The believer’s destiny

Le destin du croyant

“The mountain of Zion is solid not because it is stable, but because it is sacred and dear to God. I believe that this is the destiny of every believer. We are dear to God and he does not abandon his own.” (Stan L. meditating on Ps. 125)

Christian blogger, Guillaume Nocq interviewed (in French) our Superior General, Stan Lubungo, inviting him to comment on the psalm that speaks the most to him. In this jubilee year blessed by God, Stan took the opportunity to return to the roots of our Missionary Society.

Roger Merceron, R.I.P.

Society of the Missionaries of Africa

Father Patrick Bataille, Provincial Delegate of the sector of France,
informs you of the return to the Lord of Father

Roger Merceron

on Friday the 11th of October 2019 at Pau-Billère (France)
at the age of 89 years, of which 64 years of missionary life in
DR Congo, Burundi, Switzerland, Jerusalem and France.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

(more…)

Pierre Mauriaucourt, R.I.P.

Society of the Missionaries of Africa

Father Patrick Bataille, Provincial Delegate of the sector of France,
informs you of the return to the Lord of Father

Pierre Mauriaucourt

on Friday 11th October 2019 at Bry-sur-Marne (France)
at the age of 92 years, of which 66 years of missionary life in
Algeria and France.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

(more…)

ICOF Sabbatical Renewal Programme

Sabbatical Renewal Program

Arusha 13 January - 19 June 2020

This Inter-Congregational On-going Formation (ICOF) program is offered to Catholic Priest and Religious in Africa.

Qualifications for applicants:

    • Being Catholic priest or religious.
    • Having been in ministry for at least 7 years.
    • Those in transition from one ministry to another
    • will find it beneficial.
    • Being recommended by one‘s superior/ bishop.
    • Having a reasonable mastery of English.
    • Willing to be open to share oneself with others
    • for mutual enrichment and growth.
    • Application deadline: November 30‘“, 2019
    • Application form can be downloaded from

www.icofgrogram.org/application/sabbatical

Or directlty from the following links :

Brochure for the 6 month Sabbatical Program

Application Form

Newsletter from Pisai

Newsletter from PISAI

We have received from Diego Sarrió, “Preside” at PISAI (Pontifical Institute for Arabic and Islamic Studies) the newsletter of 7th October 2019 and translated the editorial, originally in Italian. We refer you to the Website of Pisai for further information.

http://en.pisai.it/home

Dearest Friends,

Pope Francis offered us a wonderful surprise on Sunday 1 September when, after the Angelus prayer, he announced the names of the 13 new cardinals elected, including Mgr Miguel Ángel Ayuso Guixot, M.C.C.J., President of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, and Mgr Michael L. Fitzgerald, M.Afr., former President of the same Pontifical Council. This announcement filled us with joy not only because it highlights once again how dear inter-religious dialogue is to the Holy Father, but at the same time because the two future cardinals have long ties with our Institute. To both the sincere congratulations of the entire academic community of the PISAI.

The new academic year was also an opportunity to rethink the format of the newsletter we send to the Alumni. As you may recall, in recent years the PAA has sent subscribers a PDF newsletter with news and other information on the life of the Institute. Whenever possible, we have tried hard to translate all the news into Italian, English and French. Starting with this newsletter, we are trying out a new, simpler format: a single newsletter for alumni and other visitors interested in our activities. For now we will limit ourselves to Italian, which is the language shared by all of us. We count on your reactions and advice to help us improve the newsletter. We would be happy to have your contribution of news about your experiences to enrich each other and stay in touch. We would like to take this opportunity to thank Manuela Galaverni, alumna of PISAI, who has been in charge of the implementation of the PAA project since the beginning.

I wish you all a good start to the academic year.

Father Diego

Grace upon grace…

Grace upon grace...

The beginning of the month of October was very intense in Rome. Launching of the extraordinary missionary month on the 1st of October , commemorating and reviving the very strong missionary appeal made by Benedict XV in his Apostolic Letter “Maximum Illud” a hundred years ago. 

“Baptised and sent: the Church of Christ on mission in the world.” To speak today of the ones baptised and sent means that each baptised person, at his or her level, can be a missionary, can be the instrument of the proposal that God wants to make to Man, through his or her personal witness, prayer and offering.

Three days later, on the feast of St. Francis, the Pope took part, in the Vatican gardens, in a cultural event to celebrate the end of the Season of Creation 2019 and to consecrate the forthcoming Synod on Amazonia. 

But even nearer to our heart and identity was certainly the creation of 13 new Cardinals taken for a great part from missionary institutes, among whom our confrere Michael Fitzgerald. A lot has been written about the event. The General House was full of guests, between the 25 family members and friends of Michael Fitzgerald and a few of the Congolese Bishops who had come to celebrate the creation of Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo Besungu of Kinshasa. 

