News archive

Tizi Ouzou, my hometown

In this interview about the life of our confrere Blessed Charles Deckers (M.Afr.), his former student, Salah Selloum shares about the witness of life of our confrere in Tizi Ouzou, Algeria as contained in his book: “Tizi Ouzou, ma ville natale.”

Michel Picquet R.I.P.

Society of the Missionaries of Africa

Father Yvo Wellens, Provincial Delegate of the sector of Belgium,
informs you of the return to the Lord of Father

Michel Picquet

on Monday, 19th February 2024 in Brussels (Belgium)
at the age of 95 years, of which 70 years of missionary life
in Tanzania, Israel, and Belgium.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

Download here the announcement of Father Michel Picquet’s death

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Lenten Recollection: Sin and Conversion

Lenten Recollection: Sin and Conversion, (March 2024)

Lenten-Recollection-PEP-March-2024

He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth

As it is written in the prophecy of Isaiah: “He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth; like a lamb that is led to the slaughter, and like a sheep that before its shearers is silent, so he did not open his mouth” (Is 53:7 – NRSV). We can see from this prophecy that violence and insecurity are making the headlines. This is because of the various conflicts and wars in several countries. Violence and insecurity are becoming more and more a part of our daily lives, and we fear that they will become second nature, i.e. seen as normal.

So, what do we mean by violence and insecurity? Violence may be understood as the intentional use of physical force or threats against others, groups or a community. In other words, it involves coercion and domination and can cause human and material damage. Violence and insecurity can affect not only physical health but also have psychological consequences, paving the way for possible self-destruction, isolation and depression in victims. They supplant the love and affection humans should have for each other, not to mention undermining efforts to achieve peace and social cohesion in communities. This shows that violence can take different forms.

What types of violence and what are the remedies?

Violence can be psychological, verbal, economic and physical. It can also occur in the family, public spaces and institutions such as schools. Despite all this, we remain animated by an unshakeable hope for an eventual return of love and peace in communities if appropriate awareness-raising campaigns on the consequences of violence and insecurity are carried out. In particular, we are considering setting up awareness-raising programmes for the youth to eradicate any behaviour and social norms that encourage and facilitate this phenomenon. What’s more, setting up appropriate structures can help victims in the event of violence. In other words, there should be follow-up and support for the victims of violence in the communities while providing appropriate security in these areas. It is also important to identify ways of helping young people living in economically or socially disadvantaged conditions. Our experience here in Nigeria has shown that many young people lack the necessities of life. This is an open door to terrorism since money can be used as bait to recruit these young people for terrorism.

My personal experience

Some of you will know that I had the misfortune, along with another confrere, to live through the terrible experience of being kidnapped for three solid weeks. But long before that, we as a community were committed to promoting social cohesion through good neighbourliness and setting up empowerment projects for young people. We also trained the youths to fight against incivism, violence and insecurity in our community. We dared to do all this because we noticed that the population was being left to fend for itself. Everyone had to fight for survival. This situation has led to a lot of violence and insecurity in the area. While we can’t justify violence or insecurity, we recognise that certain situations can cause much damage.

Violence and insecurity are evils that must be eradicated, because they damage the integrity of others. Despite what has happened to us, we remain hopeful for a better tomorrow when people will understand that they are there because the other is there; we all need each other. And our faith tells us that for God, nothing is lost. Nothing is ever too late for God, and nothing is impossible for Him.

By: Paul Sanogo (M.Afr.)

 

Dieudonné Kitumbule R.I.P.

Society of the Missionaries of Africa

Father Arsène Kapya, Provincial of Central Africa,
informs you of the return to the Lord of Father

Dieudonné Kitumbule

on Saturday, 17th February 2024 in Nairobi (Kenya)
at the age of 47 years, of which 16 years of missionary life
in Burkina Faso, Mali and DR Congo.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

Download here the announcement of Father Dieudonné Kitumbule’s death

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William Moroney R.I.P.

Society of the Missionaries of Africa

Father Réal Doucet, Provincial of the Americas,
informs you of the return to the Lord of Father

William Moroney

on Saturday, 17th February 2024 in Nairobi (Kenya)
at the age of 89 years, of which 63 years of missionary life
in Tanzania, USA, France and Kenya.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

Download here the announcement of Father William Moroney’s death

(more…)

Yvon Lavoie R.I.P.

