Fr.
Stephen Jaschko is originally from Hungary, but he has put
down roots in Taiwan and devoted his life to the Chinese
people and to taking care of a group of mentally
handicapped children. Never waiting until there was enough
money to do things, he started a center for the mentally
handicapped with only US$100. His greatest wish in life is
to establish a permanent home for them.
A winter wind rose, and the night was wet with dew. In
the small Hakka town of Kuanhsi, in northern Taiwan, stood
a church which seemed to have long sunk into oblivion. The
signboard, inscribed with "Kuanhsi Catholic
Church" and "Catholic Hua Kuang Center,"
looked even more desolate in the relentless chilly wind.
In a cramped but clean little room by the church, Fr.
Stephen Jaschko, sj, who just entered the ninth decade of
his life last year, diligently punched the keys of a
forty-year-old typewriter. Even though he has retired, he
still leads a busy life with his heart set on improving
the welfare of the retarded children in the Catholic Hua
Kuang Center.
A birthday wish
Fr. Jaschko was born on August 18, 1911, in Kosice, an
industrial city then in Hungary but now in the Slovak
Republic. He was greatly influenced by his mother.
"My mother was a very nice person. She was always so
happy. She often led me in prayer and told me how God
loves us." Like an innocent child, Fr. Jaschko said
that the most precious things he learned from his mother
were how to love and be grateful.
He has dedicated sixty-four years of his life to the
Chinese people--twenty years in mainland China, and over
forty years in Taiwan taking care of a group of "old children"
who are unlikely to grow up (two thirds of the two hundred
Hua Kuang residents are adults).
At the insistence of the Hua Kuang residents, Fr.
Jaschko celebrated his ninetieth birthday. But in order to
save the birthday cake for the children, he did not take
so much as a tiny bite of it. He made only one wish--to
build as soon as possible a home with medical,
educational, vocational and functional purposes for the
Hua Kuang children so that they can lead a dignified life
like other normal, healthy people.
"Building the Hua Kuang Welfare Establishment is
my dream. I hope the kids here can lead a dignified
life." In order to spread the message, the Sagem
Group financed a commercial for Fr. Jaschko to call for
help from the public. The commercial was dubbed by the
famous Taiwanese writer, Hsiao Yeh. "A
ninety-year-old foreigner came to Taiwan to take care of
other people's children. If a foreigner can do that for
our own children, how can we not do something for
them?"
At a fund-raising press conference for the Hua Kuang
Welfare Establishment, Fr. Jaschko said, "I am often
touched by the abundant love of the Taiwanese people. The
children at Hua Kuang do not have other abilities, but
they do have the power to attract the love of the people
on the island."
Eight years ago, a series of tragedies occurred in
which retarded parents, fearing that after they died there
would be no one to take care of their retarded children,
killed their children and then committed suicide. Shaken
by these tragedies, Fr. Jaschko resolved to build a home
where mentally disabled children could be nurtured and
brought up in good health.
After several years of efforts, he finally managed to
procure 14.6 acres of land in Hsinpu Township, Hsinchu
County. He paid more than NT$20 million [about US$650,000]
for it by means of a loan and with help from other people.
It took another NT$330 million to level the land and build
the Hua Kuang Welfare Establishment. Fr. Jaschko and the
staff of the Catholic Hua Kuang Center have to raise at
least NT$230 million before they can apply for a subsidy
from the government. So far they have raised nearly half
the amount, but there is still NT$150 million to go.
Reform through labor
In 1936, Fr. Jaschko was sent by the Jesuit missionary
society to mainland China to preach the Gospel. Before he
left, his family held a farewell party for him. The
close-knit family was unwilling to let him go to such a
faraway place. Ever since he was a little boy, he had not
spent much time at home. His family saw even less of him
after he turned sixteen and decided to join the Jesuits.
None of them knew when they would see him again after he
went to China. Therefore, the farewell party was filled
with profound sorrow.
