[1087]
Please allow me to inform your Most Reverend Eminence of a few things which are bound to please you. During the last fortnight of Eastertide I was in Prussian Rhineland in order to see what active role Catholic Germany can assume in favour of black Africa. I hope I am not mistaken: in this part of Europe a small start has been made, which by developing through time and constant labour, will prove most fruitful and beneficial to the African race. In Cologne, which is Germany’s Rome, there is a small Association of which I have been a member and correspondent for three years. Inspired as it is by a truly Catholic spirit and in view of the interests which motivate it, it has every possibility of developing marvellously.
[1088]
The Committee of this Association, under the protection of the Most Eminent Cardinal Geissel of happy memory, is determined to distribute its money in the way that will be of greatest advantage to the regeneration of Africans. Soon, after it has reached an agreement with the future Archbishop, it will send Your Eminence regular reports and will begin in the best way possible, in accordance with your advice and judgement. In the Declaration I enclose herewith, and the 12th issue of their Annals which I will send you personally, Your Eminence will see a good, though small, beginning of support for my ideas on the regeneration of Africa.
[1089]
But the most important thing I did in Prussia, it seems to me, is to have inspired the foundation of a minor Seminary for the African Missions in Cologne which should pave the way for vocations for Africa among the German ecclesiastics (excluding Austria for which I have other plans, either in Verona or in Venice). I first expressed my idea confidentially to the president of the Association who is a minor Don Bosco of Turin, a man of great initiative, founder of another Institute. I told him of my wish to create four places in the Archdiocesan Seminary or his Institute for four seminarians who might feel inclined towards the African missions.
[1090]
The project was well received by him and a few others, who were intimately convinced and motivated to manage in this way to lay the foundations of the planned Seminary. It is really too soon to say that the success I hope for is assured: but I am quite confident, knowing the make-up of the German spirit when it is eminently Catholic. I hope that in a few years Propaganda will be able to entrust a Central African Mission to the Cologne Seminary. It is still too early for me to tell you my tactics and the places in Europe where I intend to promote the foundation of other minor Seminaries for the African Missions. It is necessary to develop all the moral forces of Catholicism and direct them towards the true benefit of Africa. I therefore find any clamour at the beginning harmful: act and be silent, and speak only when it is useful and necessary. That is the maxim I must follow.
[1091]
Your Most Reverend Eminence deigned to write to me last January saying that the Plan I submitted presents many difficulties. In view of the difficulties I am encountering in promoting agreement between the Superiors of the different African Missions, I am convinced of the truth of your observation, and that in just one glance you see much further than I ever could with my own short sight, even after a whole lifetime of meditation. In the very way I expressed my Plan, I offended so many sensibilities that this prevents me from going ahead. Before any good results may be obtained, it is certainly necessary to ensure reciprocal agreement between the Superiors of the African Missions and to invoke the special support of the pious Associations of Lyons and Paris. In order to reduce little by little the difficulties and prepare the way for the desired agreement, I have thought of altering the organisation of the Plan and I now permit myself to explain this to you as best I can in a few lines.
[1092]
The necessity remains of adhering to the system outlined by my Plan of surrounding Africa with small Institutes of African boys and girls, entrusted to the religious Orders and ecclesiastical Congregations, and under the jurisdiction of the Vicars and Prefects Apostolic. These Institutes have the aim of training an indigenous clergy and also indigenous workers of both sexes and all kinds, who are to advance step by step into the regions of Central Africa to establish the Faith there. The principle is also established that each Superior should train and educate the African boys and girls in his own way, according to the spirit of his own Institute and without any interference from anyone. Yet having said all this, it seems to me that it would be extremely useful to set up a select Committee, either in Rome or in Paris, made up of individuals of good mind, open heart and great activity, recruited above all from the Orders and Societies to whom the different Missions of Africa are entrusted.
[1093]
Thus composed the Committee would have as its special aim the task of applying for Africa’s benefit all the rich possibilities and means offered by world Catholicism which at present are lacking in the regeneration of the poor Africans. It would stir up and develop those elements already existing for the same purpose. It would initiate the bringing together for the purposes of communication, and perhaps confederation, of the various Superiors of the African Missions. It would gather ideas and the results of practical experience, and would provide new enlightenment in trying to obtain a better result in all the missions of the unfortunate peninsula. The thought of what the Church has wisely done to direct and implement special activities in oriental matters, a work certainly of less importance than the regeneration of the entire black African race, leads me to believe that the proposal of a simple Committee for the regeneration of Central Africa would not seem strange to you.
[1094]
The Committee would not be at all concerned with the financial and material means for the maintenance of these Institutes or with subsidising existing activities in Africa. Should these be established under the authority and with the approval of Propaganda, it is incumbent upon the existing pious Associations, and especially the Association of Lyons and Paris, to subsidise them, at Propaganda’s request or at the request of the Superiors of Missions under whose jurisdiction the Institutes and Works are placed.
