[2450]
Have a little patience if this letter should turn out to be rather long, because I am trying to explain in it what you mentioned to me in your most appreciated letter from Grezzano of the 17th of this month, about the interior of Africa and the new piece of land given us, 10 minutes away from our Cairo Establishment. Let us suppose that the modern Kingdom of Italy and the Pontifical State from Ferrara to Frosinone were the African Interior or Black Africa; and that the Tyrol was Europe. According to this hypothesis, Verona would correspond to Roveredo, Cairo to Venice, Aswan to Ferrara, Khartoum to Pistoia, the tribe of the Dinka to Florence, the tribe of the Bari to Siena, and the sources of the Nile, to Rome.
[2451]
The goal of our work is the conquest of Central Africa or Black Africa, not to be achieved by attacking, but by besieging it through our Institutes, which are like so many approaches from which to begin the great siege on the enemy’s weakest side, which is the course of the great Nile. What have we achieved until now? We have only taken one small step. In the town of Roveredo we have founded a small School for missionary pupils for the Kingdom of Italy and especially for Tuscany and the Papal States; we have also founded three Institutes in Venice for the education of Tuscans and the natives of Romagna, so that when their education has been completed, they can set out, in the care of Tyroleans taught in Roveredo whose education has been perfected in Venice, to implant the faith and civilisation in the lands of their birth, Tuscany and the Papal States. Given this, the primary aim of the Institutes in Venice is to train the indigenous apostles of Tuscany and Romagna. Their secondary aim is the apostolate of the Tuscans and the natives of Romagna who live in Venice. In other words: in Cairo, apostles of CentralAfrican extraction are trained, and at the same time work is carried out for the conversion of the Africans from the interior living in Egypt where they have been taken by Muslim merchants, who abduct them from their lands in Central Africa.
[2452]
What remains to be done? We must take steps to achieve our first aim and reach the interior of Africa in stages, since several priests and numerous African girls and Sisters are ready for the Apostolate of the African interior; otherwise the African girls (who are the most useful part of our apostolate) who are already mature, (18 out of 54), will die of old age in Cairo, without having worked with greater results in the lands of their birth where a thousand are converted in comparison to Egypt where only five are converted. It is therefore essential to advance in Africa, while maintaining our basic Houses in Cairo. Here the missionary is acclimatised, he learns oriental languages and customs and the practice of the apostolic ministry. In addition, new indigenous apostles of both sexes are constantly being trained here, and above all, it is here that the Vicar Apostolic in Egypt helps convert the Africans of Egypt who depend on his jurisdiction. But in Venice (Cairo) we are not at home. We have to depend on the Patriarch and his Curia in order to exercise our ministry (that is, we must depend on the Apostolic Delegate in Egypt and on the Friars in order to carry out the Apostolate); thus if we are to follow our itinerary, what must we do to reach our goal, which is to establish ourselves in the African interior (Tuscany, and the Papal States)? We must do the following:
[2453]
We must ask Propaganda and the Pope (who are longing to do so) to assign a part of Africa to be evangelised by us and by our successors, to our Colleges in Verona and Cairo, and to establish the part assigned to us as a Vicariate Apostolic independent of any other jurisdiction and dependent upon Propaganda alone, as are all the other Vicariates. These procedures will take two or three years. Supposing Propaganda were to assign the responsibility for evangelising Tuscany and establishing the Vicariate Apostolic of Tuscany to the Institutes of Roveredo and Venice. It would immediately designate a director, on the proposal of the Bishop of Roveredo, the Head of the Work, and after consulting the Vicar Apostolic of Venice, who, on paper, is temporarily in charge of Tuscany and has jurisdiction over the Institutes of Venice. Suppose that Fr Ravignani were to be appointed head. What does this head of the Vicariate Apostolic of Tuscany do? In brief, he does this.
