[2834]
Having been invited to draft a Report on the Vicariate Apostolic of Central Africa by Your Most Reverend Eminence, I shall briefly outline its history from its foundation to today and humbly submit a plan of action which to me would seem appropriate for the missionaries of the Institute for the Missions in Central Africa, recently erected in Verona, so as to take up its arduous and important functions once more, were the Sacred Congregation to entrust it with the task of soundly planting the faith in these remote lands.
[2835]
It is most certainly a fact that in the countries of Central Africa, inhabited by more than one hundred million black people who constitute one tenth of the entire human race (as I stated in the Postulatum to the Holy Vatican Council pro Nigris Africae Centralis), Christianity has never been established, or at least it may be said that at present not a single trace of it remains. Of the efforts made by the Holy See in different epochs, whether in the southern part of Mozambique in 1637, or to the west in Senegambia with the help of the Spanish Capuchins in 1645, 1658, 1660, or to the north in Tripoli and Salè with the Reformed Friars Minor, who in 1706 reached the vast kingdom of Bornu, or finally to the east, where a few missionaries crossed the southern part of Upper Nubia, none of these produced any results within the regions of the African interior. The most serious and important efforts made by the Sacred Congregation as regards these infidel populations bent under the yoke of Islam and Paganism took place under the glorious pontificates of the late Gregory XVI and the immortal Pius IX.
In 1844 an extract of a work entitled Journeys to Kordofan was presented to the Sacred Congregation. It stressed the expediency and necessity of sending missionaries into the African interior, where the inhabitants seemed well disposed to the proclamation of the Gospel.
[2836]
At the same time, Canon Casolani of Malta, returning from a trip to the northern coasts of Africa, where he had spoken to some Maltese who had contacts with areas beyond Barbary, and after travelling in the east, where he had encountered Fr Massimiliano Ryllo, the Polish Superior of the Jesuits in Syria, with whom he had discussed the importance of a Catholic mission to the African interior, explained to the Most Eminent Cardinal Prefect Fransoni the most important reasons and the great advantages there would be for the Church if it planted Christianity in Central Africa.
[2837]
Subsequently, after mature reflection on the matter, the Cardinal Prefect ordered that research be undertaken to acquire precise and definitive knowledge on the state of the regions of the African interior, their languages, the temperament and customs of the populations, their relations with foreigners and the basis on which a mission could be established there.
[2838]
To this effect, having questioned Fr Venanzio da S. Venanzio, Prefect Apostolic of Tripoli, whose territory to the south bordered precisely with the mission to be founded, the Most Eminent Cardinal received the reply that it was appropriate to attempt an expedition from Barbary via Ghadamis across the Great Desert where since 1706 a Prefect Apostolic of the Reformed Friars Minor had been established in the kingdom of Bornu, as could be seen in the Archives of the Prefecture.
[2839]
At the same time the Most Eminent Cardinal, having asked Canon Casolani, whom he knew was equipped with similar knowledge, to gather all the information that could be useful for the intended purpose, received an interesting report dated 5th June 1845. This clearly described the immensity and fertility of the countries beyond the Great Desert, giving the natural geographic boundaries, the main mountains, the rivers, the lakes, the agricultural production, the forms of government, the types of industry, the forms of trade, the superstitions and the main idolatrous and Islamic religions. To this general idea of the African interior, Canon Casolani added information on the local geography and confirmed the opinion of the Prefect Apostolic of Tripoli, that the only route to penetrate these lands which remain almost unknown was that of Barbary and Ghadamis, a town located 100 leagues south-west of Tripoli. He concluded that it would be appropriate for the Great Desert and the whole of Central Africa to be included within the boundaries of this Prefecture and that at the head of such a Mission there should be an able Vicar Apostolic, with the rank of Bishop who, with a good knowledge of Arabic, could take with him a certain number of excellent workers, both churchmen and laymen, and go to Ghadamis without outward religious show, to start winning over the local inhabitants’ spirit especially through the practice of medicine and the skills that are most useful in those lands, and with Christian charity.
