[3211]
I now come to tell you something about the Work. It is now well under way, and I assure you that it is bound to succeed, and many millions of souls will be converted. And this is not because all of us, missionaries, sisters and labourers, have decided to win or to die: but because the Work is entrusted to the Sacred Heart of Jesus which must consume the whole of Central Africa and fill it with his divine fire. On the 14th of the coming September, I shall solemnly consecrate the whole Vicariate here in El Obeid to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, while on that same day my Vicar General will carry out the same consecration in Khartoum. On that day the Members of the Apostleship of Prayer will make the same act of Consecration composed for me by our beloved friend, Fr Ramière.
[3212]
You will of course be reading the Messager du Sacré Coeur. Now, how is it possible that the Heart of Jesus should not grant the fervent prayers of so many righteous souls associated with the Messager, who are the very flower of piety and virtue? Jesus Christ is the king of gentlemen, and has always kept his word. He has always answered accipietis… invenietis… aperietur, to the petite… quaerite… pulsate. Thus Africa will see the light, and its hundred million unfortunates will rise to new life through the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
[3213]
When, thanks to royal munificence, it became possible to buy the Caobelli house near the Seminary of Verona, while still on my travels in Germany I set my hand to the Institute’s Rule, in order to present it in Rome. In the meantime, my companions in Cairo and especially the excellent Fr Carcereri, were researching those places in Central Africa where, because of their good climate and important strategic situation, it would be appropriate to settle members of the Institute, if they were ready for the apostolate in lower Africa. We studied, wrote, discussed and travelled. Finally we agreed to attempt an exploration of Kordofan.
[3214]
Since the experience on the White Nile from 1848 to 1864 had been unfortunate because of the immense swamps which provoked deadly fevers and the most dangerous diseases in Europeans, I turned my gaze to the inner tribes lying between the White Nile and the Niger, where there are mountains and healthy air. I was very happy to accept Fr Carcereri’s suggestion of Kordofan, and in a letter written from Dresden on 15th August 1871, gave him orders that preparations be made for an exploration of Kordofan to take place shortly. On 14th September, I ordered the explorers to leave Cairo the following October, a suitable season for navigation on the Nile. In fact, the valiant Carcereri together with Franceschini and two laymen, reached Kordofan via Khartoum after only 82 days; they explored both in the region of Darfur, and southwards, towards Tekkela and the borders of the Nuba; and they considered it appropriate to establish a station here in El Obeid which I now realise is the real centre of communications for the whole of the true interior of Africa, and where the air is far better than it is in Khartoum and the White Nile.
[3215]
In fact, the territory of Darfur is reached after only 3 days by camel and in 15 days one arrives at the capital where the Sultan lives. From here it takes 3 days to reach the first mountains of the vast tribe of the Nuba, Bakhit Miniscalchi’s native land, where there are many millions of unspoilt Africans who have never wanted to know anything about Mohammed. In 30 days, one enters the vast empire of Bornù, while for those who wish to go there from Tripoli or Algiers, it would take more than 100 days and the journey would be dangerous. Here in El Obeid are the procurators and representatives of the Sultans of Darfur and Bornù who provide those lands with European goods and objects through barter.
[3216]
Last September I arrived with a substantial caravan in Cairo, where the devil, as the Lord permitted, had prepared immense difficulties for me which threatened to prevent me from undertaking the expedition to Central Africa with the great caravan to take possession of the Vicariate in accordance with Propaganda’s orders and with what I had told the societies who are our benefactors in Europe and who had provided me with aid for this purpose. Not to mention the most serious opposition which arose by God’s will and from my own unworthiness; many most eminent persons wrote letters to the Most Reverend Mother General of my Sisters in Marseilles, entreating her never to let any of her sisters go to Central Africa where they would be bound to die, as had all the previous missionaries.
[3217]
The Mother General, who had 8 sisters ready to send me in Cairo in November, was alarmed and subsequently sent these sisters to Belgium to open a new house there. Likewise, with all possible cunning and deviousness it was insinuated to the three sisters who had already received their obediences from their Mother General to follow me to Central Africa, and who had been in my Institute for more than 2 years, that they should not go to Central Africa; but here there was no chance of success: they remained constant in their holy resolution since they had already received their obedience, and were ready to die for Christ.
