News archive

Piet van Hulten 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

on Tuesday, 2nd December 2025 in Heythuysen (Netherlands)
at the age of 89 years, of which 62 years of missionary life
in Malawi and the Netherlands.

Download here the announcement of Father Piet van Hulten’s death

Born in:
Gunneken Bavel
on 02/06/1936
Spiritual YearMissionary OathPriestly
Ordination
Diocese:
Breda
07/09/195926/06/196304/07/1964
Citizenship:
Dutch
Dorking
(Great Britain)
Totteridge
(Great Britain)
Kaatsheuvel
(Netherlands)

Bionotes

31/12/1964Mzimba, D. MzuzuMalawi
01/01/1966Katete, D. MzuzuMalawi
01/05/1968SupérieurKatete, D. MzuzuMalawi
01/07/1969VicaireMzimbaMalawi
01/04/1970SupérieurMzimbaMalawi
10/04/1973SupérieurKarongaMalawi
01/01/1981SupérieurMzambaziMalawi
01/01/1982CurateKaseye, D. MzuzuMalawi
01/09/1990Regional CouncillorMalawi
01/09/1990Parish PriestKaseye, D. MzuzuMalawi
15/08/1991Parish PriestKatete, D. MzuzuMalawi
01/09/1994Dist.+Reg.CouncillorMalawi
01/09/1994CurateNkhata Bay, D. MzuzuMalawi
01/08/1997District Council.Malawi
01/07/1998Parish PriestKaseye, D. MzuzuMalawi
01/11/1999Change nom ParoisseChitipa, D. MzuzuMalawi
01/12/2001MinistryMzuzuMalawi
01/07/2003District SuperiorLilongwe, D. LilongweMalawi
09/01/2004Appointes 1st Counc.Malawi
01/01/2010MinistryMzuzuMalawi
01/09/2014FormationBalakaMalawi
01/09/2017MinistryLilongweMalawi
01/07/2018MinistryLilongwe, ChinsapoMalawi
01/07/2019Nommé PEP (PE 7/19)Nederland
02/12/2025DCD (89)HeythuysenNederland

First Sunday of Advent Year A

From Sinful Sleepiness to Readiness to Welcome the Lord who Returns

Isaiah 2:1-5 / Psalm 121(122) / Romans 13:11-14 / Matthew 24:37-44

The Advent Season reminds Christians who wait for the return of their Lord that his coming is ever nearer. It is a season of double expectation: the commemoration of the first coming of the Messiah celebrated at Christmas, and the preparation for his second coming. Among many themes from today’s liturgy of the word, we would like to focus on the pressing call to rise from distracted and compromising life in the darkness, to be vested in Christ in the Gospel values, in light.

In the first reading, the prophet Isaiah’s vision concerning Judah and Jerusalem reveals the vocation of all humanity to be gathered together on the Mountain of the Lord. Although Sion, the Mountain of the Lord, is far from being the highest mountain geographically, it hosts the temple of the Lord, the symbol of God’s presence. The prophet’s vision is thus an expression of the absolute and incomparable nature of God. Therefore, the prophet Isaiah not only evokes the pilgrimage of the Jews to Jerusalem, but also, he shows that all nations will recognise the Lord and go up to Jerusalem because of the presence of God, not just to admire the mountain or the beauty of the temple, but to be instructed in God’s ways (Is. 2:3). As a consequence, once all nations would flock to Jerusalem, they will be instructed to follow the ways of the Lord, and the instruments of war will be turned into agricultural instruments (Is 2: 4). Implicitly, the prophet Isaiah teaches us, that learning the ways of Lord is not a mere decoration, or receiving a Christian name; it implies a change of behaviour that contradicts God’s presence and be a living testimony of peace and harmony.

