African nuns tell Vatican they want more influence
VATICAN CITY — African nuns told a Vatican meeting Friday they want more of a say in running the Catholic Church on the continent, saying they have special talents and shouldn’t be left to clean churches and mend vestments.
Women also have an important role to play in forging reconciliation in Africa’s many tribal and ethnic conflicts — the main focus of the 3-week-long Vatican meeting on Africa, said Sister Pauline Odia Bukasa of Congo.
“We, your mothers and religious sisters, ask you — our fathers and bishops in this church-family — to promote the dignity of women,” she said, requesting in particular greater emphasis on educating young girls.
Sister Felicia Harry of Ghana was more blunt, saying African nuns didn’t want to usurp priests’ powers but wanted to be part of the church’s decision-making process.
“As well as teach catechism to children, decorate parish churches, clean, mend and sew vestments, we religious women in Africa would like to be part of various parish councils,” she said, according to a summary of her remarks to the closed meeting.
The role of women in the church has been a recurring topic of discussion among the 300 prelates at the meeting, which is hearing testimony from bishops around the continent about their particular problems and advice from colleagues and Vatican officials on how to deal with them.
Ghana Bishop Matthew Kwasi Gyamfi said the Vatican needed to address a particular issue that many African priests face concerning polygamous marriages: A woman who married a man who then took other wives isn’t allowed to receive certain sacraments because she is in a marriage that the church cannot bless.
He said when the women have walked away from such marriages without the consent of their husbands, “the church has been cited for injustice, insecurity, breaking up families, fomenting disunity and destroying social cohesion,” he told the synod in asking for some special exemptions from Rome so such women can participate fully in the sacramental life of the church.
In addition to the role of women, the synod has addressed issues that are increasingly of concern to the broader church: how to deal with the rapid spread of Islam and Pentecostal churches, which are increasingly drawing away many Catholics.
Bishop Alfred Adewale Martins of Nigeria said it seemed the aggressive proselytizing of many neo-Pentecostal communities “aims at bringing down the Catholic Church both in her influence as well as in the number of her faithful.”
“This intention is captured in the way some of them refer to the Catholic Church as the dead church,” he said, urging the Vatican to reach out in particular to young professional Africans who are increasingly targeted by the new churches.
While such problems are universal, a purely African problem has also been raised: tribal and ethnic conflicts within the African church hierarchy.
Bishop Albert Vanbuel of the Central African Republic said recent months have seen increasingly bitter divisions between priests, bishops and laymen fueled by tribal and ethnic divisions.
“Our church is called on to show a witness … of reconciliation, justice and peace, and above all of communion,” he said.
Related News
Irish Catholic bishops meet leaders of child-abuse victims, face demands for compensationOctober 7th, 2009 Irish Catholic bishops meet child-abuse victimsDUBLIN — Ireland's senior Roman Catholic bishops on Wednesday met leading campaigners for thousands of children assaulted, terrorized or molested while in church care — but didn't address the victims' key demand for the church to admit its responsibility for overseeing decades of abuse. Representatives from four victims groups spent three hours talking with the bishops inside Maynooth, the Republic of Ireland's only remaining seminary, and pledged to meet again in coming months.
Pope: Africa is world's 'spiritual lung,' but harmed by materialism, religious fundamentalismOctober 4th, 2009 Pope: materialism, extremism harm Africa's futureVATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict opened a special meeting of bishops on Africa on Sunday by praising the continent as the world's spiritual center but lamenting that it risks being afflicted by materialism and religious fundamentalism. A Congolese choir — with bongo drums, electric guitars and swaying, ululating singers — filled St.
Pope says bishops will discuss Middle East at special meeting in October 2010September 19th, 2009 Pope: Bishops to discuss Middle East next yearVATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI has announced a special meeting of bishops next year to discuss Middle East peace efforts and the role of the Catholic Church in the region. Addressing bishops and patriarchs from Eastern rite churches, Benedict said Saturday that the meeting will take place Oct.
Vatican: Papal trip to Moscow a possibility due to improved relations with Russian OrthodoxSeptember 17th, 2009 Vatican sees end to tensions with Russian OrthodoxVATICAN CITY — Relations with the Russian Orthodox church have vastly improved, possibly paving the way for a papal visit to Moscow or a historic meeting between the pope and the Orthodox patriarch outside of Russia or the Vatican, a senior Vatican cardinal said Thursday. Cardinal Walter Kasper told Vatican Radio "we have overcome all the tensions in recent years."
