The least of these brothers
Taiwan Panorama editor-in-chief Ivan Chen, who presided over the forum, noted that the magazine carried its first report related to Catholicism back in the 1970s: a story on how the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary (CICM) had provided funding to found the Happy Children’s Center. In the 1980s there was a story on the Kuangchi Program Service, and in the 1990s the magazine documented events such as the naming of Paul Shan Kuo-hsi as only the fifth ethnic Chinese Catholic cardinal in the world. A special photo essay in 1993 titled “Men for All Seasons” recorded the faces of foreign priests in Taiwan. Reports and images such as these have left indelible impressions and memories among Taiwan’s people.
The Most Reverend Thomas Chung An-zu, archbishop of Taipei, shared a story about a Spanish Dominican priest named Father Faustino Sáez Muñoz (1908–1987) who went to Chung’s hometown of Lunbei in Yunlin County to proselytize when Chung was ten years old. Sixty years ago, Taiwan was poor and life was hard. Chung said: “He always took me along when he visited families. What I remember most clearly is how he would carefully listen to the many problems and worries that each family had, and respond to each, using the words of Jesus to encourage them. He also gave out small amounts of clothing and powdered milk that were part of the aid given to Taiwan by the US back then. By the time he left, every family was very happy. I think my religious calling dates back to that time. I also wanted to be a priest and spread joy, solace, tranquility, and hope to people.”
Academia Sinica academician and former ROC vice president Chen Chien-jen shared the following narrative: Before his marriage he was not yet a Catholic, but he had many contacts with priests and nuns working in the fields of healthcare and public health, such as the Belgian nuns Sister Maria Godelieva Claeys and Sister Helena Maria Bomans (1932–2013) of the CICM’s St. Joseph Hospital in Taipei’s Wanhua District. He said gently: “At that time National Taiwan University Hospital was the best local hospital, but it was not at NTUH that you could find the most infant incubators in Taiwan, but in Wanhua. Sister Helena’s arms were like a baby’s cradle, and they cared for all the premature babies in Taiwan at that time. It really was as the Bible says: doing something for the least of these brothers and sisters.”
There were also the Austrian Jesuit priest Father Luis Gutheinz, and the Spanish nun Sister Elvira Valentín Martín (1922–2012) of the Hijas de Jesús (Daughters of Jesus), who both cared for people with Hansen’s disease (leprosy) at Losheng Sanatorium. Chen Chien-jen described how, when anyone asked Sister Elvira why they looked after these people, she would simply say, “Because God is love!” When someone asked a female patient about Sister Elvira, she replied: “There has never been anyone else who has understood the scars and sores on my body as well as her. When she gives me a sponge bath, she never touches my sores.”
Speaking without notes, Chen recounted many such moving stories, to which the forum audience responded with frequent rounds of applause.

Academia Sinica academician Chen Chien-jen paraphrased Pope Francis: “You should be good shepherds, and a truly good shepherd is one who lives with the smell of sheep.” This remark, meaning that priests should live among those they minister to, greatly inspired Chen in his role as a public servant.

Archbishop Thomas Chung says that although foreign priests and nuns have come to Taiwan from a variety of countries, they have shared a similar faith and desire to do right, making them able to fully express their love for God and for humanity.