jesus explains, in veiled form, that He will soon ascend into Heaven where He will prepare a place for His followers. He explains that because they know Him, they know the way to where He is going—the way to the Father—because He Himself is that Way. As Jesus spoke these mysterious truths, we can imagine the Twelve listening attentively, yet with confusion.

Everything Jesus taught was true. His words, recorded in the Gospels, reveal to us the deepest divine mysteries. Within the Scriptures, we find all we need to know to attain perfect holiness and the eternal life of Heaven. Yet we cannot quickly digest Jesus’ words as we might an intriguing novel or history book. There are many layers of depth to what He says, and we can only understand those layers through prayer.

As the conversation continued, “Philip said to him, ‘Master, show us the Father, and that will be enough for us.’ Jesus said to him, ‘Have I been with you for so long a time and you still do not know me, Philip? Whoever has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, ‘Show us the Father’?’” (John 14:8–9).

Jesus’ response likely surprised Philip and the other disciples because they did not understand what He was saying. Their intention was good—they wanted to understand—but Jesus’ words were more than they could comprehend at that moment. Despite this, Jesus gently rebuked Philip as a way of drawing him deeper into the mystery He was revealing.

God often treats us the same way. There are many things that we do not understand. Why do innocent people suffer? Why doesn’t God heal my loved one in answer to my prayers? Why do my children no longer practice the faith? What am I supposed to do with my life?

Just as Philip struggled to understand Jesus’ words, we, too, face moments of confusion when God’s ways seem beyond our grasp. God’s answer to life’s most challenging questions is rarely straightforward or immediate. Why? Because such an approach can never fully satisfy the depth of our hearts. Instead, God reveals a kernel of truth to us and then invites us to ponder it, revealing the divine mystery we seek to understand little by little, to the degree we are open.

The answers we seek come only as we conform our wills to God’s, patiently opening ourselves to His Wisdom. Divine mysteries can only be understood through prayer and deep attentiveness to the truths in God’s mind. Jesus is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Only by uniting ourselves to Him in prayer will we discover the path we must walk, the truth we need to hear, and the life we are called to live.

Reflect today on anything you struggle to understand. See yourself as one of the Twelve, listening to Jesus speak, but failing to comprehend. Do not be discouraged; instead, allow the fullness of Jesus’ divine Truth to sink in gradually. Spend time in prayer, read the Gospels, be open, and listen from the depths of your heart. Seek out His gentle voice and know that He is your Way, Truth, and Life. Let Him lead you and reveal to you the mysteries of His divine Wisdom so that you, too, know the way to the Father in Heaven.

Most glorious Lord, everything You have revealed to us is pure truth, yet my mind is often incapable of fully comprehending Your Wisdom. Draw me into the many mysteries You wish to reveal, and teach me to pray so that I will more fully comprehend the way to You and to Your Father in Heaven. Jesus, I trust in You.

Saturday, May 02, 2026

Praying in Jesus’ Name

May 2, 2026
Memorial of Saint Athanasius, Bishop and Doctor of the Church
Readings for Today
Saturday of the Fourth Week of Easter


The Holy Trinity, by Giovanni Maria Conti della Camera

Video

“Amen, amen, I say to you, whoever believes in me will do the works that I do, and will do greater ones than these, because I am going to the Father. And whatever you ask in my name, I will do, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If you ask anything of me in my name, I will do it.” John 14:12–14

Have you ever prayed repeatedly for something, only to feel your prayer was unanswered? In today’s Gospel, Jesus promises that if we ask anything in His name, He will do it. How do we reconcile unanswered prayers with Jesus’ promise?

To pray in Jesus’ name is not a formula that guarantees instant results, as if prayers were magical. Saying “In Jesus’ Name, Amen” with confidence at the end of a prayer does not compel God to grant our requests. Faith is not about convincing ourselves that God will fulfill our desires but about placing our trust in His divine will. To understand Jesus’ promise, “Whatever you ask in my name, I will do” (John 14:13), we must first recognize His perfect unity with the Father. Jesus’ words and works flow entirely from this union, and He invites us to share in this relationship by aligning our will with His and the Father’s will.

In John’s Gospel, Jesus began to address His unity with the Father after curing a crippled man on the Sabbath. When the Pharisees questioned Him about it, Jesus responded, “My Father is at work until now, so I am at work” (John 5:17). This infuriated the Jews, who tried to kill Him because He “called God his own father, making himself equal to God” (John 5:18). From that point on, Jesus became increasingly clear about His divine identity and union with the Father, emphasizing that He was sent by the Father, that He and the Father are one, and that everything He spoke and did originated from this unity. When Jesus cured someone, it was because it was His Father’s will. If He didn’t cure someone, it wasn’t because He lacked divine ability; it was because, in the mystery of the Trinity’s perfect wisdom, it wasn’t the will of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. God’s will is always perfect and produces the greatest good, even when we do not understand that good.