Society of the Missionaries of Africa

Father Réal Doucet, Provincial of the Americas,
informs you of the return to the Lord of Father

Yvon Lavoie

on Wednesday, 14th February 2024 in Québec (Canada)
at the age of 85 years, of which 60 years of missionary life
in Italy, Uganda and Canada.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

Download here the announcement of Father Yvon Lavoie’s death

(more…)

Justo Lacunza Balda R.I.P.

Society of the Missionaries of Africa

Father Manuel Osa, Provincial Delegate of the sector of Spain,
informs you of the return to the Lord of Father

Justo Lacunza Balda

on Monday, 12th February 2024 in Pamplona (Spain)
at the age of 79 years, of which 55 years of missionary life
in Tanzania, Italy and Spain.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

Download here the announcement of Father Justo Lacunza Balda’s death

(more…)

Lent, a Way to Freedom?

Do you like Lent? Well, I don’t. At least not spontaneously. Having to listen to talks about conversion, penance, fasting, questioning my lifestyle, material sharing, and with all that purple in the liturgy, so sad, for 40 days. It doesn’t really appeal to me, and I could do without it.

However, if I pause and reflect momentarily, I will be forced to admit that I need it. We’ve made the most of the festive season, we’re back to the routine of ordinary time (which, we’re told, must be lived “in an extraordinary way”!), and the little routines have started to fall back into place, with the ever-present risk of mediocrity and lack of creativity.

So, let’s move on. Let’s get going! We’ve been hearing more lately about the journey ahead. Pope Francis, for example, in his Lenten letter this year, speaks of crossing the desert and of freedom. Recently, in his invitation to us to prepare for the Jubilee Year of 2025, the theme he proposed is: “Pilgrims in Hope”. So, we need to keep moving, like pilgrims on a journey. Interspersed throughout all this is the synodal journey we started many months ago, between two celebrations, and we’re still on the move. It’s not easy to establish yourself when you’re a Christian or a missionary in our Catholic Church. Here, I’ll focus on the first two propositions.

God leads us to freedom through the desert

This is the title of Pope Francis’ Lenten letter. It begins with a quotation from Exodus (20:2): “I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery”. The project is clear: our Lent is presented as a time of desert and freedom. The Pope adds: “When our God reveals himself, he communicates freedom”. From the outset, he insists on what prevents us from freeing ourselves: our attachment to slavery. In the desert, God educates his people and vigorously calls them to freedom; this was the long journey during the Exodus when the people were resistant on several occasions. 

Today, however, we too are attached to constraining bonds which we must abandon and which are often the consequence of a lack of hope. We know the desert is a place of temptation and divine seduction (Hosea 2:16-17). Lent is the season of grace in which the desert becomes once more the place of our first love, where the Lord reminds us of the very thing that once set us on this journey: that unforgettable encounter with his son. Where is your treasure?

To be concrete,” says the Pope, “we must break free from Pharaoh’s domination. He reminds us of the questions raised in Lampedusa about migrants: “Where are you?” (Gn 3:9) and “Where is your brother?” (Gn 4:9). He denounces the culture of indifference.

First, we must recognise that we live in a model of growth that divides and robs us of a future, polluting creation and our souls. Do I want a new world? Am I ready to free myself of my compromises? Our lack of hope is an obstacle to our dreams, a regret for slavery that paralyses. He believes this is why we cannot overcome global inequalities and conflicts. 

We must look our idols in the face, our desire to be recognised, valued, and dominate others. We become attached to idols like money, our projects, our ideas, our goals, our position, our traditions and sometimes certain people. And in the end, this sets us against each other. Fortunately, there are the poor in spirit who are open and ready to move forward, “a silent force of good that heals and sustains the world”- those who, like the God of Moses, see and hear the cries of people in bondage.

Lent is a time to act; in this special season, to act also means to pause, to pause in prayer to receive the word of God, to pause in action, like the Samaritan in the presence of a wounded brother: love of God and love of neighbour are inseparable.