[2840]
The Most Eminent Cardinal, once he had assured the active participation of Canon Casolani, who placed himself at the disposal of the Holy See, and after a number of dealings with the Most Reverend General of the Jesuits, from whom he obtained the above-mentioned Fr Ryllo for the establishment of the Mission and also associating with them Dr Ignazio Knoblecher, a former student of the College of Propaganda, in January 1846, presented to the Most Eminent and Reverend Cardinals of the Sacred Congregation a Project Proposal for the establishment of a new Mission in the countries of Central Africa, in which it was decided:
1. To send the Reverend Fathers Casolani, Ryllo and Knoblecher to the African interior, notably to Ghadamis, to explore on the spot the lands and disposition of these peoples so as to eventually establish a regular mission there.
2. To place at the head of this expedition Canon Casolani, conferring upon him the title of Vicar Apostolic at episcopal level.
3. To extend the boundaries of the mission to cover not only Central Africa, but also the Great Desert.
[2841]
On the basis of these deliberations, His Holiness Gregory XVI, with a Brief of the following 3rd April, erected the said Mission as a Vicariate Apostolic with the following boundaries, to which it corresponds at present:
To t h e north the Prefecture of Tripoli, the Vicariate of Tunis and the Diocese of Algiers.
To the west the Vicariates of Senegambia and Guinea.
To t h e east the Vicariates of Egypt, Abyssinia and the Gallas.
To the south the Mountains of the Moon (which if they really exist, are a few degrees beyond the Equator).
[2842]
The Vicariate Apostolic of Central Africa, even without the great expanse covered by the recent Prefecture of the Sahara, entrusted in 1868 to the Archbishop of Algiers, is the most vast and populated Vicariate in the world.
[2843]
While Mgr Casolani, who had been consecrated Bishop, was attending to family affairs in Malta, Fr Ryllo, having been informed in detail of the successful outcome of the expeditions commissioned by Mohammed Ali, the Viceroy of Egypt, along the valley of the Nile to the Sudan, especially the ones in 1838 and 1842 led by Mr Arnaux who had followed the White Nile as far as the 5th degree Latitude North, persuaded Cardinal Fransoni with many sound arguments that it would be better to penetrate the new mission territory from the east along the Nile and to choose as a point of support the city of Khartoum which, due to its geographic location and political importance would be appropriate and safe for the establishment of the first Catholic Station, since it was the capital of the new Egyptian conquests in the Sudan and the natural centre of communications between Egypt and the regions of the African interior.
[2844]
It was therefore decided to abandon Mgr Casolani’s project, which had been to travel the route from Tripoli to Ghadamis. Not wishing to conform to this determination, Bishop Casolani declined the responsibility of leading the decreed expedition, which is why the Sacred Congregation appointed Fr Ryllo as its leader, with the title of Pro-Vicar Apostolic.
[2845]
With the participation in the new expedition of Dr Ignazio Knoblecher, from Liubliana, Fr E. Pedemonte, of the Society of Jesus from Genoa and Fr Angelo Vinco from the Mazza Institute in Verona and accompanied by Mgr Casolani who followed him as a simple missionary, Fr Ryllo set off for Egypt in spring 1847. Having obtained a Firman from the Viceroy for protection from the chiefs in the Sudan, passing through File and Dongola, on 11th February 1848, he reached Khartoum, a city of straw and mud brick huts with 15,000 inhabitants, mostly consisting of slaves snatched by force from the tribes of the interior, and located in Upper Nubia near the point of confluence of the Blue Nile and the White Nile, between the 15th and the 16th degrees of Latitude North, and the 30th and 31st degrees of Longitude East, according to the Paris meridian. Khartoum is two months away from Cairo.
