Catholic priests from Romania being recruited to serve in Ireland

‘Vocations are very good there, with a surplus of priests,’ says bishop

An Irish bishop has resorted to going to Romania to recruit priests for his diocese. While the number of priests is dwindling in Ireland, there is a surplus of priests there.

Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin Denis Nulty visited the east Romanian diocese of Iasi "to explore how we might support projects out there in exchange for priests coming to minister in our diocese".

An immediate result is that the first Romanian priest will arrive to Kildare and Leighlin on August 29th, he said, adding that he hoped a second Romanian priest would come to work in the diocese over the coming months.

Kildare and Leighlin includes Co Carlow and parts of Kildare, Laois, Offaly, Kilkenny, Wicklow and Wexford.

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Speaking to The Irish Times, Bishop Nulty recalled how a relationship between the Irish Catholic Church and its Romanian counterpart had grown through the Irish College in Rome where some Romanian seminarians had also been sponsored by dioceses in Ireland.

Increasingly over the years Romanian priests also served in Irish dioceses during summer months.

Curate

With a Catholic population of almost 900,000 in Romania, just 5 per cent of the total population, the church there is strong and “vocations are very good there, with a surplus of priests”, Bishop Nulty said.

On his arrival in Ireland next week, Fr Eugen Dragos (28) will first spend time in Carlow, becoming acquainted with Irish life before appointment as curate to the parish of Tinryland in the county.

Bishop Nulty has no doubt the people of Tinryland will support him wholeheartedly in this pilot-project. “In the coming months, my hope is that a second Romanian priest will come to work in the diocese. He will also live in the presbytery at Tinryland.”

Outside support

The bishop repeated his intention “to keep all our 117 churches open” in Kildare and Leighlin, but he added: “This won’t happen without support from outside Ireland. This won’t happen without lay people taking a greater role of leadership in their local faith communities.”

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry is a contributor to The Irish Times