[2454]
Fr Ravignani takes stock of his forces, estimates more or less how many and what members the College of Roveredo can supply over ten years, and how many and who the Institute of Venice can provide. He undertakes an exploration of Tuscany with several companions, and observes that his forces will enable him to evangelise the vast tribe of Florence and its province. There he settles the males and females already perfected in the Institutes of Venice, after providing the stages of Bologna and Pistoia with an Institute each, for which it can be said with certainty that the financial resources of the Society of Mary in Vienna are available. But Fr Ravignani has not been made responsible by the Holy See for gaining only Florence and its Province for Christ; as Vicar Apostolic of Tuscany he must also think of Lucca, Pisa, Leghorn, Siena, etc., and for this reason the forces supplied to him by the Establishments in Roveredo and Venice are not sufficient. He thinks of calling several other Religious Orders to his aid. Therefore he writes to or tries to arrange matters with the head of the Work, the Bishop of Roveredo; and the latter undertakes to complete the bureaucratic procedures with the Pope or Propaganda and with the Societies who are benefactors, in order to decide which Religious Orders should be summoned to help out the Vicariate Apostolic of Tuscany. Let us suppose, as an example, that we think of the Camillians. Then Fr Guardi is contacted, the forces this small Order can supply are estimated and the tribe of Lucca is assigned to them, for example, and erected as a Parish, just as if the Bishop of
Verona called the Dominicans to entrust the Parish of S. Anastasia to them.
[2455]
This done, Pisa, Leghorn, Siena and Arezzo, etc. must be taken care of. So the Jesuits, or Dominicans, or the Institute of Don Bosco or that of Milan, etc. are likewise invited to occupy this virgin territory. As Your Excellency clearly sees, when the Catholic Apostolate is established in Tuscany the Church will think about gaining Perugia, Viterbo, Rome and Frosinone to provide the Stations of Tuscany with work, advice and help. But in calling these Orders to the Vicariate of Tuscany, it will happen that they do not want to depend on the secular priests of Florence and on one head, such as Ravignani. In this case, should Fr Ravignani see that the Camillians of Lucca, the Dominicans of Pisa, etc. woul dmake a good foundation, he will ask Propaganda to dismember his Vicariate of Tuscany (which has a population of more than 40 million), in order to form the Vicariates of Lucca for the Camillians, of Pisa for the Dominicans, of Leghorn for the Jesuits, of Siena for the Seminary of Milan, and having constituted these Orders so as no longer to depend on the priests of Roveredo and Venice, we shall have the grace of helping to extend Christ’s Kingdom in Tuscany, calling to this arduous Apostolate brave champions in the Jesuits, Dominicans, Camillians, etc.
[2456]
With these ideas which are the core of our Plan, we shall succeed in working out the issue of the Camillians in Cairo, both legally and canonically. But I believe Your Excellency would never agree that we make over our male Institute in Cairo to two Camillians, place our candidates from Verona as lodgers with them for a fee of 300 francs a year plus the collections of the daily Masses, and make us, who have a certain freedom of movement, slaves of those whom we ourselves summoned to be auxiliaries and not heads. This was Carcereri’s plan, which required me to beg eternally for alms for the Camillians, to build them up a capital of more than half a million, and to depend upon them. However, it now seems that he has recognised his mistake.
[2457]
Here you have an explanation of the ardent wish to return to their countries of the African girls who are now mature, and of the missionaries to advance on their path. This explains the need for the Cairo Institute to have a stable basis. In addition to serving the above-mentioned aims, it is useful and still necessary to ascertain whether we ought to risk European priests in the arduous and dangerous apostolate of the interior; since in Cairo there are minor scandals, naked little girls, homosexuals, etc., but in the interior, adult men and women are completely or virtually naked. In Cairo it is springtime in winter, it is only slightly hot in summer and one eats and drinks as in Europe; but in the interior, there is considerably more to suffer and to put up with for Christ. Consequently, a missionary can be good for Cairo and for Egypt and bad for Central Africa. Now the Superior of the Institutes in Cairo studies, observes and notices in three or four years whether it is possible to risk a candidate in the African interior, ne cum aliis praedicaverit ipse reprobus efficiatur. And the means?… We will talk in Verona: let us trust in God alone, let us seek his kingdom and his justice, et haec omnia adiicentur nobis. After, etc.
[2458]
I hope I have explained the matter to you clearly; it is very simple and in conformity with the canons and with the views and norms of Rome. I would like to know if you have understood it properly. I believe you will be of this opinion. Years ago it was judged lightweight by some. Now they stick their noses in and say it was their plan. So they are now confirming ours!
