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Interview Portuguese Spanish    
Year 4 - N° 186 – November 28, 2010
ORSON PETER CARRARA
orsonpeter@yahoo.com.br
Matão, São Paulo (Brasil)
Translation
Leonardo Rocha - l.rocha1989@gmail.com

 
Neide Marisa Brandt:

“The harvest field of Christ
is big and requires
everyone’s help”

The Spiritist from São Joaquim talks about the Spiritist Movement in her city. São Joaquim, in the southern Brazilian state of Santa Catarina, is known as one of the coldest cities in the country.
 

Neide Marisa Brandt (photo) became a Spiritist due to a difficult experience in her family life. A few years later she opened, with some friends, the Spiritist Centre André Luiz, where she still works. Neide Brandt is an Economist, born in the city of Fraiburgo. She has lived in São Joaquim since 1998. 

O Consolador: Tells us a bit more about Santa Catarina and São Joaquim. Is it true that the city is officially the coldest in the whole country? 

São Joaquim is on the highlands of the state of Santa Catarina, in the south of

Brazil, 1,360 metres above sea level. The population is about 25,000 people. São Joaquim and the nearby city of Urupema have the lowest temperatures on average in the whole country. Our economy is based on agriculture, farming and cattle breeding. We produce mainly apples and wines, which are used for making fine wines. Tourism is another important source of income. 

O Consolador: How did you become a Spiritist? 

Through suffering and through a desperate search for a rational explanation for God. I came from a dysfunctional family. I was the eldest daughter of a Catholic father and a Protestant mother. When my brother was 19 he committed suicide. For some years, I became a catechist, and later I spent a few months in a convent. But I couldn´t find the answers I was looking for and simply left everything behind. I continue to question, with a number of internal conflicts. God didn´t make sense to me, as He seemed to prefer some of his sons over the others. And that is something I wasn´t able to accept. How could I trust God when He had already decided that I would have a miserable life, while others around me had everything, all the joy? Thankfully, God didn´t give up on me and allowed me to meet the Spirist Doctrine, which brought to me all the answers to the questions that had been tormenting my soul. 

O Consolador: How many Spiritist Centres do you have in São Joaquim? 

As far as I know, we have three truly Spiritist institutions. They all do an amazing job, offering assistance to those who are suffering. The three Spiritist Centres of São Joaquim offer fraternal assistance to those who in need, healing and weekly lectures to the wider public. 

O Consolador: What are the main activities of your Spiritst Centre, André Luiz? 

We have regular lectures, open to a wider public, we offer healing to those in need and we study the main works of the Doctrine – the books of Allan Kardec, Emmanuel, André Luiz and Chico Xavier and other well respected authors. We also try to offer guidance for those who come to us for the first time on how to do the Gospel in the Home. We opened our doors on November, 25th, 1998. Our Centre was founded by my husband, Ronaldo, by me and three friends. The area we have is not big, but we are in a nice location, surrounded by beautiful nature. 

O Consolador: What are the main events you organise and host in the city and what are your efforts to publicize the Spiritist message?

We have a books´ fair, twice a year, a Spiritist Week in the first half of the year, when we invite Spiritist speakers from the region, we leave reading material (leaflets etc.) in some of the main shops and we have a scheme of lending books in our region. And more recently we began to receive the transmissions from the Spiritist radio network, Rádio Boa Nova. 

O Consolador: What do you think of the attention Spiritism has been getting in the media lately? 

For many of us, the awakening to spiritual life is slow. But the debate of Spiritist issues in the Brazilian media in the last few years is like seeds being sown. They will germinate in due time.  

O Consolador: How about Spiritist literature? How is the exchange of books and ideas between the various Spiritist centres? 

We have been trying to work on that, to encourage the exchange of books and ideas. The results so far have been very positive. 

O Consolador: What other charitable work do you carry out? 

We have campaigns for the donation and distribution of winter clothes and food, we provide assistance to poor children, who come to us every Saturday for our evangelisation sessions and for a meal. We also provide assistance to those in our jails and hospitals – not only giving them medicines and much needed clothes, but also fraternal assistance, someone for them to talk to, to discuss their problems with. 

O Consolador: What else would you like to add? 

The harvest field of Christ is big and requires the help and assistance of all Spiritist Institutions. Let us be good companions to each other, friends, brothers and sisters. But let us respect the needs and different aspects of each Spiritist Centre. That is the only way forward. 

O Consolador: Your final thoughts… 

“Watch and pray so that you will not fall into temptation,” Jesus said (Mathew, 26:41), alerting us to the fact that we must be careful in every stage of our lives and making it clear that we will collect the legacy left by ourselves. Therefore, we must be disciplined and persevere in the faith we have embraced, not being ashamed to show how special Jesus is in our lives. 


 

 


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O Consolador
 
Weekly Magazine of Spiritism