The Son is distinct from the Father, yet there is a perfect communion of being, will, and action. Though we are not God, when Jesus says to His disciples—and to us—“If you ask anything of me in my name, I will do it,” He is inviting us to share in the Trinity’s will and action. We do not become divine as the Father and Son are, but we are invited into their union of will and action so that when we speak, it is Christ speaking in and through us. When we act, it is Jesus acting. And when Jesus speaks or acts in us, the Father also speaks and acts. It is in this way that Jesus promises to grant whatever we ask when we ask in His name.

Praying in Jesus’ name requires great humility and surrender. Accepting God’s will often requires great trust, especially when it involves suffering. For example, if it were God’s permissive will that someone you love endure a long and difficult illness, offering his or her suffering as a sacrificial act for God’s glory, would you willingly pray for such an outcome? Doing so would be difficult, but if our prayer is united with God’s will, we will see that such suffering, embraced sacrificially, can produce greater good than physical healing. Jesus’ own Passion is the ultimate example, as He submitted to the Father’s will, saying, “Not my will, but yours be done” (Luke 22:42).

Reflect today on how you pray and what you pray for. At the very least, our every prayer should end with: “May Your will be done.” An even deeper way to pray in Jesus’ name is to surrender our preferences for the outcome of a circumstance, seeking only God’s glory and the salvation of souls, and entrusting ourselves and our prayers to the will of God. That way, as we truly pray in Jesus’ name, we will be certain that those prayers will be answered.

Most Holy Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, You are One God in three divine Persons. Your unity is perfect, accomplishing all things in harmony. Please draw me into union with You so that all I do and all I pray flows from Your perfect will, giving You glory and bringing about the salvation of souls. Most Holy Trinity, I trust in You.

Friday, May 01, 2026

Pretended to Be Poor in the Philippines — What I Discovered Changed Everything

What would happen if someone gave up comfort, wealth, and status and chose to live as the poorest man in a Filipino Barangai for 30 days? Would he find desperation? Would he uncover corruption? Or would he discover something the modern world has quietly forgotten? This is the story of a man who pretended to be poor in the Philippines.

 And what he discovered changed everything. When Daniel Whitmore first arrived in Manila, no one noticed him, and that was exactly what he wanted. Officially, Daniel was a British tech entrepreneur known in quiet business circles for building and selling two startups before the age of 35. He had spoken at conferences in Singapore and London.

 He had investors in New York. He understood numbers, markets, and strategy. But there was one thing he did not understand, happiness. Daniel had read studies ranking countries by life satisfaction. He had seen how the Philippines, despite economic challenges, consistently appeared among the most optimistic nations in the world.

 He saw viral videos of jeepy drivers helping strangers, of communities rebuilding after typhoons, of overseas Filipino workers sending money home with pride instead of resentment. It confused him. How could people with so little smile so much? So he made a decision that even his closest friends did not understand. He would travel to the Philippines quietly.

 no assistance, no luxury hotels, no corporate meetings. He would live for 30 days on the average daily wage of a minimum worker. He would rent a small room in a modest baring outside Metro Manila. He would dress simply. He would not reveal his wealth or background to anyone. He told no one who he really was. Through a local church contact, Daniel found a small room in a Barangai in Queson City.

 The walls were thin plywood. The electric fan made more noise than wind. The bathroom was shared. Outside, tricycles buzzed like restless bees. Children played basketball barefoot on cracked concrete. Sarisari stores lined the narrow streets, their shelves filled with sachets of shampoo and instant coffee hanging like colorful flags.

 The first night, Daniel lay awake listening to distant karaoke echoing through the humid air. Someone was singing an old love song slightly off key, but passionately. He checked his phone. No signal inside the room. For the first time in years, he felt disconnected. The next morning, he met Mang Leito, the tricycle driver who lived next door.

Mangito was in his late 50s, skin weathered by sun, smile wide and effortless. He introduced himself with a firm handshake and immediately invited Daniel to join him for coffee. Not at a cafe, at the Sarisari store, where they poured hot water into plastic cups and stirred in instant coffee. Daniel hesitated.

 Back home, meetings happened in glass offices with filtered air. Here, conversations happened beside hanging laundry and barking dogs, but he nodded. Over coffee, Mangalito spoke about his three children. One worked in Dubai as an OFW. One was studying nursing, the youngest still in high school. He spoke of sacrifices, yes, but not bitterness. He laughed easily.

