March 19th marks the
50th anniversary of priestly
ordination of Fr. Peter
King, O.M.I. Fr. Peter
likes to point out that he
was born in Shanghai in
1924, the year of the Rat.
According to the traditional
Chinese zodiac, those
born in the year of the
Rat are often described
as social, quick witted,
always on the go and hard
working. In many ways
this is an apt description
of his life and ministry
over the past fi fty years.
As a small child his family fled
the fury of the Japanese invasion
in the mission of the Columbian
Fathers. There he did various
tasks for the missionaries and
slowly developed a desire to
serve as a priest. They helped
him go to St. Ignatius College
to study. As painful as this time
was for him and his family,
Fr. Peter remembers it was in
those dark days that his desire to
serve as a priest was born.
“If it had not been for the war,”
he says, “I would not have
gone to school or wanted to be
a priest. From every bad thing
something good can come.”
The respite at the end
of World War II was quickly
overshadowed by the ravages
of the civil war between the
nationalists and communists, and
the eventual communist victory
in l949.
Fr. Peter, as well as many other
seminarians, fled the country to seek refuge in the Philippines.
There in a refugee camp for
displaced Chinese seminarians
he pursued his seminary studies.
Finally on March 19, 1958,
he was ordained a priest in
St. Cruz Church in Manila.
His early ministry was in the
southern Philippines, serving as
a teacher at the Chinese High
School Jolo, Sulu, then as
director of Chinese High School,
Kalibo, Aklan. He came to know
the Oblates of Mary Immaculate
and felt called to become one of
them.
After a year of novitiate he
made his fi rst vows at Kennedy
Ranch, Sarita Texas, U.S.A.,
December 1962. Returning to the
Philippines, he served in various
parishes and taught at Notre
Dame University, Cotabato. He
eventually became very involved
in the Mission Apostolate to
Overseas Chinese and was
outstanding in his work at Queen
of Peace Church, Cotabato.
In 1994 he joined the Oblate
China Delegation, Hong Kong.
Since that time he has been
based in Notre Dame Parish,
from where he serves as
chaplain and spiritual adviser
to multiple groups of migrant
domestic helpers.
At the end of the annual
Oblate Retreat, the China
delegation
will gather to celebrate with
Fr. Peter and his friends on
May 2 at Notre Dame his half
century of indefatigable service
to God and the Church.
Ad Multos Annos!