[1095]
The Committee would be concerned with providing, within the limits of its resources and capacities, the material means for the preparatory Works in Europe for the African missions, such as the foundation of minor Seminaries and arts and crafts establishments. Providence has granted the religious Orders the exalted task of carrying out the Apostolate in Africa and to reap the most august rewards for it. In order to obtain the best results it would be very useful if the way to the African Apostolate were to be opened to all vocations from the secular clergy, who are so effective in the Missions, as the results of the different Mission Seminaries, especially Paris, eloquently show.
[1096]
Such sublime work would be the task of the Committee I intend to form, which by means of highly dynamic and holy men, of which there is an abundance in the Church, would found minor Seminaries for the African Missions. I am not at all scared by the idea of creating seven minor Seminaries in the seven most important places in Europe, if one establishes as a base the system of Gospel poverty, as practised by Cottolengo and Don Bosco in Turin; for such a system is very economical and the most appropriate for the formation of apostles who have to go around Africa sleeping on reed mats and sheltering in grass huts. I am confident that, step by step, by the grace of God and with unflinching constancy, we shall achieve this end.
[1097]
In view of the fact that forging an agreement between the Superiors of the African Missions is extremely difficult from the outset, unless Propaganda itself promotes it, the Committee, each time it found personnel ready for an Institute, after having assured itself that the pious Associations could grant the necessary ad hoc subsidy, would then take the matter up with the Superior of the African Mission concerned for the setting up of the hospice for the education of the African boys and girls and for the housing of the Missionaries. This system of addressing Vicars and Prefects Apostolic toties quoties to gain permission to set up the Institutes seems to me simpler and more practical than seeking agreement from all the Superiors of African Missions. For the time being this will not be necessary for certain points on the Coasts of Africa from which it is impossible to push into the interior, such as the Missions of Senegambia, Sierra Leone, Dahomey and Guinea because, as Your Eminence knows, the fact that over the last two centuries 14 million slaves were wrenched from the western coasts of Africa and transported to America to work in the mines has so angered the populations of the interior, that not only Europeans but also Africans who try to penetrate these territories from the coast would be instantly slaughtered.
[1098]
Perhaps later on Providence will open the way also in these western parts. This is why the Committee’s first efforts will be directed towards eastern and north-eastern Africa, and especially on the great Ethiopian plateau, where the climate is most satisfactory and the people are more susceptible to receiving Catholicism and European culture.
[1099]
Your Most Reverend Eminence will ask if it is possible to forma Committee of this kind! I answer that if the substance of the project is right, reasonable and well thought out, the Committee is feasible, for in that case I am certain that Your Most Reverend Eminence will extend your protection over it. I attach the greatest importance to the Committee which I would like to see formed in the way I have described, for it is this element that will liven the spirit, fire the zeal and promote the greatest interest in the Catholic world for the most forsaken race on earth, the black race. If Providence were to allow this Committee to be blessed by Rome, then, as I see it, the beneficial repercussions for Africa would be very numerous!
[1100]
Little by little the Superiors would come closer in spirit. There would be an exchange of ideas, enlightenments and efforts so that viribus unitis the objectives would be reached more easily and more rapidly. Moreover, all the existing works aimed at helping the Africans, which are all God’s works, currently operating separately from each other and producing scarce and incomplete results, would thus be united together and focused on the single purpose of planting the faith firmly in the heart of Africa. They would acquire greater vigour, develop more easily and become most effective in achieving the desired objective.
[1101]
I will not speak of Fr Lodovico da Casoria’s work in Naples, where there is most sturdy material for Africa, or of my beloved Superior Fr Nicola Mazza’s little Work. I will be so bold as to remind Your Most Reverend Eminence of the proposal I made to you last October: to assign to these two Institutes the two Missions of the Eastern and Western Nile, the former having as its borders Egypt in the North and the river Sobat in the South; and the latter, Egypt and the Libyan desert in the North and the river Ghazal in the South. To this effect, I have asked the most zealous Canon Mitterrutzner of Bressanone to reach an agreement with the Society of Mary in Vienna for the subsidy of both the Institutes. The work of the Mazza Institute, being Austrian, will certainly be subsidised: I have a positive reply on this: The Canon has not yet had a reply for the Naples Institute, from which Africa will certainly receive immense benefits.
[1102]
I will not speak of the small Association in Cologne, which will grow admirably as the work of the African missions progresses. When Germans read and see that work is being done and there is action, they are generous. For the first eight years the Cologne Association published nothing in its annals but the redemption of slaves, their placement in Convents in Europe, the death of the African girls, their religious professions, so that its development was meagre. Instead it has grown better in the last few years when the annals covered the African missions and the conversion of Africans.
