CNA Staff, May 4, 2020 / 14:53 pm
When he was just 15 years old, Fr. Geison Gerardo Ortiz Marín had to quit school and find a job to help support his family.
Faced with a difficult economy, Ortiz's family was struggling financially. He quit school and found a job opportunity at a neighboring family's bakery, where he worked for five years.
The priest told ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish language news partner, that he learned important life skills from the job, such as "knowing what it is to meet a schedule, getting up at dawn and working overtime. In short, it was an enriching experience."
He took those life skills with him when he entered seminary at age 21. He has now been a priest for 10 years and serves as pastor of Saint Rose of Lima parish in Ciudad Queseda in northern Costa Rica.
Recently, however, Ortiz has returned to his roots as a baker to raise funds for the needy in his parish during the coronavirus pandemic.
Public Masses were suspended a month ago in Costa Rica due to the pandemic. As the lockdown continued, the priest could see the financial strain mounting on members of the community.
"A lot of people starting knocking on the rectory door asking for help, while the parish and local charitable groups weren't getting any income from the collection," he explained.
So Ortiz began baking. He uses around 55 lbs. of flour each workday to bake different kinds of bread, rolls and other items. A bag of baked goods sells for 1500 colones, or about $2.65.
"With 1500 colones here we can buy perhaps a 5-pound package of rice," he said, adding that he has been able to help about 60 families so far.
From the sale of baked goods, he was able to raise extra funds, he said, which have ensured that anyone who has knocked on the rectory door has left with a package of rice, sugar or beans.
No one has been sent away empty handed, the priest said.
"I work all day long baking bread, selling it, and in the evenings I celebrate the Eucharist. I always tell the Lord, 'Thank you for the true bread that gives eternal life, which is the greatest of riches and is what I want our people to have, receive, taste and feel'," he said.
Ortiz encouraged other priests to find creative ways to help serve those in need during the challenging times presented by the pandemic.
"I believe that this is a special moment," he said. "God has allowed me to return to my origins. God has allowed me to help meet the needs of our brothers. This is a moment in which the Lord is allowing us to live in solidarity and to reach out in a very special way."
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