[3584]
Concurring with the desire Your Eminence deigned to express to me in your respected letter of 15th April last N. 4, I hasten to draft for you a concise and brief Report on the current situation of the Mission entrusted to me, which, together with the Report that Fr Carcereri, My Vicar General will have already presented to you, will be able to give you a clear impression of the importance of the Work that divine Providence has put in my hands. I think it appropriate first of all to begin with a few general notions on the condition of this laborious and enormous field of the Lord’s Vineyard.
[3585]
The Vicariate Apostolic of Central Africa is without a doubt the greatest and most populated in the world.
It borders:
In the North, the Vicariate of Egypt, and the Prefecture of Tripoli.
In the East, the Red Sea, the Vicariates of Abyssinia and the Gallas, and the Prefecture of Zanzibar.
In the South, the 10th degree of Latitude South, where the so-called Mountains of the Moon are generally supposed to be situated.
To the We s t , Southern Guinea and the Prefecture of the Sahara Desert.
[3586]
It is clear from this that the Vicariate of Central Africa includes an expanse of territory that is larger than the whole of Europe. Its population, according to the calculations of my most learned Predecessor, the Pro-Vicar Knoblecher, soars to ninety million souls (1). According to my subordinate opinion based on serious investigations and diligent studies, the population of the Vicariate exceeds a hundred million souls.
[3587]
Most of this immense, totally uncivilised population is divided into more or less independent tribes. Some are nomadic. Nevertheless there is no lack of enormous kingdoms and empires governed despotically as rigorously as the term implies. On the other hand, the tribes present a shadow of government that tends to be patriarchal. The head of the family has great authority; and in affairs of public interest and especially war, the chief of the tribe, who is generally the head of the most powerful and wealthiest family, has an absolute authority that is recognised and respected by all.
[3588]
More than a hundred languages, (not counting the dialects) are spoken in the Vicariate, all completely different one from another, more than Italian from German. There is no word in any of these tongues for writing and reading, since literacy is completely unknown. All the norms of government, laws and history are passed down by tradition. The late Pro-Vicar Knoblecher collected the numerals of a good forty-five different languages that are spoken in the Eastern part of the Vicariate, which I myself have seen and read. Now these precious writings have been lost. In 1859 we succeeded in compiling a large dictionary and grammar of the Dinka and Bari languages; and last year I began to collect many words of the Nuba language.
[3589]
All the languages of Central Africa, as far as I have been able to ascertain so far, are monosyllabic and Semitic in nature. The dominant language in the Moslem countries subject to the crown of Egypt is Arabic which, over the centuries, has taken root in the whole of Lower and Upper Nubia from Aswan as far as Khartoum: but the centuries of Moslem oppression could not make the original language disappear; it is called Berber, and spoken exclusively by the Baràbra.
[3590]
The peoples of the Vicariate are generally of the Ethiopian race, with the exception of those I shall mention later who are of Arabic origin. All the colours are present, from the Abyssinian, to pure ebony and coal-black. There are in addition tribes of a reddish hue and the colour of blood, like those of the Dor in the Centre and of the Abujerid on the White and Blue Niles. Then there are races of every height from dwarfs to giants. They are all warriors and from childhood are trained to use weapons which are normally spears and poisoned arrows, with very sharp tips, and finely carved sticks of ebony and sunt. These peoples are extremely frugal, and not usually, as is thought, inclined to the vice of lust, as those who have been wrenched from their native lands in Africa and condemned to living amidst Muslim corruption generally are. Their houses are usually rough huts, with a door exactly like the door of an oven; their beds are the bare ground, a few skins or an angareb. The climate is generally very hot.
