By Paulo Aido
THE vast majority of Icelanders belong to the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Iceland.
There are only around 14,000 Catholics in Iceland, a country with only one diocese – Reykjavik – and eight parishes.
Some of these parishes are very distant from each other.
None of this bothers Sister Selestina Gavric, who knows first-hand how difficult it is to be a missionary in such a place, with its long snowy winters.
Sometimes going in search of a Catholic is like a real-life treasure hunt.
The Croatian sister is one of four Carmelites of the Divine Heart of Jesus currently living in Iceland, in a parish that stretches over 500 kilometres.
Without the car that she received from Aid to the Church in Need, life would be much more difficult, and it would be impossible to meet the faithful face to face.
Not that it is easy, even with the car.
Sr Selestina is practical and is unfazed by the possibility of driving for hours by herself in this car.
With it she can reach the most distant point of the parish, almost on the other side of the country, which means that Catholics can often get a surprise visit from the feisty Carmelite, even if only to know how they are doing.
“I have seen so many Catholics fall away from the Church due to lack of personal contact. We have to go out to meet them”, she said.
“We have one family here, another there. When I don’t see people in church, but I know that they have a seven-year-old child, for example, I go knocking on their door.
“‘You have a child that is this old, and you are Catholic. Your child has the right to get to know the faith better. We have catechism for children. Are you interested?'”
Iceland is not a small country, but it is sparsely populated, with only around 372,000 inhabitants, around four people per square kilometre.
However, most Icelanders live in Reykjavik, which leaves large expanses of the country completely uninhabited.
It takes a special character to go knocking on people’s doors to convince them to let their children attend Sunday school, but that doesn’t bother this Carmelite.
Her boldness and courage come from the bottom of her soul, powered by faith.
And if visiting people physically is not possible, there is always the internet – anything is better than neglecting the children’s spiritual formation.
Sr Selestina came to Iceland because she was asked.
But she says she would go further if the Church requested it.
“They asked me to come to Iceland. It was really a big surprise. But when we make our vows, we belong to the congregation and to everything it does and says. If they built a convent on Mars, we’d willingly go there to live and work,” she ssaid.
“We are Carmelite Sisters of the Divine Heart of Jesus.
“Our congregation was founded by Blessed Mary Theresa of Saint Joseph, who converted from the Lutheran Church.
“There are four of us in Iceland, and I have been here for 20 years,” she said.
Paulo Aido is a journalist for Aid to the Church in Need