“Sometimes, I felt like I wasn’t prepared enough. I felt like I wasn’t connecting with the Faithful well enough because I could not see them. But I was very excited to finally celebrate Mass, and I believe God’s grace saw me through the first Mass, and the next, and the next,” he said, adding that he had gradually built his confidence during the second Mass he presided over at his home, and finally, the third at the community of the Religious Sisters.
Part of his preparation for Holy Mass includes memorizing prayers, he said, and explained, “The only difference between me and Priests who can see is the modality I use. While they use eyes to read during Liturgy, I use braille and memory. Fortunately, in our Liturgy, some texts do not change, and memorizing them is very easy. I am therefore left with just a few prayers to memorize as I prepare for Mass.”
Adjusting to Religious life as a blind person was, however not easy for the Kenyan Catholic Priest who lost his sight shortly after he was ordained deacon in 2019.
Credit: The Catholic Information Service for Africa (CISA)
“I fell sick and while in hospital, I lost my sight. It was only three months after I was ordained a Deacon and I was so excited to edge so close to Priesthood. Then the doctor made the announcement that changed my life,” Fr. Mithamo told ACI Africa during the January 21 interview.
“I found it hard to believe it when doctors said I had lost my sight. I felt that the doctors had failed me. But they brought in someone who counseled me and told me that all was not lost for me. I also fell deep into meditation and I found the strength to accept my situation,” he said.
Away from the hospital, Fr. Mithamo recounts facing rejection, and some of his friends abandoning him.
“I can say that I have had very few genuine friends who saw me through my difficult journey of adjusting to blindness. But many friends left me; they abandoned me and some of them are just starting to come back after the ordination,” he says, adding that top on his list of those who stood by him was the Local Ordinary of Nyeri Archdiocese, Archbishop Muheria.
Credit: The Catholic Information Service for Africa (CISA)
“My Bishop was there with me fully, always encouraging me to look at the positive side of life. I know him to be a very busy man. But he saw me almost every day. He started coaching me in my priestly duties even before I was ordained and helped to strengthen my confidence,” he says.