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Angelus News | June 30, 2023 | Vol. 8 No 13

On the cover: Everywhere you turn, it seems as if everyone is focusing on artificial intelligence — how it can be used, how it should be used, or if it should be used at all. Starting on Page 12, Elise Italiano Ureneck speaks with two Catholics experienced in artificial intelligence on how it could impact everything from education, well-being, and human demise.

On the cover: Everywhere you turn, it seems as if everyone is focusing on artificial intelligence — how it can be used, how it should be used, or if it should be used at all. Starting on Page 12, Elise Italiano Ureneck speaks with two Catholics experienced in artificial intelligence on how it could impact everything from education, well-being, and human demise.

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NOW PLAYING RESCUED FROM DARKNESS<br />

WHEN FAITH DRIVES EDUCATION<br />

An award-winning documentary shows how putting<br />

God first transformed a school in war-torn Uganda.<br />

BY SOPHIA MARTINSON<br />

A promotional image for<br />

the film “Rescued From<br />

Darkness.” | PERSONALLY<br />

CATHOLIC<br />

will always return. Like<br />

falling in love. You’ll never<br />

“You<br />

be the same.” These are the<br />

words Father Joseph Ssergo, chaplain<br />

of Pope John Paul II High School in<br />

Uganda, uses to describe his community.<br />

After watching “Rescued From Darkness,”<br />

it is easy to see what he means.<br />

Awarded “Best Documentary” at the<br />

Odyssey Fest and IMAFA film festivals,<br />

the 78-minute film from Personally<br />

Catholic tells the story of a school born<br />

out of the ashes of war.<br />

Since gaining its independence<br />

in 1962, Uganda has hardly known<br />

peace. After decades of military coups,<br />

dictatorship, and violence — including<br />

child sacrifice practiced by tribal<br />

cultures — the prospect of education<br />

seemed impossible for many Ugandan<br />

families.<br />

But in 2009, the Apostles of Jesus<br />

Missionaries and the nonprofit organization<br />

Building a Bridge to Uganda set<br />

out to build a school — in the middle<br />

of the jungle and a former war zone.<br />

Fourteen years later, the film captures<br />

700 students in bright yellow uniforms<br />

filling a vast campus of neat, red-roofed<br />

buildings. The academic results are<br />

just as impressive: JPII School consistently<br />

scores in the top 5% of national<br />

testing, and 98% of graduates go on to<br />

higher education, a rarity in Uganda.<br />

But as the film unfolds, it is the<br />

overwhelming joy — not the academic<br />

achievement — that is the distinguishing<br />

feature of the school.<br />

Almost every shot features wide<br />

smiles, laughter, and singing, almost as<br />

if the faculty and students are un-<br />

touched by the brutal past.<br />

Yet that is not their reality — many<br />

interviewees recall fleeing for their<br />

lives, sleeping in bushes, and escaping<br />

child sacrifice.<br />

The film brings these chilling<br />

memories to life through dramatized<br />

reenactments: figures race through the<br />

jungle amid the sound of gunshots or<br />

breathlessly hide in roof rafters while<br />

gunmen pace below.<br />

But at JPII School, where fear and<br />

death once reigned, music and learning<br />

have taken root.<br />

So what is the secret? Unlike other<br />

educational reform projects, no one<br />

points to a special teaching method,<br />

a complex curriculum, or high-tech<br />

school supplies. In one interview after<br />

another, the audience hears the same<br />

response — it’s the centrality of faith<br />

32 • ANGELUS • <strong>June</strong> <strong>30</strong>, <strong>2023</strong>

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