Here again, the Pope challenges us. Since we’re on a synodal path, Lent should be a time for communitarian decisions, of decisions, small and large, that are countercurrent, capable of altering the daily lives of individuals and entire neighbourhoods. He even speaks of questioning our lifestyles: our buying habits, care for creation, and inclusion of the unnoticed and despised. He invites every community to re-examine its priorities. And as if by chance, I discovered his letter after reading the latest letter from our General Council (on the state of our finances), questioning our priorities and lifestyle.

To the extent that this Lent becomes a time of conversion, a stranded humanity will experience a burst of creativity: the dawn of a new hope. Here, the Pope reiterates his appeal to the young people during the World Youth Day in Lisbon in August 2023: “Keep seeking and be ready to take risks. At this moment in time, the challenges are enormous, the groans painful. We are experiencing a third World War fought piecemeal”. But, he adds, don’t live this time as an agony, but as a birth process.

Pilgrims of hope

This is the theme chosen by the Pope for the Jubilee Year 2025, strongly emphasising reconciliation. We just heard him tell us that our discouragement often stems from a lack of hope. Elsewhere, he even speaks of the weariness of hope, referring to people, particularly consecrated people, who no longer understand why they are so exhausted in a world of rapid change.

What can we retain from this jubilee theme for our Lenten journey?

This jubilee is also part of the synodal process.

Indeed, it’s all about pilgrimages and journeys. For Pope Francis, a Christian is a pilgrim who walks with others, searching for God’s will.

A pilgrimage is a journey, a people on the move. A Christian – let alone a consecrated person – does not establish himself in the comfort of the world. Jesus gave us the example of an itinerant life. He had no fixed abode, sometimes residing in the house of Simon and Andrew in Capernaum. The rest of the time, he travelled through villages and towns to proclaim the Good News.

What’s more, Jesus always respected the Jewish tradition of going on pilgrimage. As a child, at Passover, he went on a pilgrimage with his parents from Galilee to the temple in Jerusalem. The Gospel recounts how, at the age of 12, he remained in the temple while his parents were already on their way home. He stayed to deepen his understanding of his heavenly Father. This shows us that Jesus was not only looking for men and women but also looking for God, regularly taking time out to spend one-on-one time with his Father to be inspired about his mission.

One useful question we can ask ourselves as missionaries: do I see my life here on earth as a pilgrimage? For example, the life pilgrimage from birth to death. Or the journey of my faith and my commitment as a missionary, where from the beginning of my formation, from one stage to the next, I draw closer to the Lord and seek to belong to him fully. Or the pilgrimage of my apostolate takes me out of the comfort of my presbytery or house of formation to constantly set out to meet the people entrusted to my care. Speaking of synodality, Pope Francis says the encounter is “a time to turn towards the other person’s face and words, to meet them face to face, to allow ourselves to be touched by the questions of the sisters and brothers, to help each other so that the diversity of charisms, vocations and ministries may enrich us. As we all know, every encounter requires openness, courage and a willingness to let ourselves be challenged by the other’s face and story” (Homily, October 10, 2021, Vatican City).

In the dynamic of synodality, pilgrimage cannot be separated from encounter and thus becomes a path of hope and peace. The Lenten journey is a journey of liberation.

We are all invited to be pilgrims of hope during this Lenten season.

Pope Francis has often spoken of hope, urging us to look afresh at our existence, especially now that it is being subjected to the many trials of our world, and to look at it with the eyes of Jesus, “the author of hope”. He helps us overcome these difficult days, “confident that the darkness will be transformed into light “.

Indeed, it seems to me that when we have so many reasons to be pessimistic and so few signs of hope around us, it is in the certainty that the Lord accompanies us and will have the last word that we draw the strength and courage to continue to commit ourselves to our apostolates. Hope is a way of looking at reality with different eyes. This is what the parables of the mustard seed and the leaven in the dough tell us. Suppose we limit ourselves to media information, watching the news on TV or our smartphones, for example, these days. In that case, we are struck by the accumulation of ruins in the Holy Land, in Gaza, in Ukraine and in all the wars that continue in Africa. But if we consider in faith all the gestures of love, solidarity and sharing among our brothers and sisters, especially the poor, the efforts of Christians and consecrated persons to fight for greater justice and peace, and the confidence of all those young people in formation in our congregations who believe that a better future is possible, then our hope is nourished.

