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Chapter communication – 21st May 2022

Chapter Communication - 21 May 2022

Towards the end of the first week, the stage of listening to each other continues through the various reports. Today, it was about the PAC and the Generalate.

PAC
Emmanuel Ngona

Mission and promotion of income generating projects.

After a brief description of the province, its sectors and communities, and the growing number of missionaries from the RDC, Fr Ngona shared the missionary objectives of the province, and then explained the self-financing of the PAC through income-generating projects.

The fundraising projects are not only the idea of the Missionaries of Africa, but also of SECAM. These projects remain in line with our charism and mission, they must also respond to real needs of the population. PAC’s commitment was illustrated mainly by two major projects, Le Georges Defour in Ruzizi and CML in Kigali. These two projects required a good investment. They offer various services: a chapel, a multi-purpose hall, shops, meeting places, offices, space for guests, a restaurant, etc. Their success is growing and revenues are increasing. Other large-scale projects have been carried out, such as in Kisenso (Kinshasa) with a water project for the parish and the population, and at the new house in Kigali. Three schools were built in the province.

Smaller projects were carried out at the local level, with small shops, agricultural projects, etc. There was a session for parish priests, introducing them to the importance and development of such projects. These projects need good stewardship. Let us not forget that it is about mission and not about money.

GENERAL HOUSE
Martin Grenier and Odon Kipili

Portal of the Church of Africa in Rome.

The Generalate is well known to many confreres as the residence of the General Council and the team that supports it, and of the student confreres. Many sessions are held there for our confreres and MSOLA and it is already a meeting place for many Africans in Rome. Its renovation has raised the concern to improve its influence in Rome and in the missionary world.

With time, several suggestions were expressed, among them the idea that the Generalate should become the portal of the Church in Africa. The collection and diffusion of news from Africa and its Church, the planning of conferences with themes relevant to Africa, the holding of sessions dealing with African realities, press conferences, the use of the chapter hall, the possibility of a small museum. The project corresponds to our missionary charism. The President of SECAM, Card. Philippe Ouedraogo, supports it. The project would allow the Generalate to reach out to the African peripheries and to inform the public. There are, of course, many details to foresee, people to be contacted and confreres to be appointed to develop and implement the project.

PLENARY ASSEMBLY

The six teams brought the fruit of their discussions to the first plenary meeting of the Chapter. They were asked to share three key themes from the different reports heard so far. The purpose of this exercise is to record the main emerging subjects. For instance inter-religious dialogue, mission outside Africa, internationality, interculturality , finances. There is no need to panic if you do not see your main suggestions as the chapter is at the end of its first week.

Chapter Communication – 20th May 2022

Chapter Communication - 20 May 2022

The capitulants get used to the chapter hall, the use of the microphones, and the schedule. The presentation of the different provinces is taking place.

For the chapter, it was requested that the provinces be described in terms of a particular aspect of the mission and of our society, expressing strengths, weaknesses, challenges and threats. This way of proceeding allows to have in mind the whole society and to widen the scope of the discussion from the beginning of the exchanges.

 WEST AFRICA PROVINCE
Luc Kola

The West Africa Province offered us a description of the mission
in a context of insecurity and violence.

New realities are emerging: violence, rural exodus, displacement of populations, religious extremism, deficient education and health services. People live in fear.

The confreres remember the courage of the first missionaries who were killed crossing the Sahara. Moreover, they receive valour by considering our vocation, charisma and esprit de corps. Prayer remains a source of fidelity and courage. The apostolate continues with various activities, such as inculturation and IFIC and the Senufo project. In the context of insecurity, inter-religious dialogue, Justice and Peace take on a central role as well as the pastoral care of refugees. As travel in our missions is increasingly difficult due to the covid and insecurity, the media has played an important role in maintaining contact with the people and in evangelisation.

The situation of insecurity over which we have no control has repercussions among the confreres at both personal and community level. As the mission is more dangerous, many confreres experience concern, fear and tension. Accompanying and supporting them is difficult and requires skills and resources. Sometimes some hesitate before accepting appointments in the province and within the province. It is suggested that houses of formation prepare young people for mission in such context.

Despite all this, our call to mission remains and missionaries are committed to it. The Lord has promised us that he will be with us to the end.

EAST AFRICA PROVINCE
Aloysius Ssekamatte

Mission in the context of inculturation.

The presentation began by mentioning several commitments of the province, the refugees in South Sudan and Uganda, the houses of formation in its territory, missionary and vocational animation and the progress of the new provincial house in Nairobi. Christian-Muslim dialogue remains a priority and we receive requests for involvement in this area.

Community life is seen as evangelical witness. Our communities are changing as African cultures differ from each other and from the local culture of their mission. These differences can become an asset for apostolic witness.

Our international and intercultural communities generate certain difficulties. Firstly, governments limit us in terms of visas. We find that it is not uncommon to find confreres of the same nationality in the same mission station. We also see interpersonal conflicts and community instability that affect long-term commitment, contact with people and language learning. Circumstances can lead to a confrere having too much responsibility, as a parish priest, bursar, etc. The understanding of the evangelical counsels needs renewal. Obedience sometimes becomes problematic. Individualism, sense of entitlement, personal interests destroy community cohesion. Many confreres experience health problems soon after ordination.

