N. 163 (156) – TO CANON GIOVANNI MITTERRUTZNER
ACR, A, c. 15/64
Alexandria, Egypt, 20/11 1865
My dearest friend,
[1191]
Having to busy ourselves with finding what we need for our small expedition to Shellal has made us put off letter writing. With all the emotion that fills our hearts we cannot find words to thank you above all, and that most exalted Bishop, for making the generous offering of 20 francs which we kissed when we received them, as our dear Fr Nicola used to do. At the same time the Cologne Association sent me 200 Prussian thalers. 50 florins were offered to me by the Archbishop of Salzburg, to whom I presented my Plan; and there were a few other small and modest donations. You see the admirable Providence of God: with all that we are already in Cairo, for nine people are already there and tomorrow I arrive with all the things and provisions.
[1192]
The Committee has not given us a cent, assuring us a thousand times that they have nothing in their coffers, not a single florin, and that what little there is, is for Khartoum. We nobly thanked them and full of trust in God we shall do all our business. None of the Franciscans, except for Fr Mazzeck, even wanted to see Fr Lodovico. At Mass the guardian forbade the Africans from serving, and the several times that Fr Lodovico and Fr Bonaventura said Mass in the Friary Church, they neither spoke to them nor offered them coffee. So all five of us stayed at the Angheresc Corona Hotel.
[1193]
As a friend of Cavaliere Noy, I obtained a free trip on the train to Trieste for all five of us. In Trieste I made a contract with Lloyd Austriaco, and for 220 (two hundred and twenty) florins the five of us and Michele Ladò were given a second class passage to Alexandria. We had the most terrible storm and in the Greek archipelago there was a hurricane which killed 48 large oxen and a few people. Fr Lodovico thought he was dying: we heard each other’s confession and huddled together: The storm lasted 64 hours: we were forced to shelter in the lee of the island of Candia (Crete), and it was a miracle that we survived: I had already resigned myself to dying. But God willed that we reach Alexandria safely. There we took a loan of 100 gold Napoleons with which we intend to reach Aswan, to provide for the station for 6 months and for Fr Lodovico and I to return to Cairo.
[1194]
Here we find spirits grown mistrustful of Africa, but with patience, constancy and resignation all will be won. Although Fr Lodovico has certain ideas opposed to my own, we shall nonetheless work efficiently together for the good of Africa. This holy man lacks the verve of Fr Mazza and the experience of Africa; but he is a saint, though like all saints he is stubborn. He would like to see everything become Franciscan and sees no good except with the friars. To give an example, the African Ludwich from Bressanone seems to him a youth without spirit, because he smokes and drinks beer between meals: but these are insignificant little things. The fact is that he is a saint who loves Africa and will do great things for Africa. I do not obey him in his desire that I should put on the brown friars’ habit; but he is and always will be dear to me. When I am peacefully on the boat in Upper Egypt, I will write proper letters; excuse me if I write badly now but my heart is all yours. Please convey my deepest respect to His Excellency the Lord Bishop, and thank him sincerely for his goodness to me. In the Memento of Mass I always pray for him and his diocese, that God may, as in the past, inspire vocations for Africa from Bressanone. A thousand greetings to all those I know in Brixen. To you I send a world of affectionate thoughts: give my regards to the African, who I hope will be mine. Pray to the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary for
Yours ever in the Lord,
Fr Daniel