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Interview Portuguese Spanish    
Year 8 - N° 395 - January 4, 2015
ORSON PETER CARRARA
orsonpeter92@gmail.com
Matão, SP (Brasil)
 
Translation
Leonardo Rocha - l.rocha1989@gmail.com

 
Soraia de Cássia Compri: 

“There’s strong prejudice against Spiritism in our town”

The coordinator of the Spiritist Centre Pátria do Evangelho in
 Brazilian the town of Albertina, in Minas Gerais, talks in
this interview about her early days in Spiritism and the
challenges she has faced in her journey

Soraia de Cássia Compri (photo) lives in the town of Albertina, in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais, where she works as a teacher. She was born in a Spiritist family and is the coordinator of the Spiritist Centre Pátria do Evangelho. In this interview she talks about her work in the Spiritist Movement and the problems and prejudice the Spiritists in her city

have faced.

Tell us a bit more about the town of Albertina.

Albertina lies in the south of Minas Gerais state, near the border with the state of São Paulo. Brazil’s largest city, São Paulo, is 220km away. It is a beautiful, mountainous region. Albertina has some 3,000 inhabitants and its economy is based on agriculture, especially coffee growing. It became an independent town on March 1st 1963.

What is it like living in a small town in Brazil, a predominantly Roman Catholic country, and working as a volunteer in a Spiritist Centre? Do Spiritists in Albertina still face prejudice?

It is a big challenge indeed, as there is a great deal of prejudice against Spiritism in the town, where most people are Catholic. It beggars belief that in the 21st Century there are still people who are scared of walking past the Spiritist Centre.

You are a small group of contributors. How is it working together in small numbers?

Even though we are a small group of 5 to 7 regular volunteer workers, we are aware that the Spirit World gives us huge assistance. In our mediumship meetings, many discarnate Spirits who lived in the town before are brought to us for assistance. Many were politicians and Catholic priests who, as incarnates, did not believe in Spiritism and rejected it.

What are the main activities of the Spiritist Centre?

We have a meeting open to the general public where we study the Gospel and offer healing. We also have talks once a month, on Sunday afternoon. And from time to time we organise talks in public areas so that people get used to the idea of Spiritism and feel less intimidated to join us.

Is there any particular event in the history of the Spiritist Movement in Albertina that you would like to share with us?

In 2012 we received a message through the mediumship of my father, Oscar Dionísio Compri. The Spirit who contacted us was very moved and said that he had been longing to speak to us. He said he wanted to let us know how our Spiritist Centre had been built. He told us that he was happily married when his young wife fell gravely ill and passed away. They had young children. Soon after passing away, he noticed that her Spirit seemed attached to the home. She was always around. All the prayers to get her to move away and seek help in the Spirit World failed. One day he felt inspired to promise God that he would build a Spiritist Centre in his lands if his former wife found peace and realised that she had already left the material world. Eventually, the situation normalised and in the end of the 1930s he began to build, brick by brick, slowly, the new Spiritist Centre. Very moved, he told us that in those early days they barely had access to books and struggled to buy even The Gospel According to Spiritism.

Tells us a bit more about the pioneers of the Spiritist Movement in the town of Albertina?

We researched the old documents of the Spiritist centre and found out that the Spirit who contacted us was called José da Silveira Campos. His name was in the title deed of the property as donor of the plot of land. The deed is from October 16th 1943, when the building had already been built. It was named initially Charity Centre Pátria do Evangelho (Land of the Gospel). The Centre ceased its activities for long stretches of time. Only on August 9th 1964 it was officially founded with the name of Spiritist Centre Pátria do Evangelho.

How does the wider public view the activities of the Spiritist Centre, including those held in common areas of the town?

We publicise our events, including our monthly talks, in posters that we hang in public areas and government buildings. We also talk to people we know could be interested. But very few people who are not Spiritists attend our events.

Are people in Albertina aware of Spiritist literature?

Very little. Those who come to our meetings for the first time are given a free copy of The Gospel According to Spiritism and The Spirits’ Book. Our humble library is available to everyone but in reality only our regular workers use the books we have.

A final thought…

I know our activities are still very limited and there is a great deal yet to be done. I believe the opening hours of the Spiritist Centre should be extended and that during the day we should provide fraternal assistance (or counselling) and visiting people who are ill in hospital. We should dare a bit more, opening a bookstand in the town’s main square. At this moment, that is still a dream, as we are short of volunteers. But I believe things will happen when they are meant to. 



 


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