The psalmist highlights the disposition of a worshipper who holds Jerusalem dear: “I rejoiced when they said to me, ‘Let us go to the house of the Lord’” (Ps 122: 1-2). The mere invitation to go up to Jerusalem constitutes a source of joy. Unlike today’s attitude of some worshippers who do not distinguish the Church from any other hall, he testifies that going to the mountain of the Lord, Jerusalem, is an act of worship. As he stands in the gates of Jerusalem, “and now our feet are standing within your gates”, he does not recall the hardships of the journey; he rather focuses on praising God, and rather than pouring out his requests, he prays for the peace of Israel and his inhabitants. Though he recognises the primacy of Israel as the chosen people, he acknowledges Jerusalem’s vocation for all the tribes of the Lord. This pilgrim could be a prototype for conversion in prayer. Very often, people’s prayers are self-centred: They neither praise God nor intercede for others; they always have endless lists of demands. The psalmist inspires an awakening call from self-centeredness to God-centeredness and altruistic centeredness.

The second reading and the Gospel call for spiritual alertness. In the Gospel, Jesus defines his relationship with his disciples as a master and servant. “Therefore, stay awake, for you do not know on what day your Lord is coming” (Mt 24:42). Waiting for the Master is a must for a servant. Hence, striving to stay awake is not a privilege given to the Lord; it is a duty that stems from faithfulness. In the same line, Jesus employs two comparisons. The first recalls the story of Noah, when people were eating, drinking and marrying. The problem is not what they did in their social life; the only issue seems that they did not realise the danger until the time Noah entered into the ark (Mt 24: 38). That is to say, the alertness to get ready for the coming of the Lord passes through the details of ordinary life. The second comparison shifts the emphasis to personal awareness. Two men and two women who are on duty, one will be taken and the other left. It follows that the preparation to receive the Lord is more than a communitarian activity; it is a personal commitment. It is not enough to console oneself that we are all priests, religious, confreres, etc, still one needs to check one’s own preparation. Besides, we should take seriously the fact that Advent embraces two dimensions, the eschatological, the second coming of the Lord which we proclaim at Mass when we say “Christ will come again”, and the personal journey to death that each of us must make. The question would be: Am I prepared to go to the New Jerusalem?

St. Paul, in the second reading, using the concepts of darkness and light, admonishes the Romans to get ready in terms of repentance. Time management seems crucial because Christ is coming. The urgency is underlined through a triple call: The time has come, our salvation is nearer, and the night is almost over, and a triple invitation: Let us cast off the works of darkness, let us walk properly as in the daytime, but put on Jesus Christ. Salvation and night are opposites, hence the believer who awaits salvation ought to get out of the cover of the night characterised by orgies, drunkenness, sexual immorality, sensuality, quarrelling and jealousy. It follows that Christianity is not a club to join when one wishes, as he wishes; it is a lifelong commitment defined by the Word of God.

In a nutshell, the Advent season is not a mere waiting idly for the coming of the Lord; it is a reminder that we are on a pilgrimage to the celestial Jerusalem; we walk in the ways of the Lord and not according to our desires. Advent is a call for the change of mentality from worldly pleasures to heavenly delights; an invitation to be aware that we do not have time to procrastinate the conversion to tomorrow, for the time to get into the ark is here and now.

Happy Advent.

By: Gilbert Rukundo, M.Afr.

Safeguarding Newsletter, No. 3 November 2025

Godfried Trypsteen R.I.P.

Society of the Missionaries of Africa
Father André Simonart, Provincial Delegate of the sector of Belgium,
informs you of the return to the Lord of Father

on Tuesday, 25th November 2025 in Brugge (Belgium)
at the age of 92 years, of which 67 years of missionary life
in DR Congo and Belgium.