[3218]
Apart from being gravely compromised since, although the Most Reverend Mother General was convinced she had fallen into a trap, and again assured me she would send the sisters after the Feast of St Joseph on which she was to have more than 30 new professions, I was nevertheless seriously prevented from undertaking the expedition: the superior destined for Khartoum was poorly and it did not seem prudent to risk 16 black teachers with two or three sisters. A new assault, plotted by those same people who had sought to scare off the above-mentioned General and sisters contributed to cooling down the Mother General and several of the sisters. It was the following:
[3219]
Since the Congregation of the Sisters of St Joseph has more than sixty houses in Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia, the Mother General has to provide for them all; I realised with certainty that all the Bishops and Vicars Apostolic where these houses are located, constantly insist on having more Sisters, since it is a Congregation with an excellent spirit and destined precisely for the missions, whose Cardinal Protector is the Eminent Prefect of Propaganda himself; but the Mother General cannot always satisfy the needs of all.
[3220]
Therefore since I foresaw that I too would never be able to obtain the necessary number of sisters for the immense Vicariate of Central Africa, after having in vain made inquiries through Mgr Canossa as to whether the Canossian Sisters would assume the direction of some male Institutes in Central Africa and after obtaining the consent of Pius IX, to the supreme pleasure of Mgr Canossa, I opened a female Institute in Verona to train women missionaries for Africa, which I temporarily called the Devout Mothers of Africa. For this purpose I purchased the Astori convent in S. Maria in Organis and settled in it the Devout Mothers of Africa, an Institute that is making rather good progress as the Bishop writes to me, and which will provide me with some good missionaries in a few years.
[3221]
Now my dear friends in Cairo, informed of this, wrote to the Mother General of St Joseph and insinuated to the Sisters of Cairo that Comboni was now making use of the Sisters of St Joseph until his own sisters in Verona were ready; but that as soon as he had his own sisters, those of St Joseph would be given their passport, he would thank them for helping him in the early stages of his Work and would end by sending them away. This was a great shock to the Mother General’s firmness, but finally by the grace of God and after my prayers and assurances, she decided to give me all the Sisters she will be able to, just as she does in her dealings with the other heads of missions, and obliged herself to do so with a document signed by me and by the Most Eminent Cardinal Prefect of Propaganda. You see how good Jesus is, and how he treats Our Lady and her most holy Husband, St Joseph!
[3222]
I shall say nothing about the other storms raised against me by divine will, about the efforts to undermine the constancy of my missionaries, about being denounced to the Turkish police for the crime of baptising Africans who were already Muslim (which is true), etc. We would all be too fortunate if the Turks cut off our heads for the faith; indeed, we have long been prepared for this, in the certitude that God will inspire others after us, according to the wise economy of his Providence.
[3223]
Although I was aware that letters slandering me had already been written in Europe and even to Rome saying that I would lead the sisters and missionaries to their death, although I only had three sisters and unwell to boot, who had obtained their obediences from the Mother General, I nevertheless decided to leave Cairo for the terrible Khamsin of the desert, during the most critical season and aware that I should meet contrary winds. After consulting my companions, we decided to throw ourselves into the arms of Providence and comply with Propaganda’s wishes, thoroughly known and expressed.
[3224]
On 26th January, on two large dhows (dahhabias), in one of which were the missionaries and lay brothers, and in the other, the sisters and African girls, we left Cairo for Central Africa. Almost by a miracle, after a most disastrous 90-day voyage and after losing a lay brother smitten with smallpox near Thebes, we reached Khartoum safe and sound. After another 10 days from Khartoum, I reached El Obeid with the others. Since the description in print of this terrible journey will be sent to you from Verona, I am not telling you about it now…
[3225]
The city of Khartoum and above all the Great Pasha who is in command from Meroe to the sources of the Nile, received me with excessive honours. I then thought that Our Lord Jesus Christ, after the Hosannahs, had the Crucifige lying in store. However the Pasha received me as a friend, offered me all his assistance with anything I want to do for the good of civilisation and religion, gave a great banquet in my honour, and offered me the use of his steamships free to make my pastoral visits of the Blue and White Niles, as far as Gondokoro. He did indeed do so for this journey to Kordofan, since he made his steamship available to me for 127 miles on the White Nile as far as Tura-el-Khadra, where I landed and reached El Obeid by camel in nine days.