SOUTH AFRICAN PROVINCE
Felix Phiri

Mission in the context of internationality
especially for governance and appointment of provincials.

There is a concern in society about the appointment of major superiors and provincials in particular. There seems to be a desire that the provincial should be of the nationality of one of the countries of the province. Is this the way of the Missionaries of Africa?

A look at our past shows us that the large national group was once French. Gradually, the evolution led the society to an internationality according to the views of our founder and international life was promoted both at the level of our communities and at the level of major superiors. At present we are also living a moment of transition with fundamental elements:

    • The feeling of belonging to our country of origin. How should we live it?
    • In the past: the system of provinces in Europe and America that sent personnel and resources and offered communities largely of one nationality. The regions received missionaries who lived in international communities.
    • Now, we have only provinces and all provinces send and receive personnel and resources. Therefore, the provinces now receive missionaries appointed to the province for the missionary apostolate, missionaries on leave or sick, other “nationals” appointed for work in the province.
    • Thus, the interplay of nationalities is transformed. Nationals living in their province of origin as well as those living in other circumscriptions wish to have a say in the consultation and appointment of major superiors.
    • We must keep our international and intercultural character. Therein lies the good of our society and mission. Misunderstood nationalism should not interfere in appointments.

PROVINCE OF EUROPE
Gérard Chabanon

The Province of Europe describes its Mission outside Africa.

This mission comprises six main centres, Roquetas, Liverpool, Marseille, Toulouse, Berlin and Karlsruhe, which are places to live our missionary charism in areas where we respond in various ways to a real need. They are oriented in the line of Pope Francis, fraternity and solidarity. Their activities are similar and it is impossible to describe them all here.

There is a pastoral component: traditional pastoral work with Catholic populations among immigrants.

There is a dialogue component, with Muslims and Christians of various Churches, especially in the dialogue in everyday life, including collaboration with other religious groups and the various civil authorities. Our impact is valuable here.

There is also a social component: approaching African migrants, families, going to working-class neighbourhoods, visiting prisoners, forming different associations and support groups for women, students, some of whom are now African students from Ukraine (Germany), commitment against human trafficking, help for drug addicts.

Many of these activities would not work without the help and competence of lay people.

These projects bring us into contact with the local churches and civil authorities. The missionaries of Africa are committed to these projects and develop them with the concern of transmitting our missionary spirit to our collaborators and the people we meet.

The idea of a Mediterranean synod is emerging.

PROVINCE OF THE AMERICAS
Réal Doucet

The province of the Americas shows us
another image of the mission outside Africa.

It now has three sectors, United States, Mexico and Canada. Brazil is closed when the administrative procedures are completed. There is a resumption of candidates in Mexico with some young men in the house of formation. The most active colleagues in the US are not American. The Afrika Centre, whose mission was to promote the integration of Africans into Montreal society, is closed for the moment because of Covid.

Father Barthélemy Bazemo described the AFJN, the activities of Justice and Peace, and the advocacy work with the White House authorities in support of Africa. AFJN is a place where many African personalities can meet. Several African bishops use its services. There are positive fruits for the development and peace in Africa. “With Washington, we are present where it counts.

The AMS offers good possibilities for missionaries in Africa in the field of missionary and vocational animation, formation and finances. Contacts with young people are also possible. There is a future for the society.

SOA
Paul Johnston

Soa is a missionary entity outside Africa.

In Asia we are present in two countries, India and the Philippines, and we hope to enter Vietnam. Mission/vocation promotion and formation take precedence. There is a slowdown in animation now because of the confinement, which has prevented animators from visiting possible candidates.

The missionaries of Africa are present in the working class areas and prioritise contact with young people. They go to the peripheries a lot. They are also involved with migrants. Inter-religious dialogue is also part of the activities, living in an environment with a low percentage of Christians. Contacts with religious congregations are good.

SOA contributes to the internationality and interculturality of the Missionary Society of Africa.

Some Indian bishops think that our vocation promotion is reducing diocesan vocations. Obtaining Indian visas has become difficult. For some time now, many people have been asking about religious freedom in India.

Aldo Giannasi R.I.P.

Society of the Missionaries of Africa

Father Gaetano Cazzola, Provincial Delegate of the sector of Italy,
informs you of the return to the Lord of Father

Aldo Giannasi

on Thursday, 19th May 2022 in Modena (Italy)
at the age of 86 years, of which 65 years of missionary life
in Mali,  Algeria and Italy.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

Download here the announcement of Father Aldo Giannasi’s death

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Chapter communication – 19th May 2022

Chapter Communication - 19 May 2022

The presentation of reports is the first part of the chapter. So today we have heard four of these reports: General Treasurer, the provinces of the Maghreb, Ethiopia / Near East and Ghana / Nigeria. I would like to offer you some highlights from these reports.

