
“Two Plus Two Plus God”
Abel Albino is a doctor and founder of CONIN (Cooperative for Infant Nutrition) in Argentina. He often remembers St. Josemaría’s words: “Two plus two is four, but two plus two plus God…”
2009/01/15
CONIN (Cooperative for Infant Nutrition) was founded in the city of Mendoza, Argentina, on September 4, 1993. Currently more than 500 children with advanced malnutrition and some 1,500 with a less serious condition are being treated there. Moreover, a CONIN network has been created, with 12 centers in different parts of the country and in Paraguay, and four new centers that will open soon.
Abel Albino working with mothers and their babies
How did this project start?
I studied medicine in Tucuman, did my residency in Pediatrics in the University of Chile, and then went to Mendoza. I married at 32 and began working to support my family. Then, I started on my doctoral thesis, wrote a couple of books, and I went to Europe to work in molecular biology. And there is where this story started.
Family leaving a CONIN center
In Europe, I saw many small countries that are powerful in the world and I could not believe that Argentina, a big country rich in resources, should be suffering from poverty. When you’re out of your own country, you get a better perspective; you miss it and you appreciate it more. Besides, you start to realize that somehow it also depends a little on you.…
One day, while walking in the corridor of the faculty and thinking how bad the situation was back in Argentina, I noticed a newspaper lying on the floor. Out of curiosity, I picked it up. It had an interview with Mother Teresa of Calcutta in which she was asked what peace was. Since I was not feeling at peace, I thought I should see what this woman had to say about it.
Dr. Abel Albino with Dr. Fernando Monckeberg, founder of CONIN in Chile
Those words fascinated me. Eventually, I told my boss: "Look, I’m going back to Argentina. I know that my work here will contribute to the future of molecular biology but, in reality, I am the son of a country that has yet to solve its problems. At the bottom of my heart I am a doctor, and it will be good for me to return." So I returned to Mendoza. I knew that I had "to serve," but I didn’t know how or where.
Art workshop for neurological stimulation
Once back in Mendoza, we organized a course about these issues and invited Professor Ignacio Villaelizar from Spain. He told us, "Get in touch with Monckeberg." Professor Monckeberg had been my professor at Luis Calvo Mackenna Hospital when I did my training in Pediatrics in Chile from 1973 to 1974. We invited him and he spoke to us about the only case where low I.Q could be prevented and reversed, and was created by human beings—malnutrition. It was then that I got involved in this project.
How did you get acquainted with the message of St. Josemaría and how does it affect your personal and professional life?
His message had made a big impact in my life. St. Josemaría was behind the two significant moments that led me to finally follow this path. First, I was studying in the University of Navarra when I read the words of Mother Teresa, and St. Josemaría was the founder of that university. Then, I was in Rome for his beatification when I heard Pope John Paul II’s words.
With his five daughters
How do you keep up a close relationship with God, while being a father of 5 daughters, with a clinic to run, and as the founder of CONIN with centers in Argentina, Paraguay and Gambia?
Shop for manual work
And then, God wanted me to remain a widower. I feel like Don Alvaro del Portillo, successor to St. Josemaría, who used to say, "I am the baton in the hands of the conductor or the brush in the hands of the painter." It may be that God wants to do some good work through me. So I throw myself into doing the things that come my way with love and affection, and with passion, trying to serve the best that I can.
How do you envisage CONIN’s future?
When I think of the marvelous growth that lies in CONIN’s future, I remind myself of St. Josemaría’s words: "Two plus two is four, but two plus two plus God…"
What spurs you to continue working day after day in this project?
SAINT JOSEMARÍA
LINKS
2010/09/07

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