Download here the announcement of Father Godfried Trypsteen’s death

Born in:
Furnes
on 26/06/1933
Spiritual YearMissionary OathPriestly
Ordination
Diocese:
Brugge
07/09/195405/07/195807/02/1959
Citizenship:
Belgian
Varsenare
(Belgium)
Heverlee
(Belgium)
Furnes
(Belgium)

Bionotes

01/09/1959Service MilitaireLouvainBelgique
01/04/1960BukavuCongo
01/09/1960VicaireKabareCongo
07/01/1961Prof. E.A.P.KabareCongo
01/08/1961Petit SéminaireMugeriCongo
01/07/1965Kadutu, BukavuCongo
01/09/1967Evénements, est enBelgique
01/10/1967Surveillant CollègeMenenBelgique
01/09/1968Prof. Ath. RoyalIbanda (Bukavu)Congo
01/09/1969VicaireKadutuCongo
01/09/1972VicaireKashofuCongo
28/01/1979VicaireMurhesaCongo
01/10/1987VicaireCiherano, D. BukavuZaïre S.E.
01/05/1989Curé + Resp.Bumpeta, D. BukavuZaïre S.E.
05/10/1990CuréBumpeta, D. BukavuZaïre S.E.
25/02/2001VicaireKatoy, N. D. d’AfriqueCongo S.E.
15/07/2005AumônierVarsenareBelgique
01/07/2017RésidenceVarsenare, KasteelBelgique
25/11/2025DCD (92)BruggeBelgique

Bicentenary Celebration of the Birth of Cardinal Charles Lavigerie in Malindi, Kenya

On the 16th of November 2025, the Missionaries of Africa Community (M.Afr.) and the Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Africa (MSOLA) serving in the diocese of Malindi celebrated with joy and gladness the 200 years of our founder Charles Lavigerie. We were honoured to have as the main celebrant of the Eucharistic celebration his Lordship, Rt. Rev. Willybard Lagho, Bishop of Malindi concelebrate by Fr. Leo Laurence Assistant Superior General of the M.Afr. and other priests. From Nairobi a delegation of the Lavigerie Family in Kenya consisting of one confrere, one MSOLA Sister and one Lady from the Lavigerie Lay Missionaries Association, joined us in lifting our prayers and thanksgiving to God in memory of Cardinal Lavigerie, his prophetic inspiration and the charism he handed over to us. Together with all the parish community we celebrated three other events n the same celebration: the Parish Family Day of St. Catherine of Alexandria, patron saint of the parish, the administration of the sacrament of Confirmation and of the sacrament of first Holy Communion. It was a day of praise and thanksgiving to God for faithfulness and loving compassion in our life as a parish and as a Society. As we could sing together: “Taste and see that the Lord is good” (Ps. 34:8)

What kind of mission do the M.Afr. and the MSOLA do in Malindi ?

The MSOLA Community of Pope Francis Rescue Centre Malindi serves in a diocesan project that rescues and supports sexually abused children, journeys with their family members, takes their cases to courts, does psycho-social support, helps children to continue their education and skills training and helps vulnerable families to start a small business.

The Missionaries of Africa community serves in St Catherine Parish, Tarasaa, in an environment of majority Muslims. The Catholic faithful are a minority among Christian denominations. The environment of the parish is a fertile land for ecumenical encounters and interfaith dialogue, and also for justice and peace ministry, necessary because of conflicts and tribal clashes. That is why we are very much involved in these activities both at parish and diocesan levels. We use both ecumenism and interfaith dialogue as tools for community peace building, reconciliation and promotion of social justice. As a parish, our first goal is proclamation and evangelisation; we do catechesis even in neighbouring high schools for YCS. We also engage in youth ministry, in this way promoting peaceful cohabitation among the communities through sports and cultural activities. Our parish compound has become a meeting place also for youths and children from others churches and religions, especial Muslims. Other places of interreligious dialogue and encounter are our school and dispensary.

Together in prayer as pilgrims of the Gospel and of hope, may we continue sowing the seeds of love, peace and justice for a better world, walking together in the footsteps of our Founder Cardinal Lavigerie. May his zeal for mission and passion for Africa keep our hearts burning to live truly the gospel values in building witnessing communities and making ourselves everything to everybody (Le tout à tous).

By: Fidèle M. Mugalihya, M.Afr.