[3226]
Not only did the Turks come to congratulate me for having reached Khartoum, but the Great Mufti himself, the head of the Muslim religion, congratulated me for having brought the sisters to educate girls. The same thing happened here in El Obeid, where the Pasha abolished slavery the day before I arrived, and for the first time published the decrees of the 1856 Paris Congress and set free more than 300 of his domestic slaves. He came to visit me with a great retinue, accompanied by two generals and the heads of his Diwan and he volunteered to support me in my every wish.
[3227]
It was not that this applause was spontaneous, because Turks loathe Christianity; it was not that slavery was effectively abolished, but on the contrary, as I shall explain later, it is at its peak in Central Africa and in Egypt, since the Turks will never abolish slavery: they will sign treaties, they will abolish it on paper, they will pretend they do not want it to throw dust in the eyes of simpletons; but as long as Muslims are Mohammedans they will not put an end to the trade in Africans. However, they wanted to lavish this homage on me, who have threatened many Pashas on the subject, since they had been officially warned by the Diwan in Cairo that I am an arch-enemy of slavery. But you must know that I was equipped with a great firman from the Sultan of Constantinople, obtained through our most gracious Emperor of Austria and Hungary, by which the Great Sultan orders the Pasha of Egypt to protect the Vicariate of Central Africa. I brandished this wonderfully written firman from time to time; with the result that the Austrian flag is feared and respected here, and all the governors and Pashas will offer me their services during my long journey.
[3228]
I will now say a few words to you about this Vicariate, the largest in the world and the most difficult and arduous. To cultivate it would require two thousand Jesuits, about fifty Stigmatines from Verona, five hundred Casaretto Benedictines of the new reform, etc., who now occupy Subiaco. We are few at present, but I shall write to you of my projects, which I have already explained to that saint of a man, Fr Beck, Commander in Chief of the Pope’s grenadiers, and which pleased him.
[3229]
In the north, the Vicariate of Central Africa borders Egypt, Barca, Tripoli and Tunisia; in the East, the Red Sea, Abyssinia, Gallas; in the South it extends to the 12th degree of Latitude South, including the lakes or sources of the Nile, Udzkidski, etc. and the Congo; in the west, the two Guineas, and the straight line from the south western point of the Prefecture Apostolic of Tripoli as far as Niger, touching the north of the Vicariate Apostolic of the coast of Benin. You see that this Vicariate is larger than the whole of Europe.
[3230]
Now in this immense Vicariate, under the governance of my predecessors Knoblecher and Kirchner from 1848 to 1861, the following four stations were founded and prospered. They are located on the line formed by the Nile and the White Nile and constitute the Eastern part of the Vicariate, that is: 1) Gondokoro at the 4th degree of Latitude North; 2) Holy Cross at the 6th degree, 3) Khartoum at the 15th degree, and Shellal at approximately the 23rd degree of Latitude North. Under the governance of the Franciscans from 1861–72, in the first two years the three stations of Gondokoro, Holy Cross and Shellal were abandoned, and for nine years they kept up Khartoum alone, with one or two missionaries from the excellent province of the Tyrol. The poor Franciscans, expecting suppression in Italy, lack the members to sustain and preserve all their innumerable missions, as I was told by the most venerable Fr Bernardino, their general.
