[3734]
The illnesses we have all had in this burning climate due to the enormous spate of the Nile which last autumn threatened the city of Khartoum with destruction, and the impossibility of rendering exact accounts for last year because of the late arrival of the caravan led by Fr Carcereri who was bearing a considerable part of the resources from the Propagation of the Faith and from the other small Associations which had been granted to me in 1874, have prevented me from sending you by 1st October the statistics of my Vicariate with the complete information for the next allocation of funds. This is why I limited myself to sending you on 3rd December last a short Report on the good progress of this Mission and the above-mentioned statistics, though incomplete.
[3735]
Now that Fr Carcereri has taken 103 days to lead the personnel of the caravan from Cairo to Khartoum, leaving, for lack of camels, all the trunks and the few remaining provisions in Wadi Halfa, that is at the second cataract 40 days away from here, I am also giving you, in abbreviated form, a more exact financial situation with the statistics of the Vicariate. I beg you therefore, Mr President, to take this little Report into consideration rather than that of the 3rd of December, since having just become aware of the enormous expenses incurred by Fr Carcereri’s journey and caravan, I have changed somewhat the estimates shown in the statistical tables which I had sent you recently. I am thus forced to emphasise the urgent need my Vicariate has of more abundant help than in the previous years so as to make up for last year’s deficit, for this important Mission to be firmly planted and widely developed in these lands where the Word of the Gospel has never penetrated.
[3736]
In order properly to consolidate the main mission in Khartoum, it is absolutely essential to build a church and the Sisters’ Institute with schools, an orphanage, rooms for a nursery, an infirmary, etc. We shall see about the church (which will be the cathedral) later on. For the complete building for the Sisters we will need at least 80,000 francs, including what we have already spent.
[3737]
Thanks to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and to you, nearly half this house has just been finished. Spending 24,416 francs, I have built a house which, for the moment, is large enough for the Sisters and the orphanage. To construct this half we used (under my direct supervision) 723,947 red bricks, each 25 centimetres long, 12 wide and 6 thick, as well as 1624 ardebs of mortar, 948 days’work by masons at 9 or 10 francs each a day, 10,372 days’work by slaves and 4394 francs’ worth of wood. My blacksmiths, carpenters and mission personnel enabled me to save more than half the construction costs. Although it is incomplete, this building is immensely useful, both for the salvation and the Apostolate of Khartoum and Central Africa. At the end of March I shall stop the work on this building, and start it again another year.
[3738]
The Mission in Kordofan, especially with the Sisters settled there, now has a new lease of life. In addition to the repairs made to the Missionaries’ house, to protect the Africans’ little Seminary or College, I was obliged to completely enclose the Sisters’ house with a wall and to repair the huts. After the month of May we will have a chapel here with the Blessed Sacrament perpetually present. Everything is built of sand walls, according to the local custom. For all these things which are the bare necessities, I spent 4,105 francs 7 centimes. Much work and expenditure are still required before the mission has all it needs. Nevertheless, it is still the operations base and communications centre for the whole central part of the Vicariate.
[3739]
At present Kordofan has become the starting point for the new mission in Jebel Nuba. His Excellency Ismail Pasha Ayub, the Governor General of Khartoum, passing through El Obeid on his way to Darfur to conquer it, visited our two establishments in Kordofan and wrote to say that he was delighted and quite amazed at how flourishing they are and assured me that he would always be pleased to protect such an eminent work of European civilisation.
[3740]
The Sacred Congregation of Propaganda has ordered me to found the Mission of Jebel Nuba to the south-west of Kordofan as soon as possible. As you know, in October 1873 I sent Fathers Carcereri and Franceschini to these tribes and had them accompanied by the veteran of the Central African Missions, Mr Augusto Wisniewski from the Diocese of Ermeland who has been in our Vicariate for 20 years and knows all the tribes perfectly in these lands as far as the 4th degree of Latitude North.
[3741]
In the company of this good man, Fr Carcereri visited the first villages of these tribes where the great chief resides, and chose to start the Mission and the regeneration of the Nuba in the village of Delen. In the month of November I sent two members of the Mission to prepare some living quarters there. For this little expedition I spent 2,490 francs on camels, provisions and iron, etc. But when Fr Carcereri’s caravan reached Khartoum, I hastened to send two priests to prepare two houses, one for the Missionaries and one for the Sisters.