Bartolomé M. Burgos 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

on Wednesday, 19th November 2025 in Madrid (Spain)
at the age of 89 years, of which 66 years of missionary life
in Uganda, Great Britain, Ireland, Soudan, Italie, Jérusalem, Ghana and Spain.

Download here the announcement of Father Bartolomé M. Burgos’ death

Born in:
Totana
on 11/01/1936
Spiritual YearMissionary OathPriestly
Ordination
Diocese:
Cartagena
27/09/195526/06/195929/01/1960
Citizenship:
Spanish
Maison-Carrée
(Algeria)
Carthage
(Tunisia)
Madrid
(Spain)

Bionotes

01/09/1960Etudes PhilosophieRomaItalia
30/06/1962LogroñoEspaña
30/06/1968Stage d’anglaisLondonGrande-Bretagne
01/01/1969Centre de langueMugalike, D. HoimaUganda
01/07/1969VicaireBujuniUganda
04/05/1970VicaireKakindoUganda
15/06/1970VicaireHoimaUganda
31/07/1970VicaireKakindoUganda
01/07/1972Nommé:Circ. MGTotteridgeGrande-Bretagne
24/06/1973PE.73/7:nomméDublinIreland
01/01/1975ProfesseurDublin, TempleogueIreland
01/04/1975ProvincialMadridEspaña
01/07/1979Prov.:2ème mandatMadridEspaña
29/09/1982Session-RetraiteJérusalemIsraël
01/07/1983SupérieurToritSudan
01/09/1993Tranfert SéminaireKhartoumSudan
02/05/1996Année sabbatiqueRomaItalia
01/09/1997CIDAFMadrid, MenorcaEspaña
04/09/1997Nommé Conseil. Prov.España
25/10/1997Déf. Thèse Doct. Phil.RomaItalia
09/11/1998Elu Conseiller Prov.España
14/12/1998Elu Premier Conseil.España
03/12/2004Supérieur, SessionsJérusalemJérusalem/ Palestine
01/01/2008FormationEjisu, 1st PhaseGhana
01/09/2011Fundación SurMadridEspaña
03/10/2012Session SeniorRomaItalia
01/09/2023MinistèreMadrid, LiebreEspaña
19/11/2025DCD (89)MadridEspaña

Pilgrimage in the footsteps of Cardinal Lavigerie – Bayonne, 31st October 2025

Friday, 31 October 2025

Today, the 200th anniversary of our founder’s birth, was celebrated at Bayonne Cathedral. In this place, Charles Lavigerie was confirmed and received the Holy Spirit, which made him, like all baptised persons, a missionary sent to proclaim the Good News.

The day began with a guided tour of the cathedral dedicated to Mary by its parish priest. The cathedral is a veritable book that has preserved traces of history throughout its evolution, from English to French rule, from the destruction of the Revolution to the changes of the post-Vatican II period, a stopover on the pilgrims’ route to Santiago de Compostela.

On the eve of All Saints’ Day, we took a tour of the saints represented in the side chapels behind the choir. We stopped at St. Martin, whose pilgrimage was an important milestone in the Cardinal’s life, where he had a dream of men of colour shortly before receiving his call to the bishopric of Algiers. The last chapel had no decoration, perhaps due to a lack of funding? Or to leave a place for the Cardinal? As sons and daughters of Lavigerie, we spotted the pelican painted above one of the saints.

Missionaries of Africa from Billère and Spain arrived for the day, as they had the day before, making the round trip in a single day, along with others from Belgium.

The Mass was presided over by Bishop Marc Aillet, in the presence of the retired bishop emeritus, who is close to our community in Billère. In his homily, the bishop in his homily, took up the rich sharing of the previous day’s round table discussion, gave thanks for the missionary impetus brought by our presence to the Church of Bayonne, and took up the interior missionary attitudes emphasised in Pope Paul VI’s apostolic exhortation Evangelii nuntiandi on the evangelisation of the modern world, the 50th anniversary of which we are celebrating this year: under the inspiration of the Spirit, authenticity of witness, unity, truth, animated by love marked by respect, concern not to hurt, with the fervour of the saints.