[3231]
The houses and gardens of Gondokoro and Holy Cross have been completely destroyed. In Shellal the house is still standing but it is in a wretched state. In Khartoum the house is still very sound and it is without a doubt the most beautiful and solid building in the whole of the Sudan; but the garden is reduced to a jungle, and it will take me a year to make it produce its 2,000 francs a year for the mission adjoining it. In addition to all this, the establishment in Khartoum has been stripped of everything; in Knoblecher’s time that Mission was provided with everything like a Benedictine establishment in Europe. The good Franciscans found themselves in a critical period when a revolution was raging in Europe and the Society of Vienna had been reduced to its lowest ebb, almost as it is today. When the Pope suffers, all the Church’s members suffer!
[3232]
Now to lay solid and firm foundations on which properly to establish the Vicariate, I am limiting myself to strengthening as far as I can the two central stations which serve as an operations base for all future missions which will be founded in Central Africa. These are Khartoum and El Obeid: and since the journey from Cairo to Khartoum is sufficient to kill and render useless the missionary, and also to comply with Propaganda’s wishes as expressed to me by the most Eminent Cardinal Barnabò in his venerable letter of 29th April, I intend to open Shellal.
[3233]
I will now considerably deplete the Cairo Institutes because I myself have brought 30 of their members who are ready for the apostolate, to the centre, and another 20 will be taken there in a second expedition next August. So two small establishments in Cairo are always necessary to acclimatise the missionaries and sisters and to test their vocation further; and they constitute a kind of Procurator’s office of the Vicariate for relations with Europe and a source of provision for the Mission. The journey from Cairo to Khartoum is too perilous and excessive for the missionaries’ health. Hence the need of Shellal, which is halfway between Cairo and the Sudan. Since we have witnessed the death of so many missionaries, it is necessary to study the means to preserve their lives.
[3234]
Now in Cairo, when the Consul General returns from Vienna, we shall already have the land given us by the Khedive on which to build these two establishments. Land in Cairo costs 20 francs a metre. The Pasha will therefore be doing us a supremely charitable deed. Since the cutting of the canal of Suez the cost of living in Cairo is two or three times as much as it is in Germany. I therefore intend to reduce the two institutes to the minimum, that is, they will only be for European men and women who are preparing for the Apostolate of Africa.
[3235]
In Cairo, Africans are expensive (500 francs each), and there they are already corrupted by the Muslims. Here they cost almost nothing, from 15 to 30 thalers, and are better, unspoilt and not adulterated by Muslims. Thus where until today the Cairo Institutes cost me 34,000 francs a year, I hope that as from 1874 they will cost me a quarter of that. In Shellal, in addition to the male house, we have 12 feddan of good land (64,000 square metres): with the cost of equipment to draw water from the Nile, half the station’s food can be produced by the station: but it is necessary to build a small house for the sisters entirely in oriental granite like the Obelisks in Rome, which were all cut in Shellal, or in the neighbourhood. In Shellal sick people flock from sixty miles away to be treated by the mission. On 16th March in a single day I baptised four dying children who then all went to heaven.
[3236]
In Khartoum the sisters’ house and the church are essential. Khartoum has a population of about 50,000, and the climate has been improved, because of the large buildings erected there and the creation of gardens. Living there now is like living in the southern part of the regions of Verona and Padua. Since I have had my Vicar General resident in this station, Khartoum has been given a new life and I hope we shall soon see Christianity flourishing there. It now has many catechumens. On the Feast of the Holy Spirit I confirmed 34 new converts. Catechism, preaching and the ministry are now as vigorous as they are in the parishes of Verona. I hope in a few years, if God gives us life, to announce to you that this mission is a great success. Here in El Obeid, where my explorers Carcereri and Franceschini were the first Catholic missionaries to arrive, a small nucleus of Christianity has already been formed.
[3237]
We have our own house and a lovely little church. We need to enlarge it for the schools and the crafts and skills, because for the time being the school is under a big tree and it is hot from 9.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m. Then we need the house for the Sisters. At the moment I have three institutes of African girls with my cousin, a professed member of the Company of St. Angela Merici, who live in straw huts. The houses here are huts; but since fires have occurred and will always occur, the government has decreed that they must all be made of sand, since there are neither stones nor earth to make bricks here. Before the rains, these sand houses are covered with a paste made from sand and the excrement of cattle, and this enables the houses to resist the rains for that year. The operation must be renewed annually. The actual house with a church which we possess at the moment cost 13,000 francs, but we have to lay out an expenditure of 600 francs every year, what with beams and mud to preserve it. It is one of the soundest and most beautiful in the capital.
