[3442]
At 3.00 p.m. on the 16th of this month the fact-finding caravan set out from El-Obeid for the Nuba, a numerous, black, largely idolatrous people who live in the south-west of Kordofan where there is a very healthy climate, from what I understood from the great chief and from the Cogiur or Great Sorcerer; where there are hundreds of mountains, some areas of which pay tribute to Kordofan and thus Egypt, but almost all are independent and free. An immense plain separates Kordofan from the Nuba, and is inhabited by the nomads, the Baqqarah Omur, who pay tribute to Egypt, and are the worst kind of assassins and thieves, profess a cold Mahommedanism and exercise (perhaps even for the Government) the office of Jallabas, that is, they are slaughterers of human beings and slave traders.
[3443]
Since the great chief of these Baqqarah, 20 days ago now, was here in El Obeid to confer with the Pasha, I succeeded in getting in touch with him and making friends. And after I had questioned him about the Nuba and explained to him that I intended perhaps to make a journey to see those lands or maybe send some of my missionaries there, he offered to have me accompanied there by 200 armed men and to take me himself, assuring me that his head and his beard would answer for our lives. I gave him a kerchief, a hammer and some medicines; and I told him that at an appropriate time I should make the most of his kindness. I acquired precise information about the great chief of the Baqqarah and the Nuba from a great many people; but especially from Sultan Hussein, who is a descendant of the Sultans of Kordofan who ruled before that kingdom was occupied by the Egyptian Government, enjoys a life pension from the usurping Government and officially bears the title of Sultan.
[3444]
He is our friend, and seems a true gentleman, and presented us with a nice piece of land not far from here which I have destined to be the Catholic Cemetery; he is the person best informed about the African tribes that surround Kordofan as far as a month’s journey or more away. Finally, the great Pasha was most courteous to me and offered me all I could have wished, soldiers, weapons, ammunition, horses, camels, etc. But an apostle of Christ must walk in another way according to the holy sayings of the Gospel; he must take all the measures of prudence prescribed by wise caution. And usually divine Providence must be his guide.
[3445]
When I told him that he could have a good 200 men, my valiant Vicar General Fr Carcereri, designated to head the exploratory expedition, indignantly refused: he wanted to go to the Nuba sine sacco et sine pera, trusting totally in God: but I obliged him, to his final full satisfaction, to leave armed with:
1. A special recommendation from the Pasha to the great chief of the Baqqarah, in which His Excellency ordered him to treat the missionaries as they would treat himself.
2. A recommendation from the Pasha and the above-mentioned Sultan to all the Chiefs of the land through which our caravan had to pass, ordering them to offer lodgings, food and provisions, etc.
3. A Government guide, a native of those countries who knows them well.
4. One of the Pasha’s clerks, our friend, an old schismatic Copt, well known as far as the Nuba mountain of Delen and who had two wives from that country: he told me he would let himself be killed for the Christian religion.
[3446]
I refused the soldiers, camels and other things the Pasha had offered me, and the caravan left after a triduum to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Father of the mission, and another to St Jude Thaddeus. It is headed by Fr Carcereri, with another father, a good lay German who in 1858 was with me on the White Nile, two servants and five or six others. The exploration will take a fortnight; and after his return, Fr Carcereri will leave for Rome as I wrote to you. Then after I have examined the report of the exploration, and thought about everything carefully, I will write a brief but complete report about the establishment of a new Mission among the Nuba, I will submit it to Your Most Reverend Eminence and will do whatever the Sacred Congregation enjoins me in this regard, firm in the principle of never undertaking any important matter without first consulting the Sacred Congregation delegated by God to govern and direct all the world’s missions, and receiving its venerable orders.
[3447]
My main commitment at the moment is still to firmly consolidate and perpetuate the two chief missions of Khartoum and El Obeid. Khartoum is the operations base from which gradually to spread our apostolate in the Eastern part of our Vicariate as far as beyond the Equator and the sources of the Nile; in this section of it there are hundreds of tribes and idolaters in their millions. El Obeid is the base for operations from which to spread the Gospel little by little in the Central part of the Vicariate, which contains immense tribes, kingdoms and empires and certainly more than 50 million infidels.