[2846]
Just after buying a piece of land with some rough huts which served as housing for the missionaries, Fr Ryllo became ill with acute dysentery; and on 17th June he went to his eternal repose, leaving the leadership of the mission to Dr Knoblecher.
[2847]
Soon afterwards they received the terrible news of the revolutions that were tearing Europe apart. Propaganda informed the missionaries that in its inability to provide for the needs of the Vicariate, it left them free to return to Europe to be sent on other missions. Mgr Casolani, racked with fevers, returned to Malta for good. The new Superior Knoblecher was not deterred by this. He had the land bought by his predecessors cultivated and built a small house and a chapel on it. He bought a few African slaves to educate them in the faith. He requested and obtained from the General of the Jesuits: Fr Zara from Verona and two lay brothers and, after exploring different tribes of the White Nile, down to the 3rd parallel, leaving the aforementioned Jesuit fathers to head the mission, he returned to Europe, went to his homeland and being granted the greatest favours at the court of His Apostolic Majesty and by the Bishops of Austria, was able to found the Society of Mary in Vienna which, under the Emperor’s protection and enriched with several Indulgences from the reigning Supreme Pontiff by Brief of 5th December 1852, undertook to provide the necessary means to maintain the mission. Indeed, this Society, known as Marienverein, powerfully assisted by the illustrious Professor Mitterrutzner of Bressanone, for a number of years provided abundant resources to the Vicariate.
[2848]
Dr Knoblecher, coming to Rome and reporting to the Sacred Congregation on his activities, was appointed Vicar Apostolic during the Audience of 10th August 1851. Taking with him five Slav priests as well as several laymen, he sailed for Alexandria from Trieste on 2nd September. After buying a comfortable boat in Cairo, to which he gave the name Stella Mattutina, he safely reached Khartoum at the end of December. Leaving the priests Kociiancic and Milharcic to head the Station, he led the others into the Bari tribe and founded the Station of Gondokoro, located between the 4th and 5th degrees Latitude North and the 29th and 30th degree Longitude East of Paris.
[2849]
It is pointless here to describe the geography of this eastern part of the Vicariate Apostolic where the activities of the new missionaries and of those who followed them were mainly concentrated until 1861. I shall not mention for the moment the very gentle temperament and character of these unfortunate peoples who groan under the weight of the most inhuman slavery, victims of the barbarous trade practised by the Muslims and the Jallaba, who simulate friendship and then violate the sanctuary of peaceful African families and violently snatch boys and girls from their mothers’ arms, sometimes mercilessly slaughtering the parents themselves who offer opposition, to sell them as slaves on the markets of Kordofan and Nubia and fill the harems of the Turks. It is equally useless to point out that to remove this shameful plague, neither the treaties repeatedly made by the European powers, nor the feigned rigours of the consular and Muslim authorities will have any effect; only an active Catholic apostolate and the proclamation of the Gospel will, in time, triumph over this barbarity and radically destroy the horrible African slave trade. It is finally useless to mention the extraordinary fertility of the land, the places visited by the mission, the multifaceted superstitions, the traditions of the Old Testament, the customs of the people who inhabit the White Nile, the idolatry and the fetishism which prevails there, the devastation caused by Muslim propaganda among these tribes and the happiness with which Africans embrace Christianity, especially when they are young; it is useless, I say, to mention all that has been done by the 32 missionaries who have reached Africa in seven different expeditions, who strove under the active and wise leadership of Knoblecher, and most of whom died as victims of charity for the salvation of these souls. A very brief report of mine on the history of the Vicariate, from its foundation to our day, was published in the Annals of Propaganda Fide in March 1871.
[2850]
I shall therefore limit myself to giving a summary of the advances made under Knoblecher’s governance, which lasted until 1858.
1. The Khartoum Station was founded. The very large house and the small church with the ample garden which produces good resources and is enclosed by a wall, all built by the mission, cost more than sixty thousand Roman scudi.