[3591]
In the Centre there is regular rainfall for six or seven months each year. In Berber, Dongola, Khartoum and Kordofan, the rains fall from between three to four months; that is, during the three or four months of the rains, or Kharif, it rains abundantly eight or ten times. All the rest of the year the skies are perfectly clear. This is the reason why the houses of the mission must be solid and large: our lives depend on it. The Vicariate has many deserts of burning sand. Most of Central Africa however, is scattered with very fertile pieces of land, which if irrigated, with human work could produce immense riches. The hills that rise in some localities are rather small in comparison to the European mountains: almost all the Vicariate’s land consists of immense plains, rich in fertile grazing land and full of all kinds of animals. There are large numbers of elephants, hyenas, lions, tigers, panthers, snakes of an enormous size and other fierce animals. The roads are insignificant: the largest which are convenient to us are the ones always used by the Jallaba, that is, those on which the slave traders pass with the innumerable hordes of their victims: these routes are practicable for the missionary.
[3592]
The main Religion in the Vicariate is fetishism and idolatry in all its varied and strangest ramifications. But Islam predominates throughout the Northern territory of the Vicariate, in Nubia, Waday, Kordofan, the kingdom of Darfur, part of the Empire of Bornù, and among the nomadic Arab tribes who are the ramifications of the well-known emigrations of the 7th and 8th centuries which poured out of Arabia and gradually penetrated many tribes of the Interior. However, the followers of the Koran who people such a large part of the Vicariate are not as fanatical as those in Egypt and Asia.
[3593]
There are about 5,000 heretical Copts established in the Vicariate from the time of the Egyptian conquests, as government scribes, or traders and adventurers, and they have an Episcopal See in Khartoum which is vacant at the moment, for the reasons I mentioned to the late Eminent Cardinal Prefect in my letter of 20th October last year.
[3594]
There are also about 2,000 schismatic Greeks who live there, a small number of Lutheran and Anglican Protestants, and a few Jews, attracted by trade.
There are barely 300 Catholics in the whole Vicariate, of all rites. But when all the works of the Catholic apostolate have been organised in the Vicariate’s missions, then I am deeply convinced that our holy faith will progress by leaps and bounds. The Prussians (forgive me, Your Eminence, for this example of the modern persecutors of the Church and the Papacy) worked non-stop for five consecutive months to prepare their military strategies to hold the impregnable Paris under siege. Then, after bombarding it for a few days, they entered the proud capital of France, victorious. When we have prepared the bombs and machine-guns of well-organised Institutes of missionaries, Sisters and colleges, and when we have properly organised the schools, kindergartens, hospitals and the other Catholic works, we will open fire, and the colossus of idolatry will be tumbled by virtue of the Cross, like the mystical stone of Scripture, and Jesus Christ alone will reign.
[3595]
There is no doubt that when the works of the Catholic apostolate are wisely established among the interior tribes of the Vicariate, the preaching of the Gospel will achieve remarkable triumphs, so that we shall see the mass conversion of entire peoples to our holy Religion. Islam has never been able to take root among the Africans of Central Africa. The nomadic Arab tribes for many centuries and the Egyptian government for the last forty years have made unheard of attempts to gain the tribes of Africans for Mohammed; and even today the Governors of the Egyptian Sudan, as I could see with my own eyes, adopt the policy of sending the most fanatic of their muftis and ylemas and religion teachers to prepare the people by preaching the Koran to submit to the crown of Egypt, but their efforts have always been in vain. The Africans detest Islam.
[3596]
Moreover I am of the opinion that having properly organised our holy missions in the Muslim countries of the Vicariate, as in Khartoum, Kordofan, Berber, Sennar, etc., with the passing of a few generations, through public worship and the exemplary life of the Missionaries, the Sisters and the members of the Mission and through the foundation of charitable institutions, even this immense province dominated by Islam will bow before the Cross. Today the Catholic Mission exerts an enormous influence on the local Government, on every kind of Christian and on the infidels. One can in all truth say that the mission is the Sudan’s principal moral authority. However, the Head and the Missionaries need great prudence and circumspection together with steadfast resolution if they are to continue to withstand the impacts of brutal violence, especially with regard to the excesses of the most horrible slavery and trade in Africans, of which the Vicariate is the most unfortunate stage. The greatest obstacle to the conversion of these Muslim peoples is the brutal oppression which weighs heavily on them, and the torture and the arbitrary excesses of the minions of the Diwan of Egypt.
