REFLECTIONS OF ONE SMALL CANDLE
by
Book Details
About the Book
LIT CANDLES We keep candles in our homes in case of power failures, for prayer or to create a cozy atmosphere or simply for their beauty. Their real purpose is and has always been to dispel darkness and in doing so bring comfort and reassurance to us in physical darkness. We are all familiar with the Christophers’ motto. “It is better to light a candle than to curse the darkness.” In South Africa before apartheid was abolished, people would light a candle and place it in a window as a sign of hope, that one day this evil would be overcome. It soon was declared illegal, as illegal as carrying a gun. The village children would laugh and say, “The government is afraid of candles.” Things did get better for them as a people with the end of apartheid after the long years of darkness. It is an appalling sense of darkness we encounter whenever there is a diagnosis of illness that completely re-directs our lives and wipes out our plans for our lives as well as our future. If ever there is a time in our lives we need this darkness dispelled it is in this bewildering place. So many of us have given up our loved ones to cancer, but there is a candle lit and it was lit by a doctor at a cancer facility and there is light in his words:
About the Author
Gertie Pratt Mayeux; {b.} January 20, l932, St. Landry, Louisiana; {m.} Paul N. Mayeux {deceased}, November 12, 1949; {ch.} Six sons and six daughters; {ed.} O.L.O.L. School of Nursing, Loyola Graduate Studies, McKnight School Of Art; {occ.} Mother, Artist and Retired Teacher of Art and Religion; {pers.} “Words from the heart to the heart deeply move. We must be always aware of this power within us and use it well”; {a.} Ville Platte, LA.