2. The Gondokoro Station was founded, which is normally a two month’s journey from Khartoum. A house with a chapel and a garden were built there, costing the mission about thirty thousand scudi.
3. The Holy Cross Station was founded in the Kish tribe, between the 6th and 7th degrees Latitude North and the 28th and 29th degree Longitude East
from Paris, which is about forty days from Khartoum and twenty days from Gondokoro. It was made up of about twenty huts and a reed church built entirely with our own hands, and cost a few hundred scudi.
[2851]
4. A knowledge was gained of all the tribes spreading to the left and right of the White Nile, among which the following may be distinguished: the Shilluk, the Dinka, the Janghé, the Nuer, the Kish, the Tuic, the Gogh, the Eilab and the Bari. A study was made of the superstitions, the temperament, the social condition of these Africans, so as to know well the easiest method and the surest way to win them for the faith. In addition, medicine and charity were practised so as to enable them to distinguish the spirit of the missionary who wanted their welfare from that of the white adventurer who mistreated them and stole their children and goods.
[2852]
5. Some of the languages of these lands were learned, two of which are the main ones: Dinka, which is spoken by 22 tribes and several million natives; and Bari, which is spoken by Africans living between the 5th parallel and the Equator. In these two languages, the illustrious Professor Mitterrutzner of Bressanone, with the help of our manuscripts, compiled and published dictionaries, catechisms, several dialogues and the translations of the Psalms and St Luke’s Gospel. The publications in these two languages, of which scientists in Europe ignored even the name, will be immensely useful to future missionaries in Central Africa.
[2853]
6. Finally, about one hundred idolaters became Catholics. And here it should be noted that it was thought proper to grant baptism only to those, save a few exceptions, who consecrated themselves entirely to the service of the mission, and who could therefore be maintained by it and if necessary be taken to Khartoum or Egypt to safeguard their faith in all events. Many thousands of Africans, indeed whole tribes, would have embraced our holy religion: but due to the frequent death of missionaries which meant that the mission was not fully stable and could not be sure of maintaining a constant priestly ministry or regularly teach the converts, it was deemed better to await the time when it would be possible to consolidate and perpetuate the mission. Knoblecher told me this several times.
[2854]
During this period, Europe saw the appearance of two new Institutions which were preparing to consecrate their efforts to the formation of candidates for Africa.
The first was the Institute for the distinctly talented founded in Verona by the most zealous Fr Nicola Mazza who, through the late Mgr Besi, presented a humble petition in 1853 to the Eminent Cardinal Prefect asking for a small portion of Central Africa to be evangelised by his priests. His Eminence referred the petitioner to the Pro-Vicar Apostolic for the matter to be dealt with. Once everything was agreed, the Mazza Institute sent seven missionaries, of whom I was one, to Central Africa on the two expeditions of 1853 and 1857. Five of these died, one went back home for good, and the last, the poorest of the lot, is still being a servus inutilis in the field of the mission.
[2855]
The other Institution is that of Fr Lodovico da Casoria, a Franciscan, who in 1854 established two colleges in Naples. One was for boys, consisting of more than 80 young Africans; and the other for girls, with more than 120 African girls. The pious founder had these African boys and girls educated to prepare them as candidates for the missions, most of them having been ransomed from slavery by the great zeal of the late Fr Olivieri of Genova.
[2856]
Just as there was a glimmer of hope that the Vicariate of Central Africa could be strengthened by these important means and measures, Dr Knoblecher, returning to Rome to see to matters concerning the Mission, died in Naples on 13th April 1858. Three days later in Khartoum, his Vicar General, Fr Giuseppe Gostner from the diocese of Trent, also succumbed. Those in charge of the Stations of Holy Cross and Gondokoro and a few other missionaries also died.