[3597]
The Egyptian Government has such possessions in the Vicariate that were they well organised and governed, in a few decades they could become a most flourishing empire. In fact, they occupy a large area in the eastern part, and some bits in the central part of the Vicariate, covering the immense expanse that extends from the Tropic of Cancer to the Equator. Leaving aside Lower Nubia, from Shellal to Wadi Halfa and a good part of the Atmur Desert that owes allegiance to the Governor of Esne in Upper Egypt, the possessions of His Highness the Khedive are divided into 14 Mudirdoms or vast provinces, each governed by a Mudir, who is always a Pasha or a Bey, and safeguarded by more than 30,000 Egyptian and indigenous soldiers, armed with guns and cannons for campaigns. These fourteen provinces all together depend on three Hoccomdars or General Governors with great authority, who live in Taka, Khartoum and Gondokoro.
[3598]
His Excellency Munzinger Pasha, a Swiss Catholic, is the current Hoccomdar or Governor General of the Eastern or Red Sea district, which includes the Provinces of Taka, Suakin, Gadaref, and Ghalabat in my Vicariate, as well as Massùa in the Vicariate of Abyssinia, which is subject to the Viceroy of Egypt.
[3599]
His Excellency Ismail Pasha Ayub, a Turk and the worst Muslim (although very courteous and generous to me) is the Hoccomdar or Governor General of the Provinces of Khartoum, Sennar, Fasogl, Berber, Dongola, Kordofan, Fashoda (the vast tribe of the Shilluk on the left of the White Nile) and Shakka on the Bahar-el-Ghazal at the 9th degree of Latitude North.
[3600]
His Excellency Colonel Gordon, an Anglican Englishman, who has tamed the rebels of China and is a distinguished cavalier, is Governor General of the White River and the Equator, and possesses the provinces of Gondokoro and Fatico. He has been charged by the Khedive to establish the Egyptian Government in the fruitful and densely populated lands located around the sources of the Nile.
[3601]
The activities of the first missionaries, including myself, from the establishment of the Vicariate in 1846 until 1861, extended to the Eastern part of the Vicariate where they founded the four Stations of Shellal, on the Tropic of Cancer, Khartoum, between the 15th and 16th degrees, Holy Cross between the 6th and 7th degrees, and Gondokoro, between the 4th and the 5th degree of Latitude North on the White Nile.
From 1861 to 1872, under the Franciscan administration, all the above-mentioned Stations were abandoned except Khartoum.
In the two years of its administration, the work of the Institute for African Missions in Verona has extended Catholic activity in the Centre of the Vicariate, founding the Mission of Kordofan, and effectively undertaking the exploration of the Nuba.
[3602]
Khartoum’s climate is not as lethal as it was in past times, when a good 30 missionaries fell victim, and I myself was several times at death’s door. Plantations and other causes have improved the atmosphere of this capital destined to become a great Centre of power and trade as soon as the Sudan railway is built, which will remove the barrier of the Great Desert which now makes communication between Central Africa and Egypt so laborious and difficult. In Khartoum today one can live almost as in Great Cairo. The climate of Kordofan, like that of the countries of the Nuba and the Sources of the Nile as far as the Equator where we shall not delay in establishing our Holy Religion, is very healthy. It seems that God in his mercy has removed the greatest of the obstacles that stood in the way of these peoples’ redemption, a most deadly climate. Together with the equally important fact that communication routes are now being built in Central Africa, this is a new and certain proof that the hour of redemption has sounded for Africa.
[3603]
There is still one very serious obstacle that keenly and directly concerns the Catholic apostolate: the flourishing existence of the cruellest slavery which every year causes hundreds of thousands of victims. It is the horrible trade in Africans, carried on in broad daylight by thousands of minions secretly sponsored by the Egyptian Government; indeed, carried on by its very agents and Governors. But God will soon inspire extraordinary means to remove it; and our Holy Mission will powerfully contribute its force and moral strength which will not be impeded by any obstacle. It is the true mission of Jesus Christ who came into the world to set slaves free and give freedom to everyone and make them brothers and sons of the same Father who is in heaven. The mission’s glorious battle against the predominant slavery and the horrible scourge of the trade in Africans will be a powerful help in gaining Central Africa for the Catholic Church.