GENERAL TREASURER’S OFFICE

John Itaru

Father Itaru shared with us some figures of course. However, he wanted to present to us the major trends, difficulties and challenges of the financial state of our missionary society. It is good to remember that we are talking about the finances of our whole missionary society.

Among the trends, he pointed out that ordinary expenses have exceeded ordinary income for several years. This fact requires the General Bursar to draw resources from investments. This custom is not healthy in the long run. Budgeting helps to limit expenditures. In addition, the proportion of ordinary expenses decreases in relation to extraordinary expenses. We see the creation of good self-financing projects in some parishes and provinces.  The pensions of elderly confreres are decreasing.

Some proposals are sometimes expressed and it is difficult to put them into practice. For example, investments in Africa attract us but we need to remember that African economies are fragile. Moreover, there is violence and wars that disrupt financial services. It is becoming increasingly difficult to transfer money from one country to another, especially in Africa.

In fact, we did not just listen to endless numbers, but perceptions of some of our mentalities and behaviours that can undermine our financial resources, and require community and personal conversions. Many take our financial situation for granted, forgetting how quickly finances can become fragile. Some have unreasonable expectations; others believe they have some sort of entitlement. We are invited to examine our simple lifestyle practices and get down working to generate income and to better manage expenses.

Provincial and sector bursar training sessions are bearing fruit. We recommend that we address the topic of our finances in the formation houses. 

The financial state of our society is stable. There is no need to panic but to remain alert and prudent to better manage it and serve Africa and use our resources and patrimony in the long run.

ETHIOPIA AND THE NEAR EAST

Bonaventure Bwanakweri

Ecumenism, formation, St. Anne’s are at the centre of our mission in Jerusalem and Ethiopia. EPO has a strong presence of Christianity, Islam and Judaism. It is important to create bridges between people.  The confreres dedicate themselves to the population through social centres that become places of contact and service. Among the difficulties we encounter is the reality of the war, whether muted or in waiting or de facto. The languages are difficult to master for us. Christians are the minority. There is a need to revive our missionary spirit, because some confreres do not seem to be very convinced of the need for ecumenism.

GHANA / NIGERIA

John Aserbire

The mission in Ghana-Nigeria is focused on first evangelization. The presence of syncretism and “mushroom” and “successful” churches complicates our approach to the people, even though people usually trust Catholic priests and leaders. Many leave the Catholic Church to join these religious movements. It would be wise to ask ourselves whether our approach is sound, given the number of people who leave the Catholic Church. Good catechesis is one of our priorities. Catholic outstations are sometimes very small and lack resources. An effort is needed to move forward in the area of inculturation and to start self-financing projects.

African languages are difficult to learn. Moreover, Islamism creates tensions and violence in these two countries and does not facilitate our regular contact with the people.

MAGHREB

Anselme Tarpaga

We had the privilege of a guided tour of our origins in Algeria, the place of our foundation, with our founder, the mention of Missionaries of Africa who left their mark in the field of Islamic-Christian dialogue, the martyrs of Algeria, the jubilee of 150 years of foundation. Dialogue holds the primary place in the apostolate of our confreres in the Maghreb. The incarnation of Jesus constitutes the basis of this dialogue because Jesus became incarnate for all humanity, thus establishing permanent links between God and all humanity.

This dialogue is lived especially in the field of the daily life of the people who welcome us, social dialogue, study centres, collaboration for a development project. Theological dialogue does not receive much emphasis. A word that could summarize the apostolate in the Maghreb: presence, spending time with people, which is different from inactivity.

To last in the mission of presence and dialogue, it is necessary for the missionary to have a good dose of holiness, humility and resilience to overcome the obstacles and remain faithful to the mission. Among the difficulties, we find a lack of stability in our communities. Moreover, some confreres prefer to be appointed elsewhere than in the Maghreb. Our confreres must sometimes overcome and relativize racist behaviours towards them.

The diversity of the origins of the missionaries of Africa in the Maghreb is more marked than in the past.

Chapter communication – 18th May 2022

Chapter Communication - 18 May 2022

The work of the Chapter begins today. On Monday, six working teams were constituted, three French and three in English; the See-Judge-Act method was adopted too.

See: read, listen, and share. It is a matter of taking the pulse of the society, of the mission and of arriving at a global vision. This task is carried out with the different reports and sharing.

Judging: filtering the information and discerning the major orientations.

Acting: the implementation of the decisions and orientations, with the work of the post-chapter assemblies.

The first report to be presented is that of the Superior General. In his approach, the Superior General focuses more on the past six years than on projections for the next six years.  He did not read the report. Rather, he provided a reading  and working grid..

The General Council of the MSOLA addressed a word to the chapter, briefly describing the main orientations during its mandate and the collaboration between our two institutes, without forgetting the suggestions for the next General Council, coming from several members of the MSOLA. Our sisters participated in the Eucharist as well.