Fr. Jaschko settled down in Anhui Province, eastern
China, to learn Chinese. His teacher gave him the Chinese
name "Yeh Yu-ken" based on the pronunciation of
his Hungarian name, Jaschko. The Chinese name, meaning
"putting down roots," augured his
future--he would remain on Chinese soil for the rest of
his life.
During the nearly twenty years he spent in mainland
China, the missionary witnessed an era in which the
country was torn by war and strife. He himself was deeply
involved and affected by it.
War broke out between China and Japan and sickness and
poverty plagued the Chinese people, but there was not a
single hospital for those who were ill or injured. Hoping
to relieve the pain and suffering of these people, Fr.
Jaschko, who had studied both theology and medicine, set
out to establish a hospital in Hebei. With one hundred
beds, his hospital was the first of such a large scale in
Hebei Province.
During the twenty years the hospital was in operation,
Fr. Jaschko saved countless people who would otherwise
have been killed in the war. "Near Daming, Hebei
Province, we managed to save lives among the Japanese
army, the Chinese Communist army, the Chinese Nationalist
army, and local bandits." But to his complete
astonishment, after mainland China fell into the hands of
the Communists, the vice superintendent of the hospital
rose up to "struggle" against him. He reported
to the authorities that Fr. Jaschko had beaten a boy for
climbing a church wall and entering the vegetable garden
of the church. Fr. Jaschko was consequently imprisoned.
He said with a smile that the accusation was completely
unconvincing. Everyone who knew him knew that this priest
never beat children. He really couldn't figure out why the
vice superintendent did this to him. Later he discovered
that he had done so in order to save his father's
life--the Communists had seized his father in order to
force him to say things against Fr. Jaschko. As soon as he
found out about this, he immediately felt relieved.
"At that time, what the Chinese people did really
touched me," Fr. Jaschko said. "As we all know,
it is unavoidable that people die in hospitals. But when
the Chinese Communist government asked families of
patients who had died in the hospital to testify against
me, nobody came forward. I was greatly touched."
In 1953, the Communist party sent Fr. Jaschko to a
reform-through-labor farm in the countryside of Changyuan
County. During the three years that he was there, he did
nothing but feed cows and weave ropes. But he said that he
did not feel lonely or depressed at all at that time,
because God was in his heart.
In October last year, Fr. Jaschko returned to mainland
China to see the men who had once served as his acolytes.
At their tearful reunion, they hugged each other and cried
in
each other's arms. "When I saw them cry, tears filled
my eyes too."
Together, they reminisced about the past--Father's
vegetable garden, the Changyuan hospital during wartime,
and how they couldn't bring themselves to yell "Bring
down Yeh Yu-ken" when Fr. Jaschko was arrested. The
men who used to be so young had all grown old. The priest
and his acolytes had missed each other terribly during the
forty years they had been separated. Now they were finally
comforted at the sight of each other.
A center for the mentally
challenged
When Fr. Jaschko was released from the labor farm in
1955, he was deported to Hong Kong. From there he came to
Taiwan and settled down in the coastal area of Chiayi,
south-central Taiwan.
Most people who lived in the coastal villages of
Tungshih and Putai bred and sold oysters for a living, and
life was not easy for them. Feeling that these poor
fishermen were in urgent need of a small medical center to
take care of their health, Fr. Jaschko raised money from
overseas and built a two-story reinforced-concrete
hospital in one of the villages. He then took up his
lodgings in a small bamboo hut halfway up a mountain.
During rainy days, he had to fasten an umbrella to the
back of a chair so that he could continue typing letters
on his old typewriter to ask for financial aid. As time
went by, Taiwan's economy gradually took off and the local
medical environment also improved. When fewer and fewer
people came to the charity hospital for medical care, Fr.
Jaschko closed it down and went to serve as pastor of a
Catholic parish in Hsinchu.
There he decided to devote his life to the education
and cultivation of mentally disabled children. "There
was a street urchin whose parents refused to claim him and
take him home. I have him to thank for my decision."
Fr. Jaschko brought the retarded child back to his place,
and made up his mind to start an educational institution
for children like him.
