Vincentians in Africa Challenged to Value “effective communication” as Leaders

The five-day training was aimed at sensitizing the SSVP Africa leaders on Vincentian Spirituality, Effective Communication, Aggregation, Institution and Twinning Procedures; and Qualities of Good Leadership.
The Vincentians who attended the March 12-16 training were from Ghana, Nigeria, Gambia, Liberia, Zambia, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Sierra Leone and Kenya as well as selected National and International officers of the Society.
As the keynote speaker at the training on March 13, Madam Gaines, who is currently a Communication Lecturer at Wisconsin University in Ghana, called on the Vincentians to exude quality in their practice of leadership by respecting the views of members of their Conferences since “effective communication is a plan process that must achieve a goal.”
A member of the Vincentian family, she advised that the success of the communication process depends on the leader and the effectiveness of it depends on the audience.
“We have a responsibility to transform those we lead in the society and the Church as a whole,” she said and added, “As a Conference Presidents, you are the keeper of the fire, to lead your members to live an authentic life of service to the poor, to see and know the Lord.”
Fr. Andrew Campbell, the National Spiritual Advisor in Ghana who spoke on Vincentian Spirituality said the motivation for the members is found in the spirituality of the Society, which involves both prayer and action.
He said as spiritual leaders, “We are called to reflect on the spirit and inspiration of St Vincent de Paul and living according to God’s will under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.”
A member of the Society of Devine Word Missionaries (SVD), Fr. Andrew further said that the “commitment to the Mission and Culture of the Society, calls us to a life of simplicity, integrity, honesty and humility and our experience of solidarity with people who are poor, marginalised or without power.”
The Inter-Territorial Vice President of the SSVP Africa Group 1, Patrick Ebhojie from Nigeria, who chaired the training sessions noted that a Vincentian leader must keep the flame alive through prayer and contemplation and being grounded in the lives of people who are poor or in need.
He reminded the African leaders that leadership was all about sacrifice, telling them that “as leaders you have to put in more effort in whatever you for the good of the society, adding that Vincentian leadership is not something we do, but the person we are.”