In the afternoon, the Superior General spoke mainly on four points:

1/- Six unique years for our Missionary Society:

Significant events have taken place during these six years. There was the celebration of the 150th anniversary of our foundation, the beatification of four confreres martyred in Algeria, the audience with Pope Francis, the plenary council in Kampala, our involvement in the preparation of the Abu Dhabi meeting, the cardinalate of our confrere Michael Fitzgerald. All these events encourage us in our missionary commitment. Moreover, they allow us to connect more intensely with our missionary origins and perceive God’s benevolence towards us.

The General Council initiated new projects for refugees in South Sudan and Uganda, as well as accepting a commitment in some parishes in Europe and North America for an apostolate among the African population.  We experienced a live internet meeting with the three confreres who are involved in the South Sudan project and witnessed their happiness as they shared the challenges they face.

2/- 2016 Chapter Orientations:

The general council encouraged the ministry of Justice and Peace, Encounter and Respect for Creation. It did its best to appoint confreres in the Maghreb. Projects for refugees and migrants were started in and outside Africa. Efforts have been made to support IFIC in Bamako, Pisai. Covid has accelerated our use of technology and media, allowing many online meetings.

The general council regrets that it was not possible to establish a community in Addis Ababa.

3/- Challenges:

Pope Francis inspires us with a new missionary impulse. He does so constantly with important priorities:

  • The Church reaching out to peripheries, on mission, stepping out of its comfort zones. The Church exists for mission.
  • Integrity of creation and care for our common home. Ecology, climate change.
  • The Church reforming itself in depth with transparency, interculturality, respect for differences and synodality, dialogue.

4/- Towards the future, and our chapter 2022:

How do we keep our jubilee flame lit and remain missionaries, prophetic witnesses? With what consequences for our community life, our lifestyle, our finances, the formation of candidates? In the synthesis of the responses, the themes of interculturality, dialogue constantly come up both at the level of community life, missionary apostolate and governance.

The teams continued the reflection.

Chapter communication – 17th May 2022

Chapter Communication - 17 May 2022

A day of recollection in complete silence, led by Dave Sullivan, is scheduled for today. Two conferences are on the program.

STOP, LOOK AND LISTEN :

With texts from Mark’s gospel, 4(3,9,23); 4(14-20); 10(30-37); and Luke 16(19-31); 7 (36-50), Father Sullivan emphasized the need to stop, look and listen as a missionary and spiritual attitude to perceive the Lord’s message about our world and our mission. It is not easy for us to put this attitude into practice, which is crucial for the 2022 Chapter.

There are interferences that prevent us from hearing and understanding, such as inner noises, our own ideas, community and interpersonal conflicts, power conflicts. Sometimes we see other people’s opinions as contrary to our own, instead of seeing them as complementary. The parables used in the conference clearly show that we can see people, without necessarily perceiving their needs and situations, nor taking action because of a multitude of reasons.

The chapter is crucial for the future of our missionary society and for our missionary commitments. May the Lord guide its members in their listening, vision, perception and evaluation of the world and mission in order to make wise and courageous decisions for his glory, for the good of the people of God entrusted to us and for our faithfulness to the mission.

ON THE ROAD TOGETHER FOLLOWING JESUS AND OUR DREAMS

Martin Luther King pronounced a famous speech: “I had a dream…” when all men will stand in brotherhood… With those words, he inspired millions of people. The Missionaries of Africa also have a dream coming from Jesus and Cardinal Lavigerie, a dream of proclaiming the Good News to the African World, of fraternity, solidarity, brotherhood, respect, collaboration and of a just world, a more peaceful world.

At the beginning of the Chapter, it is essential that we remember our dream, our vocation, our charism and reconnect with it as apostles of Christ. We are invited to do it all together individually and community wise. In 2 Tim. 1(6-7), Paul asks Timothy to renew the gift of God in him. That word of Paul’s is for us today. We should not fall into the trap of forgetting our initial zeal Apoc. 2(4-5).

The good Samaritan, Luke 10(30-37); the healing of the blind, Mark 10(46-52).

Fr. Sullivan used some images to make us see and walk. Lavigerie was like the Samaritan seeing the needs (of the wounded man) and we like innkeepers called for the ongoing care of the mission (long term collaboration). He also used the healing of the blind man to remind us that Jesus healed the blind man sit at the side of the road, giving him vision and the possibility to walk on the road, following Jesus.

May we walk together in an “esprit de corps”, in unity and solidarity, pursuing the same dream, doing our utmost to keep a global vision of the Society. We are called to witness to God’s dream by our lives, prophetic witnesses to the African World of today. Let us ask the Lord to grant us the courage and the wisdom needed to respond to today’s challenges.

We are gathered in his name and he is with us as promised to accompany us on our missionary path Mt. 18(20).

Chapter Communication – 16 May 2022

Chapter Communication - 16 May 2022

Today marks the official opening of the Chapter 2022. It is quite difficult to give news because the capitulants are deliberating behind closed doors. From the announcements, however, we can say a few brief words. The very first tasks of the Chapter concern the call of the capitulants, the information and approval of the different procedures of the Chapter itself, the method that will be used, the acceptance of collaborators as representatives of different ministries, such as Justice and Peace, integrity of the ministry, the bursar’s office, translators, secretaries, etc. There are 40 capitulants while the participants’ group reach fourteen persons.
In the evening, Cardinal Michael Fitzgerald presided the Eucharist, which was attended by all the members of the Chapter and all the members of the Generalate community. In his introduction, Father Stan Lubungo shared with us that he saw the nomination of Mike Fitzgerald as cardinal, as a sign of the divine kindness towards our Society. He asked us to pray for the chapter.

