The China Mail - Africans eye a pope from among their own

USD -
AED 3.673025
AFN 70.910153
ALL 86.699187
AMD 389.281371
ANG 1.80229
AOA 911.999708
ARS 1163.459302
AUD 1.567054
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.69673
BAM 1.71749
BBD 2.017624
BDT 121.412232
BGN 1.71706
BHD 0.376882
BIF 2971.75424
BMD 1
BND 1.310543
BOB 6.904909
BRL 5.684897
BSD 0.99924
BTN 85.223905
BWP 13.679732
BYN 3.270297
BYR 19600
BZD 2.007262
CAD 1.38621
CDF 2877.000099
CHF 0.82558
CLF 0.024535
CLP 941.509771
CNY 7.28698
CNH 7.29145
COP 4302.25
CRC 503.703574
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 96.829432
CZK 21.957995
DJF 177.947162
DKK 6.56266
DOP 59.301085
DZD 132.334008
EGP 50.952643
ERN 15
ETB 133.171989
EUR 0.879075
FJD 2.257402
FKP 0.754311
GBP 0.751704
GEL 2.739973
GGP 0.754311
GHS 15.139341
GIP 0.754311
GMD 71.49907
GNF 8653.233986
GTQ 7.696057
GYD 209.068596
HKD 7.75848
HNL 25.906135
HRK 6.622599
HTG 130.553714
HUF 358.030192
IDR 16848.55
ILS 3.646535
IMP 0.754311
INR 85.3276
IQD 1309.049716
IRR 42112.499047
ISK 127.379892
JEP 0.754311
JMD 158.295683
JOD 0.709203
JPY 142.550498
KES 129.310087
KGS 87.317395
KHR 3999.947311
KMF 434.497745
KPW 899.943534
KRW 1435.289889
KWD 0.30652
KYD 0.832744
KZT 516.410322
LAK 21610.253213
LBP 89536.643088
LKR 299.736996
LRD 199.856862
LSL 18.648185
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.468253
MAD 9.268286
MDL 17.262561
MGA 4496.976988
MKD 54.035186
MMK 2099.105189
MNT 3543.117696
MOP 7.985405
MRU 39.592014
MUR 45.301804
MVR 15.405024
MWK 1732.754344
MXN 19.58973
MYR 4.372982
MZN 63.999901
NAD 18.648185
NGN 1611.420268
NIO 36.776684
NOK 10.397365
NPR 136.359445
NZD 1.672465
OMR 0.38502
PAB 0.99924
PEN 3.687855
PGK 4.13606
PHP 56.454499
PKR 280.873841
PLN 3.758341
PYG 7998.138334
QAR 3.64263
RON 4.375201
RSD 102.936075
RUB 82.841669
RWF 1426.984496
SAR 3.751093
SBD 8.336982
SCR 14.24948
SDG 600.498731
SEK 9.590895
SGD 1.31184
SHP 0.785843
SLE 22.750114
SLL 20969.483762
SOS 571.057242
SRD 36.850033
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.74376
SYP 13002.148755
SZL 18.639655
THB 33.440501
TJS 10.617379
TMT 3.51
TND 2.983082
TOP 2.342102
TRY 38.312185
TTD 6.780212
TWD 32.514803
TZS 2690.000128
UAH 41.665137
UGX 3663.618042
UYU 41.913828
UZS 12870.082941
VES 83.31192
VND 26055
VUV 119.799608
WST 2.772278
XAF 576.024904
XAG 0.029863
XAU 0.0003
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.719185
XOF 576.024904
XPF 104.72749
YER 245.249374
ZAR 18.709042
ZMK 9001.19797
ZMW 28.105008
ZWL 321.999592
  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    9.5

    0%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4500

    63

    -0.71%

  • CMSC

    0.1600

    22.32

    +0.72%

  • NGG

    0.2400

    71.95

    +0.33%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    9.75

    0%

  • RELX

    0.0150

    52.715

    +0.03%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    9.21

    -0.98%

  • RIO

    0.8350

    61.035

    +1.37%

  • GSK

    0.1500

    37.18

    +0.4%

  • BCC

    1.2000

    94.53

    +1.27%

  • BTI

    -0.0200

    42.49

    -0.05%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.5

    +0.08%

  • BP

    0.2750

    28.875

    +0.95%

  • CMSD

    0.2800

    22.57

    +1.24%

  • BCE

    -0.1350

    22.085

    -0.61%

  • AZN

    0.5500

    69.06

    +0.8%

Africans eye a pope from among their own
Africans eye a pope from among their own / Photo: © AFP/File

Africans eye a pope from among their own

In 2010, Ghana's Cardinal Peter Turkson said he was not ready to become pope -- and that the Catholic Church might not be either.