 He teased Daniel about his awkward Tagalog. He refused to let Daniel pay for the coffee. “You are new here,” he said. “You are family now, family.” Daniel had investors. He had business partners. He had followers on LinkedIn, but he could not remember the last time someone called him family. Days passed.

 Daniel searched for temporary work, just as he had promised himself he would. He helped unload vegetables at a wet market. He carried sacks of rice for a small store owner. He earned small amounts, barely enough for meals and rent. He learned quickly that budgeting in the Barangai required creativity.

 Meals were simple, rice, eggs, sometimes dried fish. Yet every evening, neighbors gathered outside. Plastic chairs appeared from nowhere. Someone always brought extra food. Someone always shared. One night, heavy rain flooded part of the street. Water seeped into several homes. Without discussion, men and women formed a line, passing sandbags handto hand.

 Teenagers lifted furniture to higher ground. Someone brought hot lug for everyone. Daniel watched in disbelief. There was no formal organization, no government truck, no payment, just people helping people. Later, soaked and exhausted, he asked Mangito why everyone works so hard for each other. Mangito shrugged. Because tomorrow it might be my house.

That answer stayed with Daniel. In his old world, help often came with contracts, expectations, publicity. Here, help came quietly. As the days turned into weeks, Daniel began noticing something deeper. Poverty was real. Struggles were real. Some families skipped meals. Some worried constantly about hospital bills.

 But even in hardship, there was dignity. There was humor. There was Bayanihan, the old Filipino spirit of communal unity, where neighbors carry each other’s burdens the way they once carried entire houses on bamboo poles. Daniel had read about Bayanihan before coming. But reading about it in articles was different from standing in muddy water at midnight, shoulder-to-shoulder with strangers who treated him like a brother.

 One afternoon, he met Ailing Rosa, an elderly woman who ran a tiny caranderia. She worked from dawn until late evening, serving affordable meals to workers. Daniel often ate there, counting coins carefully. One day, when he realized he was short by a few pesos, embarrassment washed over him. He apologized, explaining he would pay the balance tomorrow.

 Aling Rosa waved her hand dismissively. “Just eat,” she said softly. “No one should be hungry.” Daniel insisted, but she smiled firmly. “When you have more, you give more. That is life.” That night, Daniel sat in his small room, staring at the ceiling as the electric fan rattled above him. In London, he once debated equity structures worth millions.

 Yet here, a woman who earned far less than he ever had was teaching him about generosity without even trying. Something inside him began to shift. He started asking himself a question he had never considered before. What if wealth was not what he thought it was? But the real turning point had not yet come. Because in the final week of his experiment, Daniel would face a moment that would test whether he was truly just observing or whether he was ready to become part of the story.

 And what happened next would force him to reveal the one secret he had carefully hidden since the day he arrived. The secret Daniel had carried since the day he arrived was simple, but heavy. He was not the struggling foreigner everyone believed him to be. He was a man with more money in his bank account than most families in the Barangai would see in a lifetime.

 And yet for 23 days he had lived as if he had nothing. What he did not expect was that pretending would slowly stop feeling like pretending. It happened on a Tuesday afternoon under a sky thick with heat. Daniel had just finished helping unload sacks of rice at the small store near the corner when a commotion broke out across the narrow street.

 Ailing Rosa, the elderly woman who ran the caranderia had collapsed. For a moment everything froze. Then just as Daniel had seen during the flood, the barangai moved as one. Someone ran to call a tricycle. Someone fanned her with a cardboard box. A young nursing student checked her pulse. Mangito shouted instructions calmly but firmly.

 Within minutes, they were rushing her to the nearest public hospital. Daniel went with them. The hospital corridor was crowded, fluorescent lights flickering softly above worn benches. Families waited patiently, holding envelopes of documents and plastic bags of food. Daniel watched as Mangito quietly spoke to the nurse about admission fees.

 There was hesitation. Ailing Rosa needed tests. She needed medication. The cost, though not enormous by global standards, was far beyond what she had saved. Daniel saw the unspoken worry pass across Mangito’s face. Outside, the neighbors began pooling money. Small bills, loose coins. Someone handed over a weak savings.

 Someone else promised to skip a payment and contribute later. No one complained. Daniel felt something tighten in his chest. Back home, he had signed investment deals larger than this entire hospital wing’s annual budget. He had wired money across continents with a single tap on his phone. And yet, here he stood, pretending to check his nearly empty wallet while watching people who had so little give everything they could.