[3742]
When the Mother Provincial, Sr Emilienne Naubonnet (who has been Superior in Syria for 30 years) arrives in Khartoum next month and I have received the trunks from Wadi Halfa, which Fr Carcereri left there because he did not have enough camels, I shall go to Jebel Nuba to found the new Mission. For this operation and to erect the two houses for the Missionaries and the Sisters, at least 10,000 francs will be needed this year.
[3743]
Already last November I opened the Mission in Berber, to be entrusted to the Fathers of St Camillus de Lellis, and I have placed Fr Franceschini and one of my lay brothers there. At the present time, five Camillian Fathers and two lay brothers have settled in Berber (one of the most commercial cities in the Sudan). The purchase of the fine house on the Nile, the fittings, basic furnishings and repairs cost me 8,134 francs 75 centimes. This house will not need repairs for a few years. With the 5,000 francs agreed in the Convention with the Most Reverend Father General of the Camillians, this house will function very well.
[3744]
The Superior of this house is Fr Carcereri, who consequently ceases to be my Vicar General.
To this very important position, to the universal satisfaction of all my Missionaries, I have appointed Canon Pasquale Fiore, who has until now been the Superior and Parish Priest of the Mission in Khartoum.
In addition to the Missions of the Vicariate I shall have extraordinary expenses this year for the two preparatory establishments in Cairo, to which the Sacred Congregation of Propaganda attaches great importance, especially for the acclimatisation of the European Missionaries and Sisters on their way to the Vicariate.
[3745]
You know that until now my two Institutes in Cairo were housed in two buildings for which I was paying a high yearly rent. In order to avoid this, after trying a thousand solutions, after three years I asked His Highness the Khedive if I could have a piece of land in Cairo to build two houses.
His Highness told me he would obtain it for me, but after a thousand difficulties and efforts also on the part of my representative, Fr Bartolomeo Rolleri, the piece of land was only granted in the month of August and on conditions that will require many sacrifices.
[3746]
In truth, the land granted to us is in one of the best locations in Cairo and is worth at least 43,000 francs, according to the estimates of the engineers. Indeed it is a magnificent deal in the interests of my Vicariate. But I will need, in this first year, the sum of 50,000 francs for building costs and securing the property. To this end, I enclose an exact copy of the French-Arabic document the Egyptian Government gave me (Appendix II).
Even though I and my Missionaries have suffered greatly from shortages over the past year while preparing, building and organising our works, we are prepared to suffer greatly this year so as to save money for the construction of the Houses in Cairo.
[3747]
If God blesses us, in 5 or 6 years the Institutes and works of the Vicariate will be more flourishing. Our courage in creating and developing the world’s most difficult and colossal Vicariate into full life and activity despite a thousand obstacles, will be unshakeable if you will have the courage to increase considerably the generous donation that your immense charity has given to this Vicariate in previous years.
These houses in Cairo have already been started and so far we have spent about 8,000 francs. But the Egyptian government requires that 50,000 francs be spent over 18 months from 4th August, that is, by 4th February 1878. However, I hope that by spending these 50,000 the two Institutes will be able to settle there, and the rest of the building to complete the work can be finished little by little. In order to be able to face all this, I have reduced the Cairo personnel to the minimum and I have also transferred the three theology students who were in Cairo to Khartoum.
[3748]
As you will see from the administration statistics, a considerable outlay is required not only for the journeys of individuals from Europe to Khartoum, but also to the other stations of the Vicariate. To these enormous costs last year was added the misfortune of Fr Carcereri’s caravan. On this caravan and on ordinary provisions, including his journey to Europe, he spent the enormous sum of 36,680 francs 91 centimes, whereas if someone else had led the expedition he would not even have spent 20,000 francs; and despite all this expenditure, the provisions they left at the cataracts are still 40 days away from Khartoum, at Wadi Halfa, where it is impossible to retrieve them for the moment.
[3749]
Fr Carcereri made two big mistakes on this expedition. Having reached Aswan, he should have done what all Missionaries have done since 1848, as well as all the traders, which is to have all their effects unloaded and transported by camel to Shellal (a two hour journey); and from Shellal, transported by boat to Korosko, where it is necessary to take to the desert to reach Berber. This is what Missionaries have always done, whereas he tried to pass the Aswan cataracts to reach Shellal, not only with the boats but with all the personnel, thus exposing both the personnel and the provisions to being swallowed up by the Nile.