The Pope had called a Constistory for Saturday the 5th of October at 16 hours to elevate the 13 new Cardinals. For that occasion, all the Cardinals of Rome were present to welcome their new brothers. A few minutes before 3 in the afternoon, “Cardinal Fitzgerald to be” appeared in his scarlet cassock but without the scarlet zuchetta and biretta, both of which he would receive from the hands of the Pope himself during the ceremony. You will recognize on the left side of the photo our confreres, Bishop Willy Ngumbi, and Martin Wullobayi, professor at the Pisai, chose by the new Cardinal as his personal secretary for the ceremony.

The following video is the part of the consistory when the Pope is inviting the “Cardinals to be” to profess their faith, when he wears them with the scarlet zuchetta and biretta and when the new Cardinals are welcomed and congratulated by the College of Cardinals present. This extract of the ceremony just lasts 24 minutes. If you want to see the full video (1h15), follow this link.

After the ceremony, each of the new Cardinals were given a space where they could be met and congratulated by their family members and friends. Back to the house around supper time, Cardinal Michael Fitzgerald still founds the energy to come and share a bit of the evening time with the confrères of the Services and a few others. This shows how simple and fraternal Michael is with his “family”. 

On Sunday, the new Cardinals were concelebrating with the Pope the morning mass on St. Peter’s Square for the big celebration inaugurating the Synod of Bishops for the Pan-Amazon Region.

At one o’clock in the afternoon, all the ceremonies and liturgies were finished. It was then time for celebration. In his congratulating speech, Father Stan Lubungo, superior general, commented on the “Coincidence” of this honour given to Michael but also to all of us and remembering the beatification of our 4 confreres martyred in Algeria and the proclamation of an extraordinary missionary month this October, all occurring within our Jubilee Year, he preferred speaking of a “wink” of God… as we are harvesting “Grace Upon Grace”!

ICMA-IC Formation on protection

Session sur la protection des mineurs et des personnes vulnérables

From 17-24 September 2019, our confrère Stéphane Joulain gave at the Catholic Missionary Institute of Abidjan (ICMA) a final training session on the protection of minors and the prevention of sexual abuse. This session had 34 participants, students from the last years of formation of ICMA’s partner or founding institutes, but also nuns and other lay people. Also participating, members of the new Centre for the Protection of Minors and Vulnerable Persons (CPM-PV) of ICMA. This Centre was inaugurated this year and will offer training and awareness in the parishes and dioceses of Ivory Coast. The director of this new centre, Sr. Solange Sia, co-hosted the session with our confrere. Members of this new centre also include two other Missionaries from Africa, Father François-Xavier Bigeziki as psychotherapist and trainer, and Father Bonaventure Mashata as a resource person. Starting next academic year, the session will be offered by the CPM-PV team and ICMA trainers. Good luck to them all. Here are some pictures of the presentation of the certificates that are jointly offered by ICMA and the Centre for the Protection of Children (CCP) of the Gregorian University of Rome.

Seniors’ session 2019

Seniors Session 2019

Due to a scarcity of candidates, only one session was held this year, namely the Seniors’ Session, which took place at the Generalate in September. Below the group photo, you can read the message written by the sessionists at the end of the session. And, at the very bottom of the page, you will find the link to the beautiful homily delivered by our Assistant General Didier Sawadogo.

Please note that in 2020, there will only be a Session for Seniors. It will take place in Rome from 9th to 26th September 2020 in English. So the Transition Session will not take place in 2020.

Getting together after years, decades, for many of us was an attractive aspect of the session. It aroused surprise, wonder, questioning, joy and humour. Brothers found brothers, sisters found sisters, sisters found brothers and vice versa. Our memories were very excited and we had enough to place beacons on the roads of our lives.

Bernard and Helga had prepared the session with know-how, with meticulousness to facilitate and enrich the journey they proposed, taking into account the limits of our ages.

To go on pilgrimage is to seek a goal. What are we targeting at our ages but the ultimate transition from life to Life? But this passage is of the order of mystery… we must only strive to achieve it by walking – together – and each one at his own pace.

A pilgrimage involves a step-by-step movement. Our steps were to discover, to rediscover the face of Jesus, which He has shown us throughout our lives and still today. 

Marvelling at the progress of this revelation: Jesus, Son of the Father, elder brother, who gives us his Spirit to teach us to love, to let us be loved by God, by ourselves and by others… A stage of wonder also for the Missionary Family in which we have long been engaged. A journey nourished by prayer, sustained throughout the days and facilitated by artistic contributions, careful preparation and enriching sharing, guided by the theme of each stage of the pilgrimage. Benefit of common prayer, of the Eucharist lived peacefully, and therefore more deeply, and undoubtedly of times of personal contemplation.