Cardinal Fitzgerald invited us to thank God for the history of the Society of the Missionaries of Africa. He pointed out how meaningful are the links between Charles de Foucauld and our Society while expressing a difference. He said that Charles de Foucauld stressed the importance of following and imitating “Jesus at Nazareth”, while ourselves, as Missionaries of Africa, are called to follow and to imitate “Jesus of Nazareth”, proclaiming the Good News, curing the sick, forming his disciples.

In his homily, Cardinal Fitzgerald showed the positive side of the Law. It is much more than mere commandments, and it is meant to lead us to life and it represents our inner disposition towards our ministry, mission and charism. We are motivated by love in our proclamation of the Good News. The central question is how are we going to put that into practice? That is exactly the question that the Chapter is required to answer. May the Holy Spirit come upon the members of the Chapter to answer that precise question and to understand better the message of Jesus.

Tomorrow Father Dave Sullivan will be preach the recollection to the Chapter members. This information is a good invitation for all of us to pray for the chapter.

Marien van den Eijnden, R.I.P.

Society of the Missionaries of Africa

Father Jozef de Bekker, Provincial Delegate of the sector of The Netherlands,
informs you of the return to the Lord of Father

Marien van den Eijnden

on Monday, 16th May 2022 in Heythuysen (Netherlands)
at the age of 82 years, of which 57 years of missionary life
in Tanzania and the Netherlands.

Let us pray for him and for his loved ones.

Download here the announcement of Father Marien van den Eijnden’s death

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Chapter Communication – 14 May 2022

Chapter Communication - 14 May 2022

At last, the day of the 29th Chapter of the Missionaries of Africa has arrived, and it was made possible thanks to all the contributions that arrived in Rome and for which all the members of the Chapter thank you. For some days now, the Generalate has been permeated by the fever of the Chapter, which has grown as the capitulants have arrived from many countries where the Missionaries of Africa are present. Thus, for many there was a time of meeting those they had not seen for years and for others the chance to make new acquaintances.

This time, the chapter of the Missionaries of Africa coincides with two important events for our missionary society, the anniversary of the martyrs of Algeria, and the canonization of Charles de Foucauld. These two events are celebrated by the community of the Generalate and also by the members of the Chapter. We received a presentation on the martyrs of Algeria by Bishop John MacWilliam and a video on Algeria offering a description of the Algerian situation at that time. On Sunday, several of the capitulants and community members will participate in the celebration of the canonization of Charles de Foucauld at the Vatican. This afternoon, a panel on Charles de Foucauld will be animated by three of our confreres, Card. Michael Fitzgerard, Bishop Claude Rault and Bishop John MacWilliam.

Today, the members of the Chapter met in assembly for the first time. The purpose was to deal with the practical issues of the house timetable and the introduction to the technology needed to order to ensure that the chapter is “paperless”. It was a good opportunity to stimulate the dynamic among the capitulants and to begin the Chapter journey.

This communication would not be complete without mentioning the improvement of the chapter hall. Some modern technological material has been fitted for the use of computers, etc. The members of the Chapter have been introduced to microphones, headphones, screens, etc. These exercises will allow for a smoother launch of the chapter on Monday.

New Chapter Room

Finally, this evening, Saturday, a BBQ is planned to encourage contacts between capitulants and members of the Generalate community.

The members of the chapter rely on our prayers. May the Holy Spirit accompany them during the chapter, opening their ears to listen to the Word of God, their hearts to his love and their minds to be guided by his wisdom.

Jean Lamonde
14 May 2022

Charles de Foucauld

CULTURE AND INCARNATION IN CHARLES DE FOUCAULD

“He came to Nazareth, the place of the hidden life, of the ordinary life…” (CdF)

We come to an important dimension of Brother Charles’ vocation, that of Culture. This dimension was present in different stages of his life, but with different aims according to what he lived during those stages.

It is interesting to follow a pattern through which we can read like a common theme: the coherence of God’s project in his life while maintaining the importance of human freedom. My project here is to see how this dimension evolved in the course of his life and became a means for him to becoming incarnate in a people and joining Jesus in Nazareth.

Let us not lose this common thread. That is why we must make a connection between this man of culture, his arduous work on culture and the way he lived his “Nazareth” vocation. He never lost sight of his search for the “cherished final place”! Unable to reach it, he continued to follow in the footsteps of Jesus, trying to become one with his Beloved Brother and Lord Jesus.

 

1-The experience of Brother Charles.

It is through his existence, his experience, that we pursue this way of understanding the message that Brother Charles leaves us on this dimension of his vocation.

We sometimes forget that he had an excellent scientific formation and a great culture, despite appearing lazy and indolent in his youth. It is important not to reduce him to the image of a man always on his knees in adoration before the Blessed Sacrament.