[3750]
The travellers were fortunate enough to save their lives by landing at the beginning of the cataract and walking to Shellal; the boats passing the cataracts were badly damaged and one was engulfed by the river. I shall say nothing of the tragedy of the death of one of my good farmers from Verona, who fell into a whirlpool of the Nile at the Shellal cataracts and drowned. If Fr Carcereri had taken camels for two hours from Aswan to Shellal as everyone else has done, all these misfortunes would not have happened.
Secondly, Fr Carcereri wanted to travel via Wadi Halfa instead of via Korosko. He had never done it, did not know Wadi Halfa, and he went that way, whereas many other traders took the route via Korosko and travelled safely from Cairo to Khartoum in 60 days.
[3751]
Now, when he reached Wadi Halfa, Carcereri had to stop for 34 days and then (after the steps I took with the government) was able to leave with only 19 camels, and reached Khartoum in 103 days from Cairo. More than half the provisions were lost in the cataracts and the rest are still at Wadi Halfa where we risk losing everything. I have now sent one of my good lay brothers from Khartoum to Wadi Halfa to collect the provisions.
When he met the caravan (to which I sent the biscuits they needed), in the Bayuda desert Fr Carcereri ordered him to stop in Dongola. I have just learned of this new difficulty and have hastened to give my lay brother the order to proceed to Wadi Halfa and there to retrieve the remnants of the provisions, take them to Korosko and, via Berber, bring them to Khartoum.
[3752]
All this, to avoid losing everything, makes the cost of the caravan even greater, so that in the end this caravan will have cost more than 40,000 francs. It is true that travelling in Central Africa is very difficult, but never again will I entrust such a task to Fr Carcereri.
Despite this enormous expenditure, I find myself without provisions and I am still in financial difficulties so that I cannot leave this capital to fulfil Propaganda’s orders to go and found the new Mission in Jebel Nuba. But all my trust is in the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Propagation of the Faith.
[3753]
Thanks to the divine Heart of Jesus and to you, despite these difficulties, the Sacred Congregation of Propaganda has been able to recognise that it is not in vain that the benefactors of the Association should make sacrifices for this colossal Vicariate. Here is a short extract from a letter Cardinal Franchi wrote me:
Rome, Propaganda, 29 August 1874
[3754]
“At the general assembly on the 14th of this month of August, the Sacred Congregation of Propaganda dealt with the affairs of this Mission, with the aim of putting it on a sounder footing. Therefore, after considering the reports sent by Your Lordship at different times, as well as that presented by Fr Carcereri, it is with pleasure that the Sacred Assembly learned how the Lord has deigned to bless the beginnings of a work so much to His glory and that it is hoped with good reason, that he will continue to protect it with his heavenly favour. The Eminent Fathers have therefore ordered that the new Mission in Jebel Nuba be instituted without further ado so as to obtain, with the means presently at its disposal, the conversion of these most unfortunate people to Christianity”.
[3755]
After giving me wise instructions on the way I should behave with regard to the slave trade and slavery, as well as the way to gradually destroy the disorders of these peoples, His Eminence informed me that the Sacred Congregation has decided on my nomination as Bishop and Vicar Apostolic, but this will be communicated to the Holy Father only after the establishment of the Mission in Jebel Nuba. His Eminence’s letter ends:
[3756]
“Finally, I have the pleasure of informing you that my Eminent Colleagues offered praise for the tenacity with which you have begun the arduous enterprise of evangelising these peoples and urge you to continue without being discouraged by the obstacles you are bound to encounter, but relying on divine assistance which will certainly not be lacking, etc., etc."
To give you an even more just and true idea of the administration of this Vicariate, I am forwarding the following notes:
[Administrative notes and four Appendices are attached]
[3757]
With this Report and the one I had the honour to send you on 3rd December last, I hope to have explained the situation and the great future of the Vicariate of Central Africa. With tears in my eyes, I implore you this year to greatly increase your generous help to my Vicariate, that it may reach the proportions which seem ordained by God for the salvation of so many millions of souls.
[3758]
The conquest of the Equator by Colonel Gordon and of the Darfur Empire by the Khedive will soon open a safer and larger field of action for our difficult apostolate.
Please accept, Mr President, my humble respects and pass them on to all the members of the Central Councils and to all the ordinary members for whom we pray every day.
Your most devoted and grateful
Daniel Comboni
Pro-Vicar Apostolic of Central Africa
Translated from the French.