We experienced all this all the more intensely because we were supported by a very valuable family life environment: guaranteed interculturality, an important presence of Africa, an atmosphere of youth alongside the different ages…. But also comfort, cleanliness and order of the house, quality gastronomy, organisation of the many services… and above all the availability, friendliness, openness and humour that each offered to each other. We leave as rejuvenated, “refreshed” and always carrying the Good News.

Thank you to our two Institutes who have thus obtained for us the grace of rejuvenation in Christ and a renewed openness to the life of our missionary family.

Wish of conclusion: “May the old apple trees we have become still produce good apples!

The sessionists

Bernard Ugeux, testimony

Bernard Ugeux, a priest at the service of women victims of rape in the DRC

In Bukavu, Democratic Republic of Congo, Father Bernard Ugeux, Missionary of Africa, devotes part of his time to helping women victims of rape. Testimony.

“If you want to destroy a society destroy women, it is they who transmit traditions, who are the unifying force of the family, who protect the children…”

Bernard Ugeux is a priest, of the community of Missionaries of Africa, also called White Fathers. For the past ten years, he has lived in Bukavu, where he devotes much of his time to welcoming, accompanying and reintegrating women survivors of conflict in Eastern DRC. Women who have often been kidnapped, raped and mutilated by armed gangs. Bukavu is also where Dr. Denis Mukwege, a gynaecologist who treats women who have been raped, who received the Nobel Peace Prize, and with whom Bernard Ugeux is linked, practices.

RAPE, A WEAPON OF WAR

Why are there people who have a good life and others we think it is not possible for people to experience such things? “I have to live with this question mark,” says Bernard Ugeux. For him, evil is not even in the order of mystery but in the order of enigma. “You have to let God be God, I won’t have the answer, I see that Jesus doesn’t give an explanation, he gives an answer: compassion, indignation, love, justice.”

During conflicts, rape is intended to destroy, it is a real strategy, we even talk about a weapon of war. “After that people are completely upset, the social fabric, culture, religion, etc. are destroyed.” It may be done by militias, a village is surrounded at night, women are raped in front of children and husbands who are forced to attend the scene. Girls are taken away as sex slaves.

HOW TO HELP WOMEN VICTIMS OF RAPE?

“The first question for all the victims is, will anyone believe me?” So, what Father Ugeux does is to listen to them, and to listen to them “in a way that makes them hear that I believe in what they say”. Then have them think that “despite all the negative feelings they have about themselves, they are still valuable”. Despite their “feeling of guilt, of defilement, of having lost their dignity, of no longer having a place in society”. Some are rejected by their families or husbands.

Father Ugeux is not a doctor nor a psychologist. But he knows Africa well and has a long experience of spiritual accompaniment. What he finds is that the women who come to him “seek less to be complained or comforted than to find a place in society”. The Nyota centre, which he runs, welcomes 250 young girls during the day. For three years they learn a trade. And little by little, “we see them regain their autonomy and their joie de vivre, their reasons for existing”. This is thanks to the network of friends of the White Fathers, who send money. Without them, he could not do “anything”.

HOW TO BELIEVE IN GOD AFTER THAT?

Since he was 11 years old, Bernard Ugeux has had “Africa at heart”: ever since a Congolese bishop came to testify in the Jesuit school where he was studying. “When I graduated from high school I hesitated between doctor and priest, finally I turned to the White Fathers and the medical dimension always accompanied me.” His struggle is similar to Jacob’s, in the Bible, a struggle against the mystery of evil, against himself. He says, “Faith, at times, is a decision.”

What keeps him going? Prayer, every morning he devotes 45 minutes to the adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. In the evening he says to God, “You are the Saviour, not me.” What also helps him is to live in community with six other White Fathers. And to see “people who are resurrecting”. For example, during the women’s festival on March 8, which is “very important in the centre”, during the traditional fashion show, “you have to see these girls marching with pride, that’s what keeps you going”. Impressed by the “resilience capacity” of women in Africa, he still keeps “deep down this anger of seeing how badly governments work and authorities abuse”.

Bp. Michael Fitzgerald… in La Croix International

Cardinal-designate Michael Fitzgerald, a man devoted to dialogue

Anne-Bénédicte Hoffner

Pope Francis shows us how to support those involved in Muslim-Christian dialogue, says the former apostolic nuncio to Egypt who is to be made a cardinal Oct. 5

In his office in Egypt. Arnaud du Boistesselin/Ciric

Cardinal-designate Michael Fitzgerald, former apostolic nuncio to Egypt who at one time was also president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, ambles through the living room of his rectory in Liverpool, northwestern England and produces two letters of congratulations.

He has a chuckle: “The message is very kind but there is a mistake,” he says. “I am not the second English cardinal, I am British. You won’t find a drop of English blood in my veins!”