The bishop recognised the fervour of our assembly, which was ready to participate more fully and express itself in the very structured liturgy. The liturgy ended with a procession and a song in Swahili, sending us forth on mission.

All the pilgrims continued the communion by celebrating and sharing a cold buffet in a bar/club dedicated to bullfighting, so dear to the people of Bayonne. It was a time to thank the organisers, Sr Cécile and Fr Michel, and Mr Olivier from the tourist office.

This anniversary date marked the solemn signing of the memorandum of understanding between the two missionary societies, M.Afr and SMNDA, for the Adjumani project in northern Uganda, as well as the launch of the Lavigerie App. These symbolic gestures place this collaboration under the protection of our founder.

The theme of the pilgrimage was ‘As a family in Bayonne’. Throughout these three days, the family spirit was evident in many ways. People who were meeting for the first time quickly found something to share, expressed words of gratitude, and made gestures as one does among brothers and sisters of the same family:

While taking a family photo at the Church of the Holy Spirit, a father spontaneously placed his rosary around the neck of the bishop emeritus. We mentioned earlier that he was close to the confreres of Billère. We love him as a confrere…

At the end of the Mass, we greeted a gentleman who is actually the great-grandnephew of one of the Missionaries of Africa from Bayonne. It was an opportunity for him to meet members of his uncle’s religious family.

Two ladies who knew the Sisters and attended catechism classes at their home told us, “You left, and it was very painful. You have returned to us in such large numbers after so many years, from so many countries, and we are deeply moved!’

A member of Lavigerie’s family, expressing gratitude for the mutual enrichment, said: ’You are the sons and daughters of Lavigerie; we are only his descendants.” Nevertheless, we are one family!

Christian, one of Lavigerie’s great-grandnephews, told us that his daughter is currently restoring the museum in Carthage, which Bishop Lavigerie founded. She was unaware of this family connection with her great ancestor, but it is as if a circle has been closed. Africa is a family affair! Coincidence? Providence? …

The archivists are making efforts to find the original baptismal certificate (which has been lost) of Charles Lavigerie. We only have a photo of it…

We can also applaud the boldness of the elected officials of the city of Bayonne, who have promised to restore the statue of the Cardinal to its former glory and to take advantage of the inauguration of the Bonnat Museum to revive the memory of our founder.

We thank the bishop who made himself available to preside over the Eucharist and the laity who, in a truly synodal spirit, did not miss this opportunity to rediscover their ancestor, Charles Martial Allemand Lavigerie, and his work. What a joy to find ourselves in such a large extended family! Unforgettable days, unforgettable Lavigerie!

At the heart of this world, the breath of the Spirit
echoes the cry of the Good News
At the heart of this world, the breath of the Spirit
is bringing new energies to life today.

By: Gisela Schreyer, Marie-Christine Rousseau and Pierre Petitfour.

Pilgrimage in the footsteps of Cardinal Lavigerie – Bayonne, 30th October 2025

Thursday, 30 October 2025

The day began with Mass, presided over by Stanley Lubungo, at the Church of the Holy Spirit, which drew a good turnout from the parish and the town. Having seen the poster or heard the announcement of the event by the parish priest, the parishioners were drawn to rediscover this famous figure, who had unfortunately fallen into oblivion in their town.

Then the pilgrims, joined by faithful from the city, retraced the steps of Lavigerie, beginning with the Church of the Holy Spirit parish where Charles Lavigerie’s parents were married and where he was baptised, the Holy Spirit fountain where, as a child, he baptised his Jewish friends from the neighbourhood during plays, houses in various neighbourhoods where members of his family lived, his monument in the city centre, the bishop’s palace where he announced to the bishop his vocation to be a ‘“countryside priest”’, the cathedral, and the high school where he studied with other illustrious Bayonne citizens. The tour was a true pilgrimage, filled with historical information, reflections and prayers!