[3448]
Until now, thanks to the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, the Mission is in good shape; and I enjoy – externally – a total influence on all the Governors of the Sudan who up to now have granted all I have asked them: free mail services (in El Obeid there is no Consul, but I want to write to the Emperor of Austria to establish a Consulate in Kordofan, since this would be most useful if in the future the Government’s Hosannas should change to Crucifige; for which we should always be prepared, as this is obviously a work of God), land, protection, etc.
[3449]
Until now, all the slaves whose liberation I have requested, all without exception, have been released; those who fled to the mission, for whom I requested freedom and the opportunity to remain on the mission, were all granted to me; indeed, the Pasha asks my opinion in some of his Government’s affairs. But since it could happen that other new governors arrive in the future who operate differently, I am taking my precautions from this moment. I seek to acquire great favours and concessions from the present Pasha, so that I can get them accepted as rights by future rulers and, at the same time, I keep my mind ready for any upsets or persecution that will be inevitable when the horrible slave trade is dealt a mortal blow, which is what the mission will do: so we hope for everything from the omnipotence of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
[3450]
Although my present cares are directed to preparing material and people, weapons and approaches so as eventually to assault the formidable fortress of Africa, and thus I am determined properly to set up Parishes, houses, schools, Institutes, and enact wise and suitable rules etc., to sharpen the weapons well and ensure that every home and every individual on the mission is equipped with all the knowledge, qualities and virtues that make an excellent instrument, soldier and workman of Christ, I am nonetheless not neglecting to study the population, souls, nature and temperament of the people of my Vicariate, subsequently to choose the appropriate means to attract them to the Faith.
[3451]
Here I will just tell you a word about the schismatic Copts who live in my Vicariate. I am diligently studying them to complete the studies I already started some time ago in Egypt on the heretical Coptic Church, which to my mind is a most interesting area for the apostolate of the Orient and for which the current provisions, adopted of course with wise prudence by the Holy See, seem to me rather limited and weak. The number of heretical Copts, as Your Most Reverend Eminence knows well, varies from two hundred and fifty to three hundred thousand. In Abyssinia they exceed one or two million. In my Vicariate there are several thousand with an Episcopal See in Khartoum and several parishes in Khartoum, Dongola, El Obeid; and small chapels in Berber, Taca, Suaken, etc. Now the heretical Coptic or Eutichian Church is limited to the following Sees, and led by the following individuals as Pastors:
[3452]
1. The Patriarchal See of Alexandria with a Residence in Cairo. The Patriarch vacat.
2. The Episcopal See of Alexandria: the Bishop is a certain Morgos, or Marco.
3. The Episcopal See of Jerusalem. The Bishop Basilius, who lives in Cairo, belongs to the Eutichian Patriarchal Curia, and every year at Easter accompanies the schismatic Coptic pilgrims to Jerusalem.
4.The Episcopal See of Cairo. Bishop Botros, or Petro, who likewise belongs to the Patriarchal Curia in Cairo.
5. The Episcopal See of Monutieh near Tantah between Cairo and Alexandria. The Bishop is Joannes.
6. The Episcopal See of Fayyum, ancient Arsinoe or Crocodilopolis. The Bishop is Isaac.
7. The Episcopal See of Minieh, ancient Cynopolis. The Bishop is Thomas.
[3453]
8. The Episcopal See of Monfallut near a large Monastery with many monks. The Bishop is Jussab, or Joseph.
9. The Episcopal See of Sánaboh between Melaui and Assiut. The Bishop is Teofilos.
10. The Episcopal See of Siut, or ancient Lycopolis, capital of Upper Egypt. The Bishop is Macarius.
11. The Episcopal See of Abutig, the ancient Abutis of the Romans. The Bishop is Atanasius.
12. The Episcopal See of Akmin, ancient Panopolis, built, it is said, by Ham, son of Noah, or, according to almost all scholars, founded or developed by Misraim, or Egypt, grandson of Ham. The Bishop is Jussab, or Joseph, and he is well provided with priests. An hour’s journey away is the village of Hamas, the homeland of the excellent Mgr Bsciai, the current Coptic Bishop.
13. The Episcopal See of Guss or Coptos, ancient Justinianopolis, not far from ancient Thebes. The Bishop is Abramo.
14. The Episcopal See of Negadeh, or ancient Maximianopolis. No Bishop has been appointed for many years, and in the meantime it is under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Guss.