He gave much of his life to prayer, notably when he was searching  for his vocation, during his monastic period and stay in Nazareth. However, he would devote a lot of work and time to practising the Arabic language in Beni Abbes and then to learning the Tuareg language in Tamanrasset. He did this in the spirit of Nazareth, which was at the same time an experience of prayer, self-emptying and relationship.    

Pre-study before his conversion—an explorer’s passion.

Let us understand this thirst for learning from the experience before his conversion. As a child, he was not particularly brilliant in his studies. He could be described as an ordinary pupil. He was already remarked for drawing in primary school: this would serve him well later on! In secondary school, he liked to read both ancient and modern authors with his friend Gabriel Tourdes, as if to nourish his lack of faith in God or even to justify it…

He had to learn a bit of cartography during his formation at St Cyr and the Saumur cavalry school. He loved horse riding… and was a good cavalryman though that did not prevent him from finishing last in his cavalry officers’ class!

So what was going to happen? What would trigger the taste for learning in him and perfect his knowledge? Where would this desire to appropriate the language of others, immerse himself in their culture, become a man among men, and try to blend in with their environment come from? In late January 1882, he had resigned from the army. He was 24 years old.

It was the time of the great explorers, of the great colonial conquests. He felt a taste for adventure during the expedition against Bouamama, an Algerian resistance fighter. He had developed a taste for a simple and spartan life.

What would he do to satisfy this taste for adventure? The map of Morocco was clearly marked with an extensive blank line, and it was a region still unknown to France. He felt the desire to explore it, challenge himself, and do what others had not done. Perhaps to prove to himself that he could succeed and also to restore the reputation of the de Foucauld family, which he had so tarnished by his conduct?

So he prepared himself for this great trip to Morocco. He took 15 months of painstaking work to learn Arabic, Hebrew and Yiddish.

We can already measure just how much he invested into this exploration. As lazy and indolent as he was, he learned to make geographical surveys, maps, to draw… He had enough knowledge to launch himself into the adventure. That would be useful to him in his expedition.

I see here the first steps of immersion in the milieu. Of course, it was not for religious reasons; he did it for the taste of adventure and fame. But God uses everything to prepare him for his future vocation!

He wanted to go where no European had gone, just as he wanted to live where no priest had lived. This has to do with the very human desire to achieve something noteworthy, but he already had everything necessary to enter the soul of a people and become incarnate there. Somehow he was already paving the way forward was being. He would not start from scratch. This would be part of the “cultural” dimension of his existence, even if this worry did not really bother him.  Later it will take on a different form, that of “Nazareth”. Nazareth will then take on an entirely new hew: becoming like Jesus, incarnate in a people out of love for them and their Lord.

He undertook this exploration from June 83 to May 84, disguised as a Jewish rabbi, with Mordecai as his companion, a connoisseur of the land who served as his guide. He explored the south of Morocco, did cartographic surveys, established relationships with the people, and lived in close contact with Jews and Arabs. He even risked losing his life and was saved thanks to some Moroccans.

In short, he succeeded and returned to Algiers. He became famous. In Paris, in May 1885, he received the gold medal from the French Society of Geography. He was 27 years old. He had become famous. The following year, from May 85 to January 86, he made another trip to southern Algeria and southern Tunisia.

In February, he moved to Paris to work on his book “Reconnaissance au Maroc”. He rented an apartment and slept on a carpet wrapped in a burnous. He lived a simple life. His book was published in 1888, and he converted the same year, in October.

If I have emphasised this investment in another culture”, this desire to enter into the knowledge of the language and customs of a people, it is because he will make use of this experience to later realise this dimension of incarnation by immersing himself in a people, but for other reasons: that of living in the manner of Jesus of Nazareth. We are getting there. We are getting there.

Nazareth: a school built on the study of language and culture.

Now let’s take a big step. Charles dedicated his life to God from the time of his conversion at the age of thirty and opted for religious life. He searched for a long time how he could make it real: a pilgrimage to Nazareth, visits to several monasteries, and finally opting for our Lady of the Snows monastery, where he stayed for a short time. He eventually left for Akbes in Syria for the same reasons we mentioned above – it was a poor monastery far from his family. He stayed there for six long years. He returned to Nazareth, where he sought to live in humility like Jesus. Then, in agreement with Father Huvelin, he decided to become a priest to go to the farthest places where he would live out his Nazareth ideal. This was in 1901.

Knowing well Arabic, once in Beni Abbès, he was able to understand and transcribe in Arabic the passages of the Gospel and also put together a kind of catechism for the use of potential catechumens. The Muslims remained resistant to his efforts at evangelization. He did not insist and would remain in their midst, respecting their customs and religion. He had a small monastery built to welcome the Brothers… who would never come!