In any case, it is not for his nationality or his episcopal seat that Pope Francis asked this priest of the Society of Missionaries of Africa (White Fathers) to join the circle of his closest advisors.
“It is an act of justice,” the pope replied to a journalist who was asking him on the flight back to Rome from Madagascar in early September.

“I have never wanted or sought honors,” says Cardinal-designate Fitzgerald. “And then, at 82, will I really advise the pope?”

He looks at the interpretations he reads here and there dispassionately: is it a question of the pope “strengthening his team”, with one eye on the election of his successor?

Or rather, through his appointment, as well as that of the current President of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, Bishop Miguel Ayuso Guixot, and the Archbishop of Rabat, Bishop Cristobal Lopez Romero, is it a desire to place interreligious dialogue at the heart of the service of the Church and the Gospel?

Archbishop Fitzgerald himself is careful not to make a decision and prefers to speak of “recognition.”
In fact, he perfectly embodies these new Francis-style cardinals, at the opposite end of the spectrum from the “princes of the Church.”

A ‘White Father’ from a young age

From the permission obtained from his parents, both Irish, to let him join the minor seminary of the White Fathers in Scot land at the age of 12, to his appointment in 2002 as head of the dicastery in charge of interreligious dialogue, he considers each of his appointments in Rome, Uganda and Sudan as a coincidence… or act of providence.

All of them have oriented him a little more toward the study of Islam and meeting Muslims. Each time, he bowed to the will of his superiors… and is surprised that we are surprised.

“It’s part of our oath of obedience: you can always refuse, but you need good reasons to do it,” he says.
He directed the Pontifical Institute for Arab Studies and Islamology (Pisai), founded by the White Fathers from 1972 to 1978 and had a number of students, including Brother Christ ian de Chergé, the future Prior of Tibhirine.

Still “without having sought it out”, he accepted in 1987 the post of secretary of what is still called the “Secretariat for non-Christians”.

John Paul II, anxious to develop relations between believers, later transformed it into a Pontifical Council. For 15 years, he faithfully assisted Nigerian Cardinal Francis Arinze in his efforts to put dialogue at the service of peace, before one day learning of his appointment as president of this dicastery.

The election of Joseph Ratzinger, under the name of Benedict XVI, in 2005, marked a turning point in his career. The new pope’s lack of interest in bringing religions closer together is well documented.

The following year, the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue was entrusted to Cardinal Paul Poupard, already in charge of culture, with Archbishop Fitzgerald being appointed nuncio in Egypt.

“Perhaps the intention was to merge interreligious dialogue into intercultural dialogue?” he wonders out loud, remaining faithful to his extreme discretion on the subject.

A few months later, after a speech in Regensburg, Germany, which caused a vigorous uproar in the Muslim world, Benedict XVI reversed his position and restored his independence to the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, placing at its head a seasoned diplomat, Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran.

From Jerusalem, where he retired seven years ago, Cardinal-designate Michael Fitzgerald received some signs of Pope Francis’ affection for him: he was entrusted with “a mission in Lebanon.”

“But I didn’t think I would be created a cardinal during Benedict XVI’s lifetime,” he acknowledges.

Surprisingly, despite the years that have passed, we can feel some Roman reflexes, when he is surprised, for example, by these appointments that “do not respect tradition.”

“I will not force the next pope to live in Sainte-Marthe,” he also announces with a smile on his face, referring to Pope Francis’ choice to renounce the papal apartments.

Outside the talk of schisms

In the meantime, and while Vatican rumors swirls about “schism” and sexual scandals, Cardinal-designate Fitzgerald is pleased to be “outside all this.”

His concern today is very different, as he has just returned to his native England, more than 50 years after leaving it. Together with three priests from his institute, he took over an almost abandoned parish in Liverpool.

In agreement with the diocese, the European province of the White Fat hers wanted this “integration” in England to have a double mission: the service of migrants and dialogue with Muslims.

They must therefore find a way to establish contact with the inhabitants: Chinatown on one side and the “Baltic triangle” on the other, named after the former sailors who used to land there.

“In the past, Liverpool was best known for the Beatles. Today, it seems that its main religion is football,” says Fitzgerald who is to be made a cardinal on Oct. 5, buying his bread in front of a huge graffiti representing the coach of the Liverpool Football Club, winner of the Champions League last season.

He also said he was ready to “give support” to the actors of Islamic-Christian dialogue in the United Kingdom.

It is on this lifelong struggle that he is most vocal: “In Al-Azhar, Abu Dhabi or Jerusalem, Pope Francis shows us how to do it: through direct contact and without being locked in prescriptions or barriers,” he exclaimed. “He’s a free man, and we need free men!”

When it comes to electing a successor to the Bishop of Rome one day, the soon-to-be Cardinal Fitzgerald, because he is over 80 years old, will not vote. But he will participate “in the discussions” and “will be happy to support the direction taken by Francis.”