15. The Episcopal See of Gondar in Abyssinia. The Bishop is Atanasius, who normally resides in Adua, where the Negus or king lives.
16. The Episcopal See of Esneh, ancient Latopolis. The Bishop is Mattha or Matteo; several months ago he fixed his residence in Luxor, ancient Thebes.
17. The Episcopal See of Khartoum in Central Africa, founded in 1840. The new Bishop has not been named because at present there is no Patriarch – the term the Copts use – and only a Patriarch can appoint and consecrate Bishops. But this reason is not valid, because Matteo, Bishop of Esneh, was appointed and consecrated this year 1873.
[3454]
After I have thoroughly studied the practical way to attempt the conversion of the schismatic Copts of my Vicariate, which will be a difficult task for us given the widespread corruption in which they live in such far-off and hot places (something I shall certainly see to when I have time, in the hope of gaining at least a few), I shall write to you ex professo on the subject. In the meantime, I do not think it inappropriate to point out to you what you will certainly know, that is, that for almost four years the Eutichian Patriarchal See has been vacant, and perhaps will remain vacant for many years, that is, during the lifetime of the current Khedive of Egypt, who has absolutely prohibited the election of a new Patriarch.
[3455]
The reason is that a high official of the great Diwan of Cairo who is a schismatic Copt, through his private hostility to a Bishop who presumed to aspire to the Patriarchal See, suggested to the highly superstitious mother of the Khedive that His Highness her son would die under the governance of the new Eutichian Patriarch. Thus after the mother had beseeched her son to prevent the election of the new Patriarch by all means possible, the Khedive, very devoted to his mother, and also superstitious, obeyed this to the letter; and the Eutichians, who lack the grace and inspiration of the Holy Spirit because they are outside the truth, humbly submitted to this decree.
[3456]
Now could not the Holy See, with its extraordinary wisdom and acumen, profit from such a long vacancy of the Eutichian Patriarchal See to attempt the conversion of a fair number of these heretics who, together with a few dogmatic errors and certainly many vices regarding especially concupiscentiam oculorum et carnis, combine a faith that is out of the ordinary and many evident virtues? For a good 15 years, the Protestants, both English and American, have decimated the schismatic Copts, and induced many thousands to follow them (meaning externally and not out of conviction!): today a great number whom I have seen speak English and go to the American and English schools in Cairo, Alexandria, Tantah, Faium and Siut, where they have won over the richest and most powerful. And in Faium, where there has been a Catholic hospice for 23 years, I saw with horror that the Protestant school was attended by a hundred or more Coptic or Catholic young people.
[3457]
It is necessary to note that our missionaries are poor, and the Protestants very wealthy. But in my opinion it is always true that among the schismatic Copts there are some good sorts, and the acquaintance I made with almost all their Bishops, many priests and a great many of their faithful, convinced me of this. Grace is in God’s hands; and perhaps the Holy See will not lack the measures to begin a conquest that would bear marvellous results in my Vicariate but more especially in Abyssinia, where a single Bishop worth nothing has jurisdiction over one or perhaps two million.
[3458]
I long to renew to you the humble prayer I made to you in my letter of 15th September last about the Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus which I would like the Holy Father to declare a Holy Day of Obligation with a Rite that is Double of the First Class, with Octave throughout my Vicariate, because from the Sacred Heart of Jesus I hope for the conversion of the hundred and more million infidels it contains. My predecessor Ignazio Knoblecher, who had made serious studies of the Vicariate, calculated the population as 90 million, as he told us, and it is recorded in his biography, printed by the most learned Mitterrutzner. But then the geographers calculated the so-called Mountains of the Moon, the Vicariate’s southern boundary at the 3rd degree of Latitude North. However today, when Geographers calculate these Mountains at 15 degrees further south, where according to Speke and Grant there are densely populated tribes, it is not far from the truth if they give the Vicariate a hundred million infidels.
[3459]
The Sacred Heart of Jesus which today spreads the treasures of its graces more widely than in the past since the devotion has increased marvellously, will convert them all.
I take this opportunity to offer you the homage of my deep veneration, and declare myself in the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary
Your most Reverend Eminence’s
most humble, obedient and unworthy son,
Daniel Comboni,
Pro-Vicar Apostolic