[3238]
All the merit for this mission goes to Fathers Franceschini and Carcereri of the Order of St Camillus who joined me with their General’s assent and a Papal Rescript; and I hope that they will always stay on the mission, which is their wish; it must be provided with a hospital, as I promised their general and which will be a blessing from God in this capital, since more than half those who are seriously ill are flung out of the city without being buried, sometimes even before they die, to be devoured by the hyenas and birds.
[3239]
Since the day before yesterday I saw with my own eyes more than sixty dead bodies being thrown out of the city in this way, and they were all Africans. I sent a letter to the Great Pasha of Kordofan in which I suggested that he order all the dead to be buried, because the prevailing custom here is against religion and civility since these unfortunates are our fellow humans. He immediately promulgated the law I desired, and now messengers and heralds are running all over the city to enforce the order with the severest penalties. Among the converts is the most important merchant of El Obeid (a schismatic Greek), who made his abjuration seven months ago in the hands of my Vicar General Fr Carcereri, and with him his whole family was converted, and is now most exemplary.
[3240]
I now come to tell you something of the most grievous scourge that afflicts my Vicariate, that is, slavery, which is at its most flourishing here, partly through the fault of atheism and the frenzy of today’s European powers, and above all of Islam, which will promise everything and sign all the treaties of the European powers, but on paper; never in practice. In my position, I can do some good in this regard; the Catholic mission is a power in the Sudan, and this is largely due to the Austrian flag that flies above it.
[3241]
All the pashas and slave traders fear us and seek to keep out of our sight. I have declared to the Pashas of Khartoum and Kordofan that I will have any slaves I find in the city or outside it, in chains, etc., brought to the mission, and that I shall not return them. Then I shall keep all those who come to the mission to denounce the ill-treatment they have received from their masters, after checking that their claims are true, and I will not give them back. I simply inform the Diwan that I have kept so and so, etc., in the mission, and until the trial takes place and is approved by me or, in my absence, by my substitute, those concerned must stay in the mission. The above-mentioned Pashas or governors, who know they are in the wrong because the most important slave trader is the government, have not said a word to me and agree with everything. Already up to now I have set more than 500 free. The horns of Christ, Fr Mazza used to say, are harder than those of the devil.
[3242]
But Oh! The horror of the slave trade which triumphs in these parts! More than half a million slaves pass through El Obeid, Khartoum and the territory between them. Most are female, but they are mingled anyhow with males of any age but most of whom are between 7 and 18, completely naked, mostly in chains, and most stolen or violently snatched from their families in the tribes and kingdoms to the south or south-west of Khartoum and Kordofan; they snatch them, killing the parents if they are old or, if they are young, both children and parents are kidnapped or stolen. They all pass through here on their way to Egypt or the Red Sea, to be sold! Females who are good-looking are treated reasonably and intended for prostitution or for the Harems, and the others for service.
[3243]
Between Cairo and Khartoum, we encountered more than 40 boats, in which males and females were wedged together like sardines. On our way through the desert, we came across more than thirty caravans, walking naked and barefoot, mothers with their babies and little girls and boys 7 or 8 years old; trailing on foot over the burning sands, on a journey which tires even the strongest of camels, and fed, not even every day, on a little durrah, or millet soaked in water.
[3244]
But what I saw between Khartoum and El Obeid, where I met several thousand slaves mostly females mixed up with the males and without a stitch of clothing, saddened me the most. The little ones, under three, were carried by other slaves, who seemed to be their mothers and were on foot. Others of both sexes, in groups of eight and ten, were tied around the neck to a beam resting on their shoulders which they were forced to carry. This was to prevent them escaping. From ten to fifteen others from the ages of 8 to 15, were tied around the neck with a goatskin cord fastened to a thicker rope which a jallaba or slave trader held in his hand. Others were attached in pairs to a beam across their shoulder, one on each side.