Text size:

"I wouldn't want to be that first black pope. I think he'll have a rough time," he said.

Now, after the death of Pope Francis, the west African clergyman's name is buzzing around the Vatican.

Turkson isn't the only potential African candidate as the Church prepares for a conclave to choose its next leader, and he wouldn't be the first pontiff from the continent: Pope Victor I, who reigned from 189-199, was from North Africa.

But as Africa's share of the Catholic population booms -- mirroring its growing share of the world population as the continent grows while Europe has greyed and secularised -- renewed attention has turned to whether the Church is ready for its first black pope.

"There has been this sense which has built up that the pope, if he is going to be a global authority, needs to come from the global church," said Miles Pattenden, a historian of Catholicism.

- Cardinals from Guinea, DR Congo -

Turkson was born into a humble family of 10 children and was Ghana's first clergyman to become a cardinal, in 2003.

In 2008, he served as a mediator on a peace council following close elections that threatened to erupt into violence and has worked in the upper levels of the Vatican's bureaucracy.

He has recently struck a more moderate tone on gay rights, pushing back against Ghanaian politicians who assert that same-sex practices aren't native to Africa. In 2023, he told the BBC that "LGBT people may not be criminalised because they've committed no crime."

That might be more palatable to some Church moderates than the rhetoric of Guinea's Robert Sarah, a traditionalist cardinal floated by conservatives who has compared abortion, "Islamic fanaticism" and homosexuality to Nazi ideology.

The Democratic Republic of Congo's Fridolin Ambongo, another cardinal in the mix, helped lead the push against blessing same-sex couples in Africa after Francis pushed the rest of the Church forward on the issue.

But for all of Francis's moderating rhetoric, he kept in place many of the Church's conservative teachings, including against same-sex marriage and abortion.

The tightrope he walked between rhetorical and actual reform might provide a path for African candidates who some critics worry are too conservative, said Cristina Traina, a religious studies professor at New York's Fordham University.

Pattenden noted there was no reason to predict the next pope would necessarily follow Francis's liberal streak.

- 'Discrimination' against Africans? -

The papacy of Francis, an Argentine, marked a major break from the Church's Europe-heavy leadership. His drive to make the Vatican's hierarchy reflect its membership means that African cardinals now make up 12 percent of the voting members of the conclave, versus eight percent during the last election.

"It would be almost impossible to imagine the world accepting an African pope without this transition of Pope Francis having been from Argentina," said Traina, even as Africa, which counts 20 percent of the world's 1.4 billion Catholics, remains underrepresented in the conclave.

One Congolese priest, wishing to remain anonymous, told AFP that while the Church has come a long way, there's a reason there hasn't been an African pope in 1,500 years.

"Discrimination, even if it isn't obvious among our European brothers, is still a reality that we often don't talk about," he said.

- Economic justice -

An African pope could bring a fresh perspective to some of the Church's current issues.

Facing a priest shortage, some members of the Church in Africa have been vocal about re-examining the ban on married pastors, Traina said. Francis's message of social justice resonated firmly on a continent at the bottom of the global economic order and the front lines of climate change.

Ambongo, who served as a top advisor to Francis, is working on how the Church should handle converts who come from polygamous marriages.

"It has always been on our lips, how we wish to have an African pope," said Father Paul Maji, a priest in the Nigerian capital Abuja.

But, he added, he was not personally "sentimental" about where the next pontiff came from -- an opinion shared by Sylvain Badibanga, dean of the faculty of theology at the Catholic University of Congo.

"We shouldn't think 'it's our turn'," Badibanga said. "It's God's turn."

Turkson eventually came to a similar conclusion.

As his name circulated as a potential pontiff ahead of the 2013 conclave that ultimately chose Francis, he had warmed to the idea of becoming the first black pope -- "if it's the will of God."

burs-nro/sn/kjm

W.Cheng--ThChM