Although he had neither money nor people to help him,
he did not balk at the task. He never waited until there
was enough money to start doing things. An American patron
donated US$100 to start his charity work, and with this
money Fr. Jaschko set up the Jenai Center for Mentally
Challenged Children.
During the initial phase of the center, more than ten
retarded children were taken in. Because Fr. Jaschko could
not find qualified teachers to educate them, he did
everything himself, including feeding them. Once he
started feeding these children, his hands would never
stop.
The Jenai Center is now under the supervision of
another Catholic priest. Fr. Jaschko has shifted all his
attention to the development of the Catholic Hua Kuang
Center. The number of teachers working at the center has
grown from under ten to more than seventy.
Every teacher is responsible for taking care of three or
four children.
Fr. Jaschko worked very hard to obtain benefits for
mentally deficient persons. At a time when Taiwan was
still under martial law and the democratic movement was
still considered taboo, he led five hundred retarded
children and their parents to the Legislative Yuan to
petition for their basic rights. They hoped that the
government would provide more assistance for families with
retarded children and pay more attention to these
children's rights to receive a better education and live a
better life.
Fr. Jaschko's petition received a warm response from
the government. From that time on, educational centers for
the mentally deficient sprang up one after the other all
over the island. Parents no longer needed to keep their
retarded children, who used to sit in despair at home
waiting for a hopeless tomorrow, within the bounds of
their households. Considering the grim political
atmosphere on the island before martial law was lifted,
what Fr. Jaschko did--going into the streets to protest
for the rights due to the mentally deficient--made him a
"radical" priest.
Over the past eighteen years, the Catholic Hua Kuang
Center has brought up hundreds of retarded children and
others with multiple handicaps. In addition to providing
the children with daily care, the center also teaches them
to take care of themselves and gives them job training.
With their education, some of the students are able to go
out and earn a living by themselves and even make plans
for the future.
Standing on their own feet
After more than ten years of strenuous effort, the Hua
Kuang Center can finally offer a more adequate and refined
education to its students and enable them more or less to
stand on their own feet. The excellent performance of
these children has made Fr. Jaschko really proud of them.
The teachers at Hua Kuang like to tell a story.
"One day a hunter was walking on the road when he saw
a sparrow lying on its back with its feet pointing towards
the sky. Curious,
the hunter approached the sparrow and asked why it kept
its feet that way. The sparrow answered, 'Someone told me
that the sky was going to fall down. I'm learning to hold
up the sky with my feet.'" The children at Hua Kuang
are like the little sparrow--they want to contribute their
little efforts to society. Even though their contributions
might be insignificant, they should still be given the
chance.
At present, about forty or fifty Hua Kuang residents
work at jobs in Taipei and Hsinchu. A team of nine
residents led by a teacher pack toys at a toy factory in
Hsinchu. Teacher Li Jui-yun, who assists the team members
with their work, remarked, "It's not hard to
cultivate their working abilities, but when it comes to
interpersonal communications problems often arise."
Li mentioned a Hua Kuang resident who worked at a
rice-flour noodle factory. He envied people who were able
to give their own business cards to others. One day he
took his boss's card to a printing company and asked to
have his own cards printed, replacing the boss's name with
his own. After the cards were printed, he distributed them
to everyone he met. The teachers at Hua Kuang had to put
their heads together and think up a title for him to put
on his cards. Finally they came up with one--President of
the Hua Kuang Alumni Association.
For those residents who are less independent, the
center often arranges for them to work as a team. When we
visited the residents working at the toy factory, they
seemed excited at our coming and began to work even
harder. "Why are you suddenly so hard-working? You
weren't like this just a minute ago," Li teased them.
The factory foreman voiced his opinion of this group of
workers. "When I first met them, I found them
different from the mentally challenged children we usually
see on TV.
When I got to know them better, I realized that as long as
they're properly trained, they can become very good
workers." But since most of the factories that employ
retarded persons are categorized as sunset industries,
they are in danger of losing their jobs when these
factories close down or are relocated abroad.
Because many Hua Kuang residents have to work during
the day, Fr. Jaschko can only see them two nights a week
when he teaches catechism classes at the church. One
evening at seven o'clock, he found that some of the
children were just having their dinner because they had
had to work overtime at the factory. He felt so sorry for
them that he even went to the factory to find out about
their working conditions there.