[2857]
The Reverend Fr Matteo Kirchner, returning from the White Nile in August of the same year, received orders from the Sacred Congregation to take up the reins of the Vicariate. Since the number of missionaries was decreasing without any hope of others in the future, he came to Rome and asked the Most Reverend Fr General of the Franciscans for some candidates, the latter having begun to deal with the Vicariate on account of the Institutes for Africans in Naples and the Missions in Upper Egypt. After being granted three, one of whom was Fr Giovanni Reinthaller-Ducla from Graz, he returned to Africa.
[2858]
His first concern, after consulting the missionaries, was to remove his colleagues in the apostolate from the inexorable menace of death which threatened shortly to exterminate the mission. It was decided that a single central residence should be established at a point in the territory that was less exposed to the deadly influence of the climate. From there the missionaries would be able to go once a year to visit the Stations of Khartoum and the White Nile, which in the meantime were entrusted to some influential and good Catholic of the place. The site chosen for this purpose was Shellal, a village located at the beginning of the cataracts of Aswan opposite the island of File, 1,000 kilometres from Khartoum, on the border between Egypt and Nubia, about 40 miles on this side of the Tropic of Cancer, between the 30th and 31st degrees East of Paris. Propaganda covered the expenses of this foundation, after the land on which the establishment was to be built had been obtained from Said Pasha, the Viceroy of Egypt.
[2859]
In the meantime, other missionaries having died, the Pro-Vicar Apostolic Kirchner, overwhelmed by so many losses and moved by the absolute necessity to ensure the indispensable number of workers for the mission, decided to entrust the care of this arduous Vicariate to a religious Order.
[2860]
Coming to Rome for this purpose, he again turned, with Propaganda’s approval, to the General of the Franciscans who, with the approval of his Council, formally declared himself prepared to assume entire responsibility for the Mission, if it was declared Seraphic. This project, to which His Excellency the Court Councillor Frederick de Hurter, historiographer of the Austrian Empire and President of the Committee of Marienverein in Vienna fully adhered in favour of the Franciscans, was supported by the following motives:
1. The benefits offered by a large Religious Body capable of supplying individuals to suit the needs.
2. The fact that the Seraphic Order already possessed the Institutes in Naples created by Fr Lodovico da Casoria, completely dedicated to those distant and difficult regions.
3. In recognition of those very few missionaries remaining almost abandoned to themselves, and foreseeing that they might soon join those who preceded them, victims of the climate and their apostolic labours, and without any hope of finding reinforcements that were ever weaker and harder to find when recruitment had to be made here and there in different dioceses.
[2861]
So it was that the present Most Eminent Cardinal Prefect, at the audience of 5th September 1861, presented to the Holy Father his subordinate opinion that he should approve the said project, leaving the Vicariate as it was, and simply entrusting it entirely to the Order of Friars Minor in accordance with the rules in force in other similar Vicariates, and continuing to govern it by means of a Religious Pro-Vicar Apostolic who was not a Bishop, until the results could decide the Sacred Congregation to send it a Vicar Apostolic of episcopal rank. The Pontifical Rescript was favourable, as can be seen in the records of the said audience (p. 1792 vol. 139) which uses the following terms: “Ss.mus etc. benigne annuit, et propositam cessionem probavit et confirmavit, iuxta votum Card. Praefecti relatoris”. The Pontifical disposition was communicated to the General of the Franciscans by the letter of 12th September 1861 (Vol. 352 p. 505).
[2862]
Once the mission had been entrusted completely to the Seraphic Order, the surviving priests of the Mazza Institute in Verona had to withdraw. Although Fr Mazza later presented the Cardinal Prefect with a new project for the founding of a mission in some African tribe, this could not be carried out for lack of means.