Let’s join him on the road from Beni Abbès to Tamanrasset. He already knew Arabic very well. In 1903, at his friend Laperrine’s suggestion, he considered leaving Béni Abbès. You see that his desire for stability is still far away, and indeed he could not go back to Morocco, which he dreamed of. He spoke to Bishop Guérin and Father Huvelin about it. And in January 1904, he began a familiarization tour that would be long and take him to several Saharan oases. His project was indeed to evangelize the Tuaregs. That was still his primary concern. He learned the first rudiments of Tamashek (the language of the Tuaregs) during his long walks. He also began an approximate translation of the Gospel into this language.

In 1905, with the permission of Mgr Guérin and Abbé Huvelin, he participated in a nomadic tour to the Hoggar. His passion for exploration did not leave him. In June of that year, he met Moussa Ag Amastane, the amenokal of the Ahaggar tribe. In August, he arrived in Tamanrasset where he began by living in a reed hut before building himself a small house made of stones and earth, the first one in the village. It was the first sign of his rootedness. Even if he planned to make further incursions into Beni Abbès, he at least showed the desire for stability.

Nevertheless, he had not lost his explorer’s soul… he resumed some trips, but in 1907, he returned to Hoggar, and his installation in Tamanrasset took more and more shape. I will skip over his travels, his absences from Tamanrasset, his three trips to France, but it was well there that he took up residence. He ardently set about learning the Tamashek language.

By 1908, he had already completed a more significant part of the transcription and translation of six thousand Tuareg poems. He would finish the final copy shortly before his death. These poems have nothing mystical about them. They exalt the warriors’ prowess, beautiful eyes of the black-eyed beauty who awaits her lover on his return from battle, the beauty of the country, the beautiful pace of his camel, and so on. Few have religious connotation. This shows the importance he attached to the life of the people of this region, through the discovery and expression of their language.

He had already started working on the composition of a small lexicon to provide military and future missionaries with an instrument to approach the country and its population. The work, later on, would become a “Tuareg dictionary”, meant to enhance the value of this vibrant language, based on Tuareg poems and prose texts collected from the people. It is an immense work which would occupy his last years. He sometimes worked on it for more than 10 hours a day! He would finish it a few days before his tragic death. In fact, he started it with no actual method. A linguist, Motylinski, would spend a few days with him and gave him a methodological approach that allowed him to complete this enormous 4-volume work that is still an authority today. A seminar on his dictionary was held at the University of Tamanrasset on December 1, 2016.

However, he often regretted not completing this project which prevented him from engaging in manual labour:

“The lexicon took me longer than I expected. I won’t be finished for another three or four years: that’s twelve years of work. That’s a lot!” (To Mme de Bondy in 1912)

On December 1, 1916, the day of his death, he wrote to Raymond de Blic:

“I have made significant progress but have not completed my little work on the Tuareg language.

He would only complete this dictionary a few days before his death.

The thwarted desire to work with his hands… like Jesus in Nazareth.*

What he desired above all, to remain in line with the incarnation, was to follow Jesus in the intimacy of Nazareth. He made every effort to work with his hands in line with this inspiration. He often lamented that his linguistic work left him little time for this humble work.

Intellectual work for its own sake was sometimes repugnant to him… because it prevented him from working with his hands as Jesus did in Nazareth! And he did his linguistic work more out of duty than taste! But he did it in the spirit that I tried to communicate to you above. He knew that he was working for future generations. But in fact, this work is especially appreciated today by the Tuaregs themselves!

Charles de Foucauld always believed that he somehow took the time spent studying the language and customs of the people he lived from manual labour. And yet he worked hard, with uncommon zeal. What he did there was a kind of groundwork for future generations while at the same time benefiting from the contacts it could give him.

He craved to be like Jesus in Nazareth, rooted in the lives of the people he came into contact with so that he may radiate Jesus, even if he did not see the fruits. He was a pioneer. His way of witnessing was not by words, and yet God knows he was capable of doing that, but by radiating the charity of Jesus to every human being. His life was about being like that of Jesus of Nazareth.

Charles de Foucauld was not a linguist by vocation. We may ask ourselves what drove him to invest so much in the Tuareg language in this village of about twenty families.

This work is in the spirit of Nazareth and his plan to follow in the footsteps of Jesus. He wasn’t “playing”, he wasn’t pretending, he wasn’t putting on an act by living this hidden existence in this lost corner of Hoggar. He undertook this immense work to incarnate himself and, above all, prepare the way for others. To find himself in conformity with his Master and Lord Jesus, Word made flesh. This is the very meaning of this deep commitment.

Moreover, he wanted his work published under a name other than his own. Again, this desire to remain small and to seek the last place! This effort, this desire touches us as a Church in our concern to be incarnated in the midst of a people, which is why we must attach so much importance to this dimension of his life.

 

2- Our Church life in the footsteps of Jesus with Brother Charles.

Jesus became incarnate to encounter the men and women of his time.

It was in the synagogue before the people of Nazareth, where he grew up, that he revealed the meaning of his mission:

“The Spirit of God is upon me… He has sent me to bring the Good News to the poor, proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, and set the oppressed free” (Lk 4:18). 

Since no one is a prophet in his own country, the inhabitants of this village practically chased him away, as they would someone pretentious who interfered with the ancestral customs. Who does this carpenter’s son think he is, without university degrees, and who dares to lecture us?