[3604]
Having given you this general information which I judged appropriate to bring to Your Eminence’s knowledge, I now come briefly to mention the present state of this most important Vicariate. To tell the truth, the means used to achieve what has been done were minimal, which is a great comfort to us since this is the ordinary rule of divine Providence which points to God as the sole author of every good.
[3605]
The greatest fruit that the Catholic Apostolate can effectively draw from the Vicariate is the conversion of the Africans who live in the idolatrous and fetishist tribes of the Interior. But we can also win souls in the Muslim countries where we are currently established, in which more than four fifths are idolatrous slaves groaning under the yoke of the Muslim families.
[3606]
To succeed in organising Catholic institutions in the idolatrous lands in the Interior so as to convert those peoples to the faith, it is extremely important that the establishments founded among those tribes should have a support base and that they depend on, so to say, the Mother Houses, that is, on the basic Missions established in safe territory under a regular government where there are also the Consuls of the European powers to protect their existence and stability.
Such are indeed the two basic and central Missions established in the two capitals, Khartoum and El Obeid, most important cities, the first with a population of 48,000 and the second of 100,000, which are wonderfully suited to our purpose.
[3607]
Khartoum is the centre of communications and the operations base from which gradually to bring the faith to the vast tribes and kingdoms which constitute the Eastern part of the Vicariate to beyond the sources of the Nile, at the 10th degree of Latitude South.
El Obeid is the centre of communications and operations base from which little by little to plant the standard of the Cross among the immense tribes, kingdoms and empires which form the Central and Eastern part of the Vicariate.
[3608]
For this reason, since I took possession of the Mission as Pro-Vicar Apostolic, I have taken special care to reinforce and consolidate the two principal and fundamental Missions of Khartoum and El Obeid, as I have several times mentioned in my letters to the Sacred Congregation. For this purpose I have temporarily set aside the great business of going in search of souls, since I think it more useful to establish the works of the apostolate soundly first. Now here is what already exists, and what I intend to do in these two primary establishments.
[3609]
In Khartoum in the male section there is the grandest and most perfect (stone) building in all the Sudan, 126 metres long and thus longer than the Propaganda building, with a vast adjacent garden that extends to the banks of the Blue Nile. It is the work of my Predecessor, Pro-Vicar Knoblecher, who spent almost a million francs on it. It is the residence of the Pro-Vicar Apostolic and the male missionaries: it has premises suitable for the arts and crafts schools, with storerooms for provisions and the items necessary for all the Stations depending on the Vicariate Apostolic. There is also an elegant chapel, which serves as a Parish church for the Catholics of this capital.
[3610]
Next to this colossal edifice, since January this year I have started to build a red brick establishment for the female Works, comparable to the grandiose male building and which should turn out to be of the same size, design and capacity (but without the arcades). At the present a quarter of the building has already been completed, because about 50 builders work on it every day; and by next July the Sisters, the girls’ orphanage and part of the schools will move into the finished section. The whole building will, I hope, be completed within a year; in addition to the funds from the European charitable Societies, I shall find of great use the donations of my special benefactors, the first of whom are Their Majesties Emperor Ferdinand I and Empress Maria Anna Pia of Austria, the sister of the Venerable Queen Maria Cristina of Naples, and his Most Serene Highness the Duke of Modena, her nephew.
[3611]
A beautiful and spacious church surrounded by trees and facing on to a vast square also flanked by trees, will separate the two grandiose establishments of the Missionaries and the Sisters. For this Work I have already made some preparations and contracted and paid in part for a million red bricks, having had firm promises of substantial subsidies for this purpose. I hope that the church will be completed in four years, and I need some European stonemasons to quarry and work the stones, which I shall order from Europe. Thus as well as the church, which will become necessary when the Sudan railway is completed, we will shortly have two enormous male and female establishments (which will be a great help in keeping up the mission’s prestige in these extremely materialistic countries), with a large garden that will supply most of the Mission’s upkeep. Each establishment will have its respective premises for the schools, training courses, orphanages and infirmaries for both sexes, and the refuge for slaves.