[2459]
After all this I have only one thing further to add. It is necessary to suffer many things for love of Christ, to fight with the powerful, with the Turks, with atheists, with Freemasons, with barbarians, with the elements, with priests, with friars, with the world and with Hell. But the one who trusts in himself trusts in the greatest ass of this world. All our trust is in the One who died for the Africans and who chooses the weakest instruments to achieve his works; for he wants to show that he is the author of good, and as for us, alone, we can only do evil. Since it is he who has called us to this work, with his grace we shall triumph over Pashas, Freemasons, atheistic governments, over the distorted thoughts of the good, the cunning of the wicked, and the snares of the world and of hell; nor will we halt our march until we breathe our last. When we are subsequently in Heaven (and we want to go there, all right!) then with our constant prayers we will put Jesus and Mary on the Cross and pray to him so much that either for love or for… he will be forced to work miracles and inspire Apostles like Paul and Xavier; until the hundred million in unhappy Africa have been converted to the faith, as soon as possible.
[2460]
I shall say nothing now of Hohenwart who sends you his regards, of my Prince Löwenstein who is in Vienna and is working out a perpetual legacy for our African Institutes with Prince Liechtenstein, of the words that Comte Henri V de Chambord said to me on 16th February 1869: si jamais je me rendrai à ma place sur le trône de France, votre mission de la Nigritie ne manquera de rien, of the assertion of the Nuncio in Vienna who sees a special blessing of God’s hand on our work and on my journey to Austria, of the hopes that exist there, of the deal with Austrian Lloyd, of the congratulations I received for the celebration in St Joseph’s Cathedral, of the 100 gold Napoleons I sent to Cairo yesterday, of the 1,400 francs for Cairo from Lyons, of the 12,347 (twelve thousand three hundred and forty seven francs and 62 centimes) paid out since January, of the 1,347 letters I wrote in this same period, of my desire that you will receive Mgr Pelami in the Seminary during his two days in Verona, of the stamps that I shall bring you from Germany (I include a precious one from Luxembourg on a letter written to me by that Bishop Adames), of the enthusiasm for Africa inspired again in Germany, of the impressive words spoken to me by the Cardinal Archbishop of Vienna “it can certainly be said that the hope of the conversion of Central Africa is not lost thanks to this new system” (in Austria they had lost it as they told me and wrote two months ago – ad quid perditio haec – refusing to make me any donation), of the good done to me by the Nuncio, of the testimonies of many Bishops, of the secret alms sent me by persons who are never recognised and do not bother to make themselves known, (I spoke to Mgr Pelami about Barnabò’s character), of Comte Thum who leaves his house in a carriage, with his walking sticks, and greetings from him and his wife to Your Excellency, to the Marchese, etc., etc., and I come straight to the sad and not very merry (may God be blessed etiam in adversis) communication of 15th April made to me his verbis:
“From the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Most Reverend Sir,
[2461]
After the most humble proposal of this Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs, His Imperial and Royal Apostolic Majesty has graciously deigned, with a Sovereign Deliberation of 6thMay this year, to grant you a subsidy for the sum of three hundred florins of Austrian currency in silver from his ministerial funds. In addition to this, his noble Majesty is pleased to grant you a further subsidy for the sum of 300 florins with a deliberation of 7th May, in the form of a letter of credit from his private account. As this Imperial Royal Minister has the honour to send Your Reverence the present communication in answer to your humble petition to His Majesty last March on behalf of the Apostolic Mission entrusted to your care, you are invited to present yourself at this office where you will receive the above-mentioned sums. Further, with regard to your last request, to have your Work recommended to His Highness the Khedive of Egypt, please take note at the same time that the Imperial and Royal General Consulate of Egypt has been informed and has been provided with instructions relating to the matter in question. May Your Reverence be pleased to receive the assurance of my perfect esteem,
For the Minster of Foreign Affairs,
B.on Belieben, Court Counsellor"
[2462]
I do not like the trick of such a cool recommendation to the Viceroy of Egypt on Minister Beust’s part, after the beautiful words he said to me. To be really powerful and effective with the Khedive, this recommendation should be made in the Emperor’s name. Thus on the 16th of this month I wrote a letter of thanks to his Apostolic Majesty, asking him for this grace. Our dear Mother Mary granted my prayer. I myself took the letter to the palace and handed it to a trusted person; and yesterday I was informed that His Majesty the Emperor had ordered the head of his private Cabinet, Councillor Braun, to write to the Consul General of Egypt to recommend the Work in the Emperor’s own name. Praised be Jesus and Mary. Give your blessing to and pray for your most unworthy Son,
Fr Dan. Comboni
His Apostolic Majesty’s good offices on our behalf are a present and future good.