[1103]
I will not yet speak of the Work for the slaves of Fr Capella from the Amiens Diocese. Having summoned him to Paris for consultations over the last few days, following Mgr Massaia’s advice, we concluded that before making any agreement with the Lyons Association he should go on a trip to Spain and under the protection of some Archbishop, as a Spaniard, examine the possibility of founding the Association there for greater advantage and hopes of success. In this agreement I have decided not to appear in person at all in Lyons, because it would be damaging to me. However, from the way we reached the agreement with Fr Capella, I am most firmly confident that the work for the slaves will be carried out. The Bishop of Amiens is most intent upon it.
[1104]
I say just a word about the Work of the late Fr Olivieri, which could be of immense value and most fruitful if it were to address and co-operate with the African missions and join in the work for the regeneration of Africa. If this Institute, instead of spending vast sums of money buying children in Africa and bringing them to Europe with thousands of difficulties from the Egyptian government and the European Consulates, simply limited itself to redeeming the young Africans and entrusting them to the Institutes in Africa, whose purpose is the education of African youth for the training of workers for the conversion of Africa, I am sure it would enjoy greater development and again be more beneficial to the Church. Since this Institute is in fact incorporated and united with the Trinitarian Order, as stated by the Decree of the Sacred Congregation for Bishops and Regulars dated 21st March 1855, Providence could in some way call to the Apostolate for Africa some of the Religious in this Holy Order, whose original purpose, by Divine Mercy, ceased to exist a few centuries since.
[1105]
This is an outline of what I wish to submit to Your Most Reverend Eminence’s judgement. It is what appears to me as most advantageous in the effort to do more for the Africans. It seems to me that the Plan, thus conceived, is simpler than before. Should Your Most Reverend Eminence’s wise judgement not deem it appropriate to approve the substantial modifications of the Plan, I will bless the Lord and redouble my efforts to meditate and think up a simpler and more feasible Plan. The problem I am attempting to solve is certainly extremely difficult: but when I think that until now the Church has had only rather poor consolations from Africa, and that the African race is the most unfortunate in the world, and that the more time passes the more the regeneration of Africa will become difficult, then I know that no torment will shake me, no labour discourage me, no difficulty stop me; even death would be dear tome if it might be of some use to the Africans. May God inspire Your Most Reverend Eminence to decree that which is most beneficial to the undertaking.
[1106]
Mgr Massaia, with whom I have been residing for the last four months, has told me that Your Eminence had let him know that I no longer belong to the Mazza Institute. I was truly surprised, since I have received no communication about this, neither before Your Eminence’s letter nor after. I wrote several times to my holy elderly founder and I received numerous letters from the Director of my Institute, and never was it mentioned that I no longer belong to the Mazza Institute. It would be a great impudence on my part to print in my Plan that I belong to the Mazza Institute, if I did not. When I returned from Rome to Verona, my old Superior welcomed me as his most beloved son and he encouraged me to concern myself with Africa.
[1107]
During my stay in France, my Director only wrote to me that the good Old Man spoke these words: “With his projects Fr Comboni is hindering my own”, which is hardly in keeping with the welcome he gave me in Verona. Before I go to Rome I shall pass through Verona to settle this matter of which I know nothing yet. I received a second life from my old man Fr Mazza: I would be most afflicted if, after twenty-three years, he were disappointed with me. The Bishop of Verona who knows the Institute, the holy old man who is the founder, and the most unworthy of its members, after examining the matter, if this is necessary and there is sufficient cause, will inform you of his venerable dispositions, to which I submit wholeheartedly. I assure Your Most Reverend Eminence that my trip to France will have done some good and has enlightened me on many things I did not know. In person I shall prove to Your Eminence that by inspiring me to go to France you gave me wise and useful advice.
[1108]
For about a month now, Mgr Massaia’s relations with the French government have been going marvellously: it is a question of having almost reached the decision to establish an embassy to the Abyssinian Empire, in the Catholic sense and in conformity with Monsignor’s wishes. If this succeeds I see a happy future for the eastern part of Central Africa. All this is secret. May Your Eminence forgive me if I write at too great a length: I am never able to express my ideas in few words. I hope that I have made myself clear enough. In the hope that God little by little will bless my efforts for Central Africa, trusting in the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary and in the Apostle Paul who being destined to convert the people has not yet finished his mission, but will pursue it for the people of Africa, I kiss the Sacred Purple and declare myself in all veneration
Your Most Reverend Eminence’s
most humble and devoted son
Fr Daniel Comboni
The Declaration of the Cologne Association follows.
[1109]
no n. 1109