[3612]
Part of what I am doing in Khartoum is being done in El Obeid, but on a rather more modest and less expensive scale, since there is neither mortar nor stone there.
El Obeid has a fairly capacious house for the Missionaries with premises for the school, crafts and skills, and a small garden. A chapel serves as the Parish church, and there is a comfortable complex of separate accommodation where I have started a school for African boys, from among whom those of outstanding piety and excellent capacity who are called to an ecclesiastical career will be selected; this school is still in its early stages, but it is going very well and showing great promise. There are already 4 young boys there whom I hope to train as indigenous missionaries. There is also an annex destined for the abandoned sick, that is, for Africans thrown out by their masters because they are ill. Until now only three of them have died, after receiving instruction and baptism.
[3613]
On the other side of the imperial road, or Derb-el-Sultanie, is the Sisters’ Institute with its Orphanage and lodgings for women slaves and a private chapel. This establishment which has room for 70 individuals will be rebuilt and enlarged after the Kharif, that is, when the rains of next October are over, and it will be totally surrounded by a large wall of red sandstone (because it is now enclosed by a thorny hedge). In El Obeid too, I am preparing wood and sand in order to build a larger church. I hope it will all be completed by the end of 1875.
[3614]
I have not yet opened the public schools for boys in either Khartoum or El Obeid, neither have I judged it wise to yield to the pleas of many, even non-Catholics, because of the lack of sufficient teaching staff. The female school in Khartoum is open; but I have had to restrict the intake of pupils as the premises are not yet ready. In El Obeid a small public school for girls has already been opened by the Sisters: but I have ordered them to proceed slowly here too, since the number of sisters and African teachers is still limited and I would prefer them to be involved in teaching the catechism to the 17 catechumens who are now there. Every step must be pondered over: once a step has been taken, we must not retreat.
[3615]
Khartoum has 74 individuals who live totally at the mission’s expense, including the missionaries and the Sisters. In El Obeid there are 58.
Since the work I have in my hands belongs completely to God, for it is with God above all that we must deal with every important and lesser matter of the Mission: therefore it is very important that piety and a spirit of prayer should prevail among its members.
[3616]
Thanks to the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, this Spirit of the Lord really does prevail. Every morning, after rising at 4.00 a.m. and at 5.00 a.m. in the winter, the missionaries spend three quarters of an hour in community meditation, in addition to the ordinary vocal prayers; and likewise in the evening they gather together in the chapel to recite the holy Rosary together, to make their examination of conscience, etc. The divine Office, spiritual reading and the visit to the Blessed Sacrament are done by each one privately. Each Wednesday morning there is an hour of Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, ending with the Blessing with Sacred Ciborium, pro conversione Nigritiae, which I established in 1868 in our Cairo Institutes, together with the devotion of the Guard of Honour of the Sacred Heart.
[3617]
Every Friday morning the Prayers to the Sacred Heart are recited in the church by both Institutes together, and at 4.00 p.m. we make the Way of the Cross together in church. Then every first Friday of the month there is a retreat and the Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament coram venerabile in homage to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, when we renew the Consecration of the Vicariate to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Lord of Africa. Furthermore, we have always publicly celebrated the month of March in honour of St Joseph in church, and of May, in honour of Our Lady, the Immaculate Queen of Africa, with a sermon every day and benediction with the Ciborium, as well as all the Novenas and Triduums in preparation for the main Feasts of Our Lord, of the Blessed Virgin Mary and of the Patron Saints of the Vicariate.
These ordinary pious practices done as a community are most effective in preserving the spirit of the members of the mission, they strengthen them and enable them to support cheerfully the great sufferings, discomforts, difficult and dangerous journeys and crosses that are part and parcel of such an arduous and difficult apostolate.