It’s up to us…

Whether we choose the image of the Exodus through the desert to free ourselves from slavery or that of the pilgrim of hope who, wherever he goes, shows people how much God loves them, the question for us at the start of Lent is: “Without getting dispersed in a flood of good but utopian resolutions that I won’t keep, is there any area of my life that I feel is a place of stagnation, fatigue, rumination, diminishing hope and the quality of my love?”. Pope Francis said that to act in Lent is also to pause. So, whether it’s a personal commitment or a community recollection (where we’re not afraid to talk frankly about the latest letter from the General Council), we must set ourselves a realistic and generous goal if we don’t want to be surprised on Palm Sunday morning when we exclaim: “Ah, is it Holy Week already?”.

Happy and fruitful Lent to all….

By: Bernard Ugeux (M.Afr.)

Pictures of the way of the Cross at St Francis Parish, Lilongwe, Malawi (2022)

General Council’s Fuori Roma in Castelfranco Veneto

The General Council met from 28th January to 3rd February for an intensive working session away from its usual Roman surroundings. This time, we were warmly welcomed by the Missionaries of Africa community in Castelfranco Veneto for our Fuori Roma (Outside Rome), and each day revolved around two working sessions, one in the morning and the other in the afternoon.

Wednesday 31st January saw a welcome break in our busy programme. Accompanied by our confrere Luigi Lazzarato and permanent deacon Mario, we travelled to Schio to pay homage to Saint Josephine Bakhita. Saint Bakhita, once a slave in Sudan, found her way to freedom and faith and became a nun in the Congregation of the Canossian Daughters of Charity in Italy. We started our pilgrimage with a time of personal prayer at the saint’s tomb. Angela Sartori, fdcc, a former missionary in the Congo, was kind enough to guide us through the chapel, the museum and the saint’s bedroom. It was much more than a simple visit. It was a precious opportunity to deepen our knowledge of the miraculous life of the saint. Sister Angela’s fervent words transformed the experience into authentic catechesis. We were moved by Bakhita’s stories and her unshakeable devotion to God despite her trials. Saint Bakhita said: ” I never despaired when I was a slave, even in the depths of discouragement and sadness, because I felt a mysterious force within me that sustained me. I didn’t die because the good Lord had destined me for “better things”. And I finally came to know the God I had always felt in my heart since I was a little girl, without knowing who he was”. Guided by faith and the desire to learn from her example, we offered prayers for our personal needs and our missionary Society as a whole. As a Society dedicated to proclaiming the Gospel and promoting justice and peace, we found in Saint Bakhita a model of strength, resilience and compassion. We brought relics of Saint Josephine Bakhita from Schio to the Generalate. These relics, imbued with her holiness and blessing, will constantly remind us of her presence.

Thursday, 1st February, was dedicated by the Missionaries of Africa community in Castelfranco Veneto for the celebration of the anniversaries of the priestly ordination of our dear confreres Fausto Guazzati, Luigi Lazzarato, Giancarlo Pirazzo and Alberto Rovelli as a special day of thanksgiving and gratitude to the Lord for their missionary life.

The evening of Friday, 2nd February, the last day of our Fuori Roma in Castelfranco Veneto, was marked by a celebration with local religious men and women to honour the day of prayer for consecrated life. This particular day, observed on the Solemnity of the Presentation of the Lord, was an opportunity to reflect on the gift of consecrated life to God and to renew our commitment. After Mass in the cathedral, we joined the religious men and women of Castelfranco Veneto for a fraternal meal. The sisters of the Disciples of the Gospel generously opened their doors to welcome us, thus creating a space for communion and sharing where we strengthened our bonds of fraternity. We shared a meal, smiles and prayers, creating precious memories that will stay with us long after we leave Castelfranco Veneto.

We are grateful to our confreres from Castelfranco Veneto for their warm welcome and generosity, and we pray that the fraternal bond we shared will continue to unite us in prayer and missionary service to God and our brothers and sisters.

By: Pawel Hulecki (M. Afr.) General Assistant