[2863]
Once the Order of Friars Minor had taken over the Vicariate Apostolic, the Sacred Congregation appointed as Pro-Vicar Apostolic the above-mentioned Fr Giovanni de Ducla Reinthaller who, having received quite a few blank appointment documents from his Most Reverend General, presented himself in quite a few friaries in Venetia, the Tyrol and Austria and soon recruited 34 religious, priests and brothers. The Fr General had sent a circular in advance to the religious of the aforementioned Franciscan Provinces. In November this large caravan of sons of St Francis reached Egypt. By mid January 1862, Fr Reinthaller took possession of Shellal. He then departed to settle the new missionaries in the old Stations. Some men died during the journey, and he himself was taken ill in the Shilluk tribe. After being brought back to Khartoum and then to Berber, he died. Other missionaries later succumbed. The arrival of another caravan of 23 more Franciscans was insufficient to make up for these losses; they had to abandon the two Stations on the White Nile and retire to Khartoum and Shellal. Even the latter had later to be abandoned too. Only Khartoum remained, occupied by a single Franciscan priest, Fr Fabiano Pfeifer from Eggenthal in the Tyrol, and two laymen. This Father remained isolated in Khartoum for all of five years without a fellow priest to hear his confession.
[2864]
Fr Reinthaller had no successor in his arduous duties. After his death the Sacred Congregation entrusted the governance of the Mission indefinitely to the Vicar Apostolic of Egypt.
The Seraphic Order sent nearly 60 men to Central Africa, including priests and brothers. Twenty-two died and the others returned either to Egypt, the Holy Land or Europe.
[2865]
In 1865 the Sacred Congregation had agreed to allow Fr Lodovico da Casoria with some of his friars and African tertiaries to occupy the Station of Shellal, where I was asked to accompany him; but after seven months he had to abandon the mission through lack of means. Four-fifths of the African boys and girls in Naples either died or abandoned the Institute. The remainder of the boys either became religious or remained as students. Of the girls, some became nuns. In a word, Central Africa has so far not received the slightest benefit from such a holy institution.
[2866]
Of all the Stations in the Vicariate, the only one that remains is Khartoum, which is governed by Fr Dismas Stadelmeyer of Innsbruck, who is assisted by Fr Ilario Schletter, a Tyrolean, and two lay brothers. These two Fathers minister to the few Catholics who are in Khartoum.
[2867]
This is a very brief historical outline of the Vicariate Apostolic of Central Africa. In the face of this long series of trials and in view of so many victims of Christian charity, a question comes naturally to mind: How could it possibly be that such a fine corps of zealous missionaries, guided by the most able leader, Dr Knoblecher, did not succeed in planting the faith solidly in a single part of this important mission? Why is it that the Seraphic Order with such imposing forces proved unable to pursue the already established enterprise with so many resources at its disposal?
[2868]
The African Apostolate is in itself extremely arduous and laborious. Nevertheless, it seems to me that the lack of success of the first stage of the Mission under Knoblecher was due to the following causes:
1. Europe lacked the base of a special Seminary dedicated exclusively to the formation of candidates for such a difficult mission. Gospel workers must be educated and formed before they can be exposed to apostolic duties; they must be trained in self-denial and sacrifice, they must have their way, as it were, mapped out towards that great end for which they have to consume their whole life. To achieve this, time and perseverance are required. Instead, Knoblecher’s missionaries, although they were of excellent spirit and virtue, were recruited here and there from different dioceses and sent immediately to the mission before being prepared adequately for the great enterprise and being enabled, through a serious apostolic education, to face the dangers and difficulties.
[2869]
2. In Egypt, where Europeans can live and work although its very hot climate can be defined as half way between Italy and equatorial Africa, there
was no Institute where the missionaries could adapt themselves gradually to the heat, the customs, the food and the way of life in Africa. Knoblecher’s missionaries left Germany, that is, from a very cold climate, and without any intermediate stage, set off all at once into the most burning regions of the world, thus exposing themselves to almost certain death. Why is it that many European traders have lived and are still living for many years in Central Africa, whereas Knoblecher’s missionaries died? It is because these traders, all of whom I have met, did not go to these regions without having spent several years on the coasts of Africa or in some city in Egypt. I think our missionaries would still be alive if they had done the same.