He spoke after meeting with Archbishop Hilarion, head of external relations for the Moscow patriarch's office.
Berlusconi insists relations with the Catholic Church are excellent despite scandalSeptember 7th, 2009 Berlusconi: Relations with church excellentROME — Silvio Berlusconi says relations between his government and the Catholic Church, which have been strained by a sex scandal involving the Italian premier, remain excellent. Berlusconi said Monday that contacts with the church are kept up "almost daily" by his top aide.
US bishop who says priests should deny communion to abortion backers resignsAugust 31st, 2009 Pope accepts Scranton bishop's resignationVATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI has accepted the early retirement of a U.S. bishop who has denounced nuns for sponsoring lectures by gay-rights advocates and directed priests to deny communion to abortion backers, the Vatican said Monday.
US Catholic sisters targeted in Vatican-ordered investigation want specifics about inquiryAugust 17th, 2009 Catholic sisters under Vatican review want answersSILVER SPRING, Md. — A group representing Roman Catholic sisters in the United States is raising concerns about why the Vatican is investigating them and who is funding the inquiry.
US Catholic delegation in Cuba to meet with local church leaders, discuss hurricane aidAugust 17th, 2009 US church leaders following up on Cuba storm aidHAVANA — A delegation of U.S. Roman Catholic bishops is in Cuba to follow up on hurricane recovery projects funded by the church.
Conn. priest who hired investigator claims bishop threatened to send him to live with nunsAugust 4th, 2009 Conn. whistle-blow priest says bishop scolded himNEW HAVEN, Conn. — A former Connecticut priest claims a bishop who played a leading national role in responding to the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal threatened to send him to live with nuns after he hired a private investigator to look into his pastor.
Breakaway conservative Catholic Society of St. Pius X to ordain 13 priests in MinnesotaJune 19th, 2009 Breakaway Catholic group to ordain 13 in MinnesotaMINNEAPOLIS — An ultraconservative group plans to ordain 13 Roman Catholic priests in Minnesota — even though their elevations likely won't be recognized by the Vatican. The St. Thomas Aquinas Seminary, part of the Society of St.
Catholic orders that abused children meet Irish government amid calls for more moneyJune 4th, 2009 Catholic orders meet Irish gov't over victim aidDUBLIN — Leaders of 18 Roman Catholic religious orders responsible for the abuse of thousands of Irish children in their care met government leaders Thursday to discuss what more they can contribute to the victims. The negotiations with Prime Minister Brian Cowen and other senior Cabinet ministers come two weeks after the publication of an investigation into six decades of beatings, molestation and humiliation in church-run institutions for castaway children.
HK cardinal says China is still controlling Roman Catholic church on mainlandJune 1st, 2009 Cardinal: Beijing still controlling Chinese churchHONG KONG — China has held off on ordaining bishops without Vatican approval, but government interference in the state-backed Chinese church is still a concern, Hong Kong's cardinal — a key adviser to the pope— said Monday. Beijing and the Vatican don't have diplomatic relations, and the power to appoint bishops is a major sticking point between them.
Pope, Prince Charles discuss environment at VaticanApril 27th, 2009 VATICAN CITY - Pope Benedict XVI and Britain's Prince Charles spent 15 minutes talking about the environment and other affairs during a meeting Monday, the Vatican said. The heir to the British throne was accompanied by his wife Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, when he was received by the German-born pontiff at the Vatican.
Vatican in 'deep pain' over bishop's re-arrest in ChinaApril 2nd, 2009 VATICAN CITY - The Vatican Thursday said it felt 'deep pain' over the re-arrest of an elderly Roman Catholic bishop from China's 'underground' church which remains loyal to the pope. The Police Monday arrested Bishop Julius Jia Zhiguo of Zhengding, a county in China's Hebei Province some 260 km south of the capital Beijing, Catholic media reported.
Dipping numbers of nuns, priests prompts debate in communityJanuary 20th, 2009 THIRUVANANTHAPURAM/NEW DELHI - The lure of attractive jobs and the increasing attacks on Christians are just some of the reasons youngsters are moving away from a career in the church, impacting on the more than 30,000 educational institutions and 6,000 hospitals being run by the Catholic church. There has been an almost 30-40 percent decline in the number of girls opting to be nuns, said Catholic Bishop Conference of India (CBCI) spokesperson Rev.