 This was the moment he had feared. If he revealed himself, would it break the trust they had given him? Would it feel like betrayal or worse, like charity from above instead of love from within? He stepped outside into the humid evening air and sat alone on a concrete step. Children were still playing in the distance, unaware of the tension inside the hospital.

 The world continued as it always did. He remembered his first night in the Barangai, the karaoke, the laughter, the word family. Dot family does not stand aside. Daniel walked back inside. He approached Mangito quietly and asked how much was still needed. Mangito hesitated before answering, embarrassed. The amount was modest by Daniel’s standards.

Life-changing by theirs. Daniel took a deep breath. “There is something I need to tell you,” he said. In a small corner of the hospital corridor, beneath a buzzing light, Daniel told Mangito the truth. He explained who he was, why he came, what he had been searching for. He showed proof on his phone, photos, articles, documents. He expected anger.

He expected distance. Instead, Mangito listened silently. When Daniel finished, there was a long pause. Then Mangito asked only one question. During these weeks, were you real with us? Daniel felt his throat tighten. Yes. Mangito studied him carefully, then nodded. Then that is what matters. No dramatic speech, no applause, just acceptance.

Daniel paid for Ailing Rose’s treatment that night. Not as a grand gesture, not in front of cameras. Quietly, privately. But something unexpected happened in the days that followed. The Barangai did not treat him differently. They still teased his Tagalog. They still invited him to plastic chair gatherings.

 Children still knocked on his door asking if he wanted to watch their basketball game. Ailing Rosa recovering slowly, insisted he continue eating at her caranderia. This time refusing to let him pay at all. “You helped me,” she said. “Now let me help you.” Daniel realized something profound. His money had solved a problem, but it had not created the bond. The bond had already existed.

 It was built on shared meals, shared floods, shared laughter. Wealth here was measured differently. On his final evening in the Barangai, the neighbors organized a small despadita. There were simple dishes, pancet, rice, grilled fish, homemade desserts. Someone borrowed speakers. Karaoke filled the air again.

 Daniel looked around at faces illuminated by a single hanging bulb. faces lined by hard work, faces quick to smile. He had come searching for the secret behind Filipino joy. He thought perhaps it was cultural optimism or religious faith or resilience shaped by history. And yes, those things were real. The Philippines had endured colonization, wars, natural disasters and economic struggles.

 Yet through it all, something endured stronger than circumstance. Connection. Not the digital kind he had mastered in his career. Not the transactional networks of business cards and investor calls, but human connection rooted in Bayani in shared responsibility. In the quiet understanding that no one rises alone. On his last walk through the narrow street, Daniel noticed something he had missed before. The houses were small.

Yes, the paint chipped, the sidewalks uneven, but the doors were open. People moved freely in and out of each other’s homes. In the world he came from, security systems grew more advanced each year. Doors became heavier. Walls grew higher. Here, doors stayed open. The next morning, Daniel left before sunrise.

 Mangledo drove him to the airport. They spoke little, both understanding that some goodbyes do not need many words. At the departure gate, Daniel checked his phone. Messages from investors, emails about expansion plans, opportunities waiting. But for the first time in years, he did not feel urgency. He had gone to the Philippines pretending to be poor, expecting to uncover hardship.

 Instead, he discovered a different definition of richness. He discovered that generosity is not about surplus, but about heart. That dignity does not depend on income. That happiness can survive even where comfort does not. Months later, Daniel returned not to observe, not to experiment, but to build. He partnered with local leaders to create small community-driven projects designed with the Barangai, not for it.

 Because he had learned that real change is not imposed, it is shared. And whenever people now ask him what changed his life, he does not mention profits or exits or global markets. He talks about a humid night in a crowded hospital corridor. He talks about a tricycle driver who asked one honest question. He talks about a barangai that showed him that sometimes the richest place on earth is not where people have the most, but where they give the most.

 If this story moved you, share your thoughts in the comments below. Have you ever discovered something powerful in an unexpected place? Don’t forget to subscribe for more untold Filipino stories and stay tuned for the next journey into the heart of the Philippines.

https://mongcredit.com/pretended-to-be-poor-in-the-philippines-what-i-discovered-changed-everything-ellie/?fbclid=IwY2xjawRhILRleHRuA2FlbQIxMABicmlkETBCVVRXaDVwenZIeTlPVkV6c3J0YwZhcHBfaWQQMjIyMDM5MTc4ODIwMDg5MgABHn_nMYIRg82hc6SIzVjcZVRhZdL5AOn34h_p1WHLptdubIsDeqcZ7LNNdFyG_aem_rH_YHQNiiykFN6hyAlevfA