Algeria: Remembering a Congregation’s Many Martyrs

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Italy (Monday, November 26, 2018, Gaudium Press) “The beatification of the martyrs of Algeria is, for our congregation, a sign of the Lord’s blessing on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of its foundation. The Society of the Missionaries of Africa (White Fathers), proud and grateful for its past, can hope for a future filled with God’s grace. Our missionary adventure is not yet over.” These were the words of Fr. Gaetano Cazzola, Provincial of Italy of the White Fathers, in an article published by Fides News Agency on November 23, 2018.

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Priory staff and visitors, taken in the summer of 1957  (source : Paul West)

Fr. Cazzola recalled that on December 8, 2018, the celebrations of the 150th anniversary of the birth of the Society of the Missionaries of Africa will begin. From December 8, 2018, to December 8, 2019, the event will be remembered with various initiatives in all the communities in Africa, Latin America, Asia, and Europe.

The history of the White Fathers is studded with martyrs. In 150 years, 50 members of the Society were killed because of their faith. The first, in 1876, were three missionaries killed in the Sahara. The last ones, on December 27, 1994, always in Algeria: Jean Chevillard, Alain Dieulangard, Christian Chessel, and Charles Deckers were shot dead by Islamic fundamentalists. December 8th will be the day when these four White Fathers will be beatified together with the other martyrs of Algeria.

The Society was created in Algeria in 1868 by Cardinal Charles-Martial Allemand Lavigerie, at the time Archbishop of Algiers. At the origin of the foundation, there was a serious humanitarian emergency. In Algeria, there was a terrible drought that had caused famine and many epidemics. People died by the thousands and the diocese of Algiers had to take care of more than two thousand orphans. It was this that prompted the prelate to create a society of religious to deal with the orphans, most of them Muslims. On October 19, 1868, the first novitiate began with 12 aspiring missionaries. Their task was reception but also dialogue with the Muslim world in which they lived (not for nothing they were asked to dress like Muslims with white robes, hence their name). The Cardinal said: “You are the initiators, true evangelization will be the work of Africans”.

From Algeria, the White Fathers created communities throughout North Africa, then sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America, Asia, and Europe. Since the foundation to date, 5,228 fathers and brothers have worked in the Society, including 138 Italians.

“Currently we are 1,210, of 36 different nationalities, 30 in Italy. In 2018, 38 young people joined us, who thus became missionaries. The society now has 507 young people in formation. The greatest number of vocations comes from Africa, as Card. Lavigerie prophesied”, underlines Fr. Cazzola. The Society also grows in Europe. New communities are being opened in Berlin and Karlsruhe (Germany), Liverpool (Great Britain), Toulouse and Marseille (France), Roquetas de Mar (Andalusia, Spain), Brussels and Modica (Italy). In these communities, European and African priests work together, dedicating themselves to immigrants and to dialogue with Muslims, an activity carried out at a high level through the management of the Pontifical Institute for Arabic and Islamic Studies (PISAI).

Source Zenit

 

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