In the afternoon, the tour took us to St. Etienne Cemetery, where we recited a rosary with words attributed to Lavigerie as ‘mysteries’ at the ‘Lavigerie tomb’, which had been cleaned for the jubilee, where his mother and other family members are buried. We also visited another cemetery where many White Sisters are buried in different scattered vaults: we saw two of them, the ones closest to the entrance. As preparations were underway for All Saints’ Day and the commemoration of the faithful departed, the cemeteries were bustling with activity, with people cleaning and decorating the graves: a sign of communion between the faithful in Heaven and on earth. And yet another opportunity to bear witness: our large, multicultural group of about 30 people could not go unnoticed!

The tour ended at Lavigerie’s birthplace, where the SMNDA was present with a community of elderly sisters located in Huire, in the St. Bernard district, from 1926 to 1999. His family had to sell the estate to move to the St Esprit district: Lavigerie experienced detachment at a very early age…

Detachment was also experienced by the White Sisters who bought the house for a community in 1948 and sold it when they left Bayonne. Their memory lives on in a street and a bus stop bearing their names. During the Second World War, the Germans occupied the house, leaving it in a deplorable state. The family who lived there no longer wanted to live there. At that time, after the Sisters left, the house was offered to the Missionaries of Africa, who did not wish to acquire it. Father Stanley seemed touched to hear this, and we thought we could sense a desire growing in him for our missionary family to be present in Bayonne…

The pilgrims gathered afterwards for a round table discussion in the new auditorium of the Bayonne media library, which was inaugurated for the occasion. The speakers, two members of the family on the side of Lavigerie’s maternal aunt Latrilhe, a historian, Etienne Rousseau-Plotto, the Superior General of the SMNDA, Angela Kapitingana, and a General Councillor of M.Afr, Aloysius Ssekamatte, conveyed Lavigerie’s passion for God and for humanity, which has become their passion too.

Family members said, for example, that as a child, Lavigerie and his friends would play at celebrating Mass and later told clumsy clerics that he himself knew how to say Mass at the age of 10. Or when people told him that he would go straight to Heaven with the saints, he would contradict them, saying that he would be bored there if he only had to deal with perfect people. Family legend also has it that Lavigerie aspired to be elected Pope; this has some historical basis.

Among other things, the historian mentioned a few people from Bayonne who influenced the Cardinal’s life: a Jesuit, Father Xavier de Ravignan, who was his mentor in Paris and introduced him to the Œuvre d’Orient, and a childhood friend who became a painter, Léon Bonnat, who in 1888 painted the portrait we all know!

For their part, the Missionaries of Africa, a sister and a priest, spoke of the spirituality of the apostle and Lavigerie’s charisma, the challenges of mission in the African world today, and the collaboration of the White Fathers and White Sisters in this mission.

The facilitator of the roundtable, an elected city official, said he was both touched and moved by the speakers and also challenged by their presentations. He remarked, ‘The story of Lavigerie raises questions that are still relevant today,’ and he thanked the Lavigerian missionary family on behalf of the city of Bayonne. There are many questions to be addressed that touch on the foundations of our vision of humanity.

By: Gisela Schreyer, Marie-Christine Rousseau and Pierre Petitfour.

Pilgrimage in the footsteps of Cardinal Lavigerie – Bayonne, October 2025

Wednesday 29 October 2025

On Wednesday, 29 October 2025, most of the pilgrims, including Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Africa and Missionaries of Africa, travelled from their various places of apostolate – Jerusalem, Rome, Paris, Marseille, and Toulouse – to the city of Bayonne by plane, car, or train. The organisers, Michel Girard and Cécile Dilé, had been working for a long time to prepare the programme.

Many of the participants discovered Bayonne for the first time and were surprised to find a city that was larger than they had imagined.

Through the symbolic gesture of kissing the ground upon his arrival at the train station, the Superior General of the M.Afr., Stanley Lubungo, demonstrated the respect and gratitude we have for the city of Bayonne, which gave birth to our founder.