[2870]
3. The way of life adopted by the German missionaries was not suited to this climate. On the mission, they retained the methods practised in Germany, especially as regards meat and drinks. Naturally they could not get used all of a sudden to the most appropriately parsimonious and moderate system of the Africans, because they moved too rapidly from their homeland to Africa. It is necessary to exercise great moderation as regards food and drink to live in Africa.
A wise and well-regulated system of nutrition is an essential condition for survival in those distant lands; and it is impossible to adjust to it without the training of a special apostolic education, without having practised at length self-denial and sacrifice in well-adapted preparatory Institutes for such difficult missions.
[2871]
4. This mission lacked indigenous clergy and even young local catechists capable of helping the missionaries in their ministry.
[2872]
5. Finally the Mission lacked the help of the female element, a house of women religious to form women teachers and indigenous female Missionaries, who are indispensable in a distant and dangerous mission.
[2873]
The illustrious Dr Knoblecher would certainly have seen to all this at a later stage. All the good that has been done to Central Africa is due to him, in whom the sublime gifts of a strong character and unshakeable steadfastness were combined with great perspicacity, great activity, intelligence and generosity.
[2874]
As regards the most unfortunate outcome of the mission in its second phase under the governance of the Franciscans, apart from the fact that some of the above-mentioned causes apply, it seems to me that the following should be added. For this most difficult enterprise, as the Lord saw fit, those chosen from among the Friars Minor were the least suited to accomplishing the holy purpose. Instead of placing at the head of the Vicariate a German religious, more suited to preaching than to the difficult art of leadership, not experienced in the foreign missions and not used to the African climate, instead of sending on such a risky assignment a band of little friars recruited at short notice from various friaries in three large Provinces with different languages and characters, sometimes without consulting the local Superiors or followed their advice, they should have chosen an able leader from the Order, who had already spent many years exercising his ministry in the Holy Land or in Upper Egypt (and there certainly were some) and thus was already acclimatised to the countries of the East. Such a man, availing himself of the aid from the Franciscans, with a well thought-out and prudent plan of action, would have been able gradually to establish solid bases for the achievement of the holy enterprise.
[2875]
If the praiseworthy and generous efforts of the Institutes for African boys and girls founded in Naples by Fr Lodovico da Casoria were unsuccessful, it is because in Europe, even in its southern countries, Africans generally cannot live and be educated to qualify for the ministry in their own land. They reach Europe racked by the horrors of slavery, by the mistreatment of the Muslims and by the exhaustion of long and arduous journeys. The air of Europe is too strange for them; and I dare add with conviction that even Egypt can only just lend itself to the education of Africans. I have noted from experience that for many young Africans the climate of Egypt itself is too different and is therefore harmful to them. Great care must be taken to make it bearable to the natives of the African interior who have been enslaved by the inhuman barbarity of the Jallabas.
[2876]
Now since it appears that, through lack of sufficient personnel, the illustrious Order of Friars Minor has the intention of withdrawing altogether from the Vicariate, to this brief historical Report, I shall be adding in a few days’ time a short Report on the Institutes of Verona and Egypt which were started under the auspices of Bishop Canossa of Verona and Mgr Ciurcia, Vicar Apostolic of Egypt, for the direct purpose of assisting the missions in Central Africa. In conclusion I shall explain in two words the plan of action which, in my opinion, should be followed for this most important Vicariate to be revived and to prosper. I will submit all this humbly to the wisdom and venerable deliberations of the Sacred Congregation, prepared as ever, together with my companions and dependants,
for every sacrifice unto death in the arduous and laborious apostolate of Central Africa, in order to procure – down to the last man – in the way most pleasing to the Holy See, the salvation of these souls, who are the most unhappy, the most needy and the most abandoned in the world.
I have the honour of remaining, with all respect
Your Most Reverend Eminence’s
most humble, unworthy and obedient son
Fr Daniel Comboni
Superior of the Institutes for Africans in Egypt
Missionary of Central Africa