[3618]
We have had 73 infidel adults baptised up to 15th May last, as well as a very sound conversion of a rich Albanian merchant who abjured the Greek schism in my hands, becoming a benefactor of the Mission; and of another rich schismatic Greek merchant from El Obeid who abjured with his wife in the hands of Fr Carcereri. But, as I said, these conversions are insignificant, since the time has not yet come to fire the cannons and machine-guns which are now being prepared in the Vicariate’s missions.
Male and female staff are still very scarce: but I have reason to hope that we shall shortly be strengthened with considerable reinforcements.
[3619]
…………..Male Establishments
1. Fr Daniel Comboni, born in Limone, Diocese of Brescia on 15th March 1831, member of the Institute of Missions for Africa in Verona, Pro-Vicar Apostolic.
2. Fr Stanislao Carcereri, from Verona, member of the Ministers of the Sick, 34, Vicar General.
3. Fr Pasquale Canon Fiore, member of the Institute of Verona, 33, Superior and Parish Priest of the Khartoum Mission, and ordinary Confessor of the Sisters.
4. Fr Salvatore Mauro, from Barletta, member of the Verona Institute, 39, Superior and Parish Priest of the Mission in El Obeid, and extraordinary Confessor of the Sisters.
5. Fr Giovanni Losi, from Piacenza, member of the Verona Institute, 35, Ordinary confessor of the Sisters in El Obeid.
6. Fr Giuseppe Franceschini, 28, member of the Ministers of the Sick, Chancellor of my Curia.
7. Fr Stefano Vanni, of the Verona Institute, 39, a pious and excellent missionary Priest.
8. Fr Vincenzo Jermolinski, Polish, a pious and learned missionary Priest, 29.
9. Giuseppe Khuri, 23, a pious and well-educated Maronite from Tripoli, Syria, Teacher of the Arabic language and aspirant to the ecclesiastical State in the establishment in Khartoum.
[3620]
Then there are 5 good and distinguished Teachers of arts and crafts, 3 in Khartoum and 2 in El Obeid, who are also most exemplary and of impeccable conduct. Of the 17 African students, there are 4 who aspire to the clerical state.
You will be better informed by Fr Carcereri with regard to the Cairo Institute directed by Fr Bartolomeo Rolleri my good and most pious Missionary, who studied at the Verona Institute, and about the people there.
[3621]
As for the female Institute directed by the Sisters of St Joseph of the Apparition, there are four Sisters in Khartoum and three in El Obeid, assisted by a cousin of mine who is already an experienced Sister, with whom I opened the female house in Kordofan for lack of other Sisters, and also 9 good African women teachers. For the requirements of the two principal Missions, we could do with at least 24 Sisters of St Joseph, who to my mind are excellent missionaries and most useful for the foreign missions: but it is a Congregation that does not have many members. Realising this several years ago, I was prompted to found the Institute of the Devout Mothers of Africa in Verona, giving it a modest income, to prepare missionaries for me for Central Africa. It now has a school and educational programme especially for the daughters of noble families fallen on bad times; and many novices there are preparing for the Apostolate of Africa.
[3622]
I intend to set up the first African house of my Verona Sisters, who are a great cause of hope, in Berber under the Camillians. Central Africa has room for everyone. I am satisfied with the Sisters of St Joseph, and I would like the Mother General to give me a large number of them, especially Arab; who, with less requirements, are most useful.
[3623]
In El Obeid, as well as the absolute ownership of two establishments exempt from tax, the Mission possesses a large and fertile garden, which I have spent a great deal on improving. However, in two years it will make two thousand scudos a year net, that is, more than 10,000 francs.
[3624]
Funds received from 26th May 1872, when I was appointed Pro-Vicar, to 26th May 1874, amount to 202,521 (two hundred and two thousand, five hundred and twenty-one) francs in cash, and more than 10,000 in kind and in goods. Whereas here in Khartoum I find myself with a small cash fund to continue building the female establishment; thanks to the Providence of my bursar, St Joseph, neither I nor the mission have a single pennyworth of debt, in Central Africa, Egypt or Europe, except for the 3,000 (three thousand) francs which I owe the Mother General of St Joseph, Sr Emilie Julien, by a voluntary obligation, and which I shall repay as soon as I receive the allocation from the Propagation of the Faith for the financial year 1873.