[3245]
Yet others had the sheva, that is, a triangular shaped beam attached to the neck of the slave who has to walk on foot dragging it. Others were chained with their hands and arms behind them, and attached to a long rope held by a villain. Yet others had their feet fettered in iron chains: others chained in this way carried bundles or burdens belonging to the masters, and the old ones walked free. They were all goaded barbarously with lances and sticks, when they stumbled or were tired; and some were already collapsing with exhaustion on the ground. Then the villains finished them off with blows from sticks or lances, or left them there on the road. I found some dead on our way and our poor catechists were upset and horrified.
[3246]
This is only a pale idea of the much more that I could say. You see, Sir, one of the tasks of our mission. No treaty, no authority, can abolish the slave trade here, because it is permitted by Mohammed, and the Muslims believe they have the right to practise slavery. It will only be wiped out by preaching the Gospel and by definitively establishing Catholicism in these parts. The government, which adhered to the 1856 treaty, adhered on paper; but not in practice. The governors of the Sudan are the first to carry on the infamous trade by which they profit; and the Pashas themselves go on raids on the Nuba, the Teggala, the White Nile, etc., taking with them troops of soldiers with guns, and they always return with six or eight thousand slaves! All this is known in Cairo, both by the Diwan and by the Viceroy and, I think, by many European consuls. But since they have all been bought by now and since the cries of pain of these peoples do not reach Europe, today dominated by atheism and Freemasonry, thus the desolation of these areas continues and will continue for a long time to come.
[3247]
Only the Heart of Jesus implored by upright souls, and the charity of the holy and dutiful persons who come to the aid of the Catholic apostolate in this holy and difficult mission, will dry the tears of these unhappy people for whose redemption we are sacrificing our life. You see too, in this respect, the enormous importance of this Vicariate Apostolic…
[3248]
Last December the Ambassador of England came to see me in Cairo: we had a long talk and we agreed to correspond. But how surprised I was when he told me that he was not bound for Central Africa, the scene of the most colossal slave trade, but for Zanzibar and Muscat. He had been to see the Viceroy of Egypt and was quite satisfied with his audience because the Khedive had praised his philanthropic mission and promised him all the support required. I who know how matters stand was silent and left him with his good faith; I only told him that the Turks, sustained by the assertions of their Mufti who interpret the Koran, believe slavery is licit and praiseworthy, etc. Then His Excellency said to me: “Do you think I shall succeed in my mission to the Sultan of Zanzibar?”
[3249]
I answered him, “Mr Ambassador, the Sultan will receive you splendidly, and offer you princely hospitality. But he will refuse to follow your wishes, since according to him the Koran is the word of God and does not forbid but permits the trade in human flesh. Or should the sultan comply with your wishes and sign a treaty with Her Majesty the Queen of England, as soon as you have left Zanzibar, he will continue to trade in slaves as before and will allow other Muslims to do so”. His Excellency was not very happy with my opinion, but expressed the hope of succeeding with the letters from his government and cannons. “With the cannons, yes”, I replied, “but only in those localities where their noise can be heard”.
[3250]
We parted in a friendly way after dining with his large entourage, which included an Anglican Archbishop expert in Arabic and Persian who shared my opinions. He was this embassy’s secretary. I do not know what became of it, because I came to Central Africa: but I am still of the same opinion now. Only Faith in Christ established in the heart of Africa and the Sacred Heart of Jesus, the Immaculate Virgin Mary and St Joseph, rather than the Queen of England and the 1856 Paris Treaty, will abolish slavery…
[3251]
Furthermore, the Holy Father Pius IX has always had this mission at heart; and he told me that he has prayed and will always pray for me. We here in Central Africa, after preaching about the Trinity, the Redemption and Our Lady, will immediately preach about the Pope, who is all the greater the more he is persecuted. Oh how delightful it is to suffer with the Pope!…
Receive the whole heart of
Your most devoted and humble
Daniel Comboni
Pro-Vicar Apostolic of Central Africa