Before they could even enter their hotel opposite the Church of the Holy Spirit (where Lavigerie’s parents were married and Charles Lavigerie was baptised), while discussing the next day’s programme, the Fathers were approached by a Bayonne resident and her Senegalese friend who happened to be passing by and overheard them. They showed interest in the programme and promised to come the next day. How welcoming and encouraging!

As we walked to the venue for our evening meal, we passed the square where the statue of our founder stands on a pedestal with numerous quotations inscribed on it. It was raining and dark, but we could see how large the statue was and how important the Cardinal is to this city: the people of Bayonne cannot ignore his name. The statue is close to the city centre.

The meal was organised in a restaurant at the town hall, in the company of representatives from the city of Bayonne (City Council and Tourist Office), members of the founder’s family (descendants of the Cardinal’s maternal aunt, the Latrilhe family), the parish priest, and other organisers. Representatives of the city gave welcome speeches, and all those present were introduced.

The jubilee is an opportunity for the city to deepen its knowledge of Lavigerie through the testimony of his sons and daughters. It is also an opportunity for the pilgrims who are Lavigerie’s ‘heirs’ to enrich themselves with the traces their founder left in this city.

We have already received testimonies of gratitude, such as from the restaurant owner, who was touched by the love shown by an SMNDA sister he met in the past; or from the man living opposite the statue of the Cardinal, who finds strength there when he feels discouraged; and also from the person who said they were honoured by our presence. The mother of Pierre Goadet, who runs the restaurant, is the cousin of our Sister Marie-Vincente Brouca, originally from Bayonne, who now lives in Verrières-le-Buisson. Her name is Maïté and she has been a real ‘mother’ to us, acting as our driver, planning our trips, and of course showing great interest in the whole programme. What an incredible rallying figure she is!

After the meal, a brief meeting was held to finalise the programme for the upcoming days. Some concerns were raised: how many people from Bayonne would take part? How committed would the diocese be? Would it be us, M.Afr and SMNDA only? We were reminded that the pilgrimage was first and foremost for us, that we would experience it in faith and give a good witness of our visit.

Those present then dispersed for the night after the Sancta Maria prayer and the blessing of the Superior General of the Missionaries of Africa, Stanley Lubungo.

By: Gisela Schreyer, Marie-Christine Rousseau and Pierre Petitfour.

Piet van der Linden 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

on Sunday, 9th November 2025 in Horn (Netherlands)
at the age of 96 years, of which 66 years of missionary life
in Belgium, Zambia and the Netherlands

Download here the announcement of Father Piet van der Linden’s death

Born in:
Vlaardingen
on 28/02/1929
Spiritual YearMissionary OathPriestly
Ordination
Diocese:
Rotterdam
07/09/195417/01/195919/07/1959
Citizenship:
Dutch
‘s-Heerenberg
(Netherlands)
Totteridge
(Great Britain)
Utrecht
(Netherlands)

Bionotes

01/09/1959“De Universis”HeverléBelgique
01/02/1960Language studyMulilansolo, AbercornN. Rhodesia
01/08/1960CurateChilongaN. Rhodesia
26/10/1961CurateMulangaN. Rhodesia
24/01/1967Supérieur+ P.P.MulangaN. Rhodesia
27/04/1969Supérieur+ P.P.KayambiN. Rhodesia
10/10/1981VicaireSerenjeN. Rhodesia
01/01/1985Par.PriestMulilansoloN. Rhodesia
01/01/1986Parish PriestMulilansolo, D. MbalaZambia
01/09/1992Parish PriestMulilansolo, D. MbalaZambia
01/01/1993Parish PriestMbala, D. MbalaZambia
01/09/1994CurateMbala, D. MbalaZambia
15/09/1995RésidenceTilburgNederland
01/12/1995SupérieurTilburgNederland
01/09/2002ResidenceHeythuysenNederland
27/11/2023ResidenceHornNederland
09/11/2025DCD (96)HornNederland
Missionaries of Africa
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