Perhaps this refusal triggered his decision to go elsewhere since his relatives were deaf and not open to his message.

But let’s not forget that this move towards his people was preceded by thirty years of learning in the great university of life!

For thirty years he learned to be a man. He grew up like the children of his age, he went to learn in the synagogue of his village; he also learned about life, about death, about the suffering of the people of his time. He had a trade, got his hands dirty, sweated to earn his living.

 Let us not forget that Jesus lived in a large family. He was often pictured between Mary and Joseph. This is how Charles de Foucauld imagined him. But he lived in the large family of Joseph, to whom God had said in a dream, “Do not be afraid to take Mary into your home, your wife” (Mt 1:20). And they referred to his “brothers and sisters” to show that they knew him well!

I like to think that he discovered in Joseph the ideal image of a father. It had to be so for him to be able to say one day: “When you pray, say ‘Abba, Father'”. Would this have been so if he had a failed relationship with Joseph?

As we meditate on life in Nazareth, let’s think about the beautiful figure of Joseph. He is sometimes presented as a quiet old man. For me, he embodies the eternal youth of God to whom the incarnate Word is entrusted.

In this university of life in Nazareth, he observed the people and listened to them: there is no evidence of any preaching activity during this long period. He learned at length to receive before giving, before speaking: from his parents, from his contemporaries, but also and above all from God his Father, whom he met and discovered in intimacy, behind the closed door of his house or on some mountainside. In Nazareth, Jesus prayed. He learned to pray from his parents and his entourage.

The vocation of Jesus began with a long confrontation with life; through a long heart-to-heart with the Scriptures, He, the Word, the Word of God, committed himself to study. For he studied, on his own, and also undoubtedly under the guidance of some rabbis in the synagogue of his village.

He listened, learned, reflected and prayed before speaking or revealing himself. He became close to others, their daily lives, their worries, and their questioning of the existence he shared with them.

He prepared the simple language of the Parables and “fermented” them in Nazareth. Through them, he would tell us what it is like to grow grain, work in the vineyard, and tend the fig tree. And also the labour of the workers! And it was out of the contemplation of ordinary people that he made the astonishing proclamation of the Beatitudes. His knowledge of Scripture prepared him for his confrontations with the Pharisees.

He prepared himself to be the man of others, for others.

When he left Nazareth and began to walk along the paths of Palestine, it was, first of all, to go and meet his own people and announce the Good News to them: that of the universal love of God. It was first of all to the people of his own nation that he addressed himself. It was towards them that he directed his steps.

“And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us” (Jn 1:14).

In Jesus, the Word of God became flesh and dwelt in our humanity. He wanted to learn the hard work of living in a specific time and country; he spoke the language and followed people’s customs. He became one with the people, worked with his hands, and became part of the life of the people. We, too, want to participate in the life of the people where we live, just as our Master did. Can you imagine what this means for us, his disciples?

This profoundly links culture with the Incarnation.

It is in this sense that the Council understood culture: “There are many ties between the message of salvation and human culture. For God, revealing Himself to His people to the extent of a full manifestation of Himself in His Incarnate Son, has spoken according to the culture proper to each epoch.” (Gaudium et Spes, The Church in the Modern World, no. 58).

Incarnation through culture is, first and foremost, a commitment to be present to one another and to welcome each other in our differences. Looking at our diocesan communities in France (like what I experienced in the Sahara), we come from different nations and ethnic groups, different mother tongues, and different mentalities. And we are present in a world marked by difference. The cultural dimension, especially in the outskirts of our big cities, is more and more pronounced. Not to mention the global culture that tends to wipe out the others!

Therefore, our Christian commitment is naturally part of our common vocation: knowledge of the language, customs, religious and cultural traditions, with the greatest respect for those we live with. Entering into the culture of the other is, in the manner of Christ, to become incarnate where we are and to share his humanity.

To incarnate is first and foremost to learn the language, learn to speak and relate with others. In the Maghreb, we do our best to provide this opportunity, especially to newcomers. We all know how much energy Charles de Foucauld devoted in line with his vocation to imitate life in Nazareth, how many hours of hard work and fatigue. The Church also has the task of taking this step, not only to learn the language but also to understand better the culture of the other, to sow better the leaven of the Gospel. Is this effort not to be made in our modern world where so much fear and suspicion hangs over us? Is the world not also ours to approach and save?

This dimension also points in another direction, that of cultural sharing: in a fraternal exchange, to put the other person in a position to better know his own culture and history and open him to different cultures. All the work done in our libraries and the language courses broaden our horizons towards the other. These activities are also “platforms of encounter”, to use an expression of Pierre Claverie, where we open ourselves to our plural humanity. In mutual emulation, we show that it is possible to meet each other despite our cultural differences: it is sharing humanity, a common stimulation for a more human world. To use an expression of Brother Christian de Chergé: our differences then take on the meaning, the direction, of communion.

+Claude Rault.

 

Charles de Foucault in front of his first chapel in Tamanrasset (Hoggar) 1905