Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Africans root for first Black pope in modern history

VATICAN CITY, Italy

Africans are hoping one of their own could become the first Black pope in modern history and