The staff at the Hua Kuang Center revealed that Fr.
Jaschko is very strict with them. No matter how busy they
are, whenever he sees children who are not clean or tidy,
he starts to sulk. "After coming so far on the road,
we should realize that the most important thing is the
quality of our education, not the number of teachers we
have." Thanks to his insistence, the education
offered at Hua Kuang is of the best quality in Taiwan.
This helps put the anxious minds of parents at ease.
Fr. Jaschko usually gets up at four in the morning. He
makes a point of not having breakfast because he wants to
experience what it is like to suffer so that he can
sympathize better with other people's pain. "As for
my body, I have already signed a donation contract with a
hospital." He plans to donate his body to the
National Taiwan University Hospital. In this way he may be
able to save even more people.
The old veteran and his
retarded wife
Ever since it was established, the Catholic Hua Kuang
Center has been growing with each passing day as more and
more people are taken in. Currently there are two hundred
and two residents. With a floor space of 64,800 square
feet, the center was obviously far from big enough to
accommodate all these residents. There was an urgent
need to expand.
Because Fr. Jaschko cannot bear to see Hua Kuang
students end up with no place to go after they grow up, he
allows them to stay on at the center. As a result about
two-thirds of the residents are over twenty years old. It
is not uncommon to see whole families living there. Once
the center even took in a family of six. The place is full
of sad stories.
Mrs. Wang, more than fifty years old, is one of the
older residents at Hua Kuang. If you ask her how old she
is, she answers with a vacant smile, "I don't
know." The answer saddens her husband, who is many
years her senior, and makes him look even older.
Mr. Wang is a veteran of the Nationalist army that came
to Taiwan in 1949. When he was younger, he worked for the
government forestry department in the mountains of the
island. Life was easy and carefree. But his life took a
sudden turn when he was found to be afflicted with
mountain sickness. According to the regulations at that
time, married personnel were to be sent out of the
mountains first. Anxious to leave, Wang looked hard for
someone who would marry him.
A matchmaker introduced a young retarded girl to him.
Of low social status and no longer young, Wang knew that
he couldn't afford to be too critical or picky. He quickly
married the girl, and the two of them moved down to the
plains and began to live a peaceful and uneventful life.
Not long afterwards, their son and daughter were
brought into the world. Unfortunately, they were both
retarded like their mother. Shouldering this heavy burden,
Wang worked in a road crew for the highway bureau by day
and as a janitor at a university by night. Yet even more
misery was in store--a gravel truck killed his beloved son
while he was riding his bicycle.
Hua Kuang director Wu Fu-mei said that every time Wang
talked about his life, tears always streamed down his
wrinkled face. "What awful things have I done that I
should have to work like a beast for them all my
life?" he would say. Old and feeble, he decided to
settle his wife and daughter at Hua Kuang so that they
won't be left helpless when he leaves this world.
Unable
to see his mother again
When Fr. Jaschko was little, his father made a living
by selling typewriters and books. They were originally
quite well off, but when World War I broke out, his
father's business slumped badly and their life became very
hard. For a period of time, his mother had to help support
the family by begging from the army. "Although life
was hard at that time, my mother was as tender and loving
as ever. She really was a great woman." When he
talked of his mother, his eyes showed profound gratitude.
Fr. Jaschko believes that after one dies, God delivers
a fair judgment on one's life. "What did you do in
your life?" God will ask him. "I don't know,
just look at my conscience," he will answer. He does
not in the least fear the coming of death. He believes
that he will see his mother again in Heaven. He was once
so laden with responsibilities that he missed the chance
to see his mother one last time.
Fr. Jaschko's only wish is to establish a permanent
home--the Hua Kuang Welfare Establishment--for the
children at the Catholic Hua Kuang Center. Only after he
has fulfilled this wish can his mind rest at ease. The
eyes of the ninety-year-old priest look so bright and
magnanimous. He makes those who are near him feel warm and
peaceful. |