[3625]
In addition to being very expensive, the journeys between Egypt and Central Africa are utterly exhausting. The first expedition of 31 individuals led by me at the beginning of 1873, which cost me 22,000 francs including some provisions, took 99 days from Cairo to Khartoum. Fr Losi who came with four Sisters and three lay brothers took only 68 days: but Fr Stanislao with another missionary, took 75 days to reach Cairo from Khartoum, and the current Mother Superior, who arrived two months ago, took 82. It takes 12 days to travel from Khartoum to El Obeid, from Khartoum to Berber 8 days, from Berber to Suakin 13 days, from Khartoum to Gondokoro two months, etc. The distinguished Monsieur Trémaux will tell Your Eminence how tiring journeys in the Sudan are. He is a member of various scientific academies and of the Institute of France, and travelling from Egypt to Khartoum at the expense of His Highness the Viceroy of Egypt, thus with all imaginable comforts which a missionary would never have, he left these truthful words in the second edition of his beautiful work Egypt and Ethiopia, on pages 357–358:
[3626]
“The journey by boat and especially by sea is nothing compared to the journey overland in these regions (between Egypt and Khartoum). In fact, by sea, for example, one can do a hundred leagues a day, playing cards on the steamer; in the desert, on a camel, one can only do seven or eight leagues in the same time span, putting up with unheard of heat and every sort of deprivation. In this regard the Sudan is ten times as far as China, ten times as far as the Antipodes” (2).
[3627]
Fr Carcereri will have explained everything about the Mission among the Nuba to Your Eminence in detail. I think that in the Nuba mission and in others of the same kind, it will be very expedient to adopt more or less the system of the famous Reductions of Paraguay, conceived by the valiant Fathers of the Society of Jesus, who have made those countries a school of Christian perfection, a model for Catholic missions. The chief of the Nuba, the Cogiur Cakum, continues to send me ambassadors, and lately he sent me a large quantity of excellent honey as a present. After the Kharif, I shall start to send material to Jebel Nuba to build the Mission establishment.
[3628]
The most important matter of slavery and the trade in Africans now remains, a miserable spectacle which takes place on the stage of the Vicariate of Central Africa. I hope that Fr Carcereri will have explained everything to do with it properly to you, since this is the main reason why I sent him to Rome and Vienna. For my part, I will explain to you by letter, at leisure, the phases of this great scourge of humanity. I hope that the divine Heart of Jesus to which I have solemnly consecrated the Vicariate will, with his infinite charity, remove this terrible scourge from unhappy Africa.
[3629]
I have also settled everything for the proper administration of the Parishes: I have given orders in an appropriate circular letter that Mgr Valerga’s catechism be adopted as the doctrinal text for catechism in the Vicariate, since I find it most suitable for these countries.
[3630]
This is a brief sketch of the mission of Central Africa. We hope for all the blessings of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, especially after the Holy Father deigned to enrich a prayer I composed in Latin, pro conversione Chamitarum Africae Centralis ad ecclesiam Catholicam with three hundred years of indulgence; and a Plenary Indulgence for those who recite it for a month.
I beg Your Eminence to take unhappy Africa to heart, and to bountifully accept the expression of my deep obedience and veneration, with which I kiss your sacred purple, signing myself in the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary
Your Most Reverend Eminence’s most humble, devoted and obedient son
Fr Daniel Comboni
Pro-Vicar Apostolic of Central Africa
(1) Dr Ignaz Knoblecher Apostolischer Provikar der Katholischen Mission in Central-Afrika, Eine Lebensskizze von Dr J.C. Mitterrutzner, p. 10, Brixen 1869.
(2) Tremaux, Egypte et Ethiopie, deuxième édition, Paris, Librairie de L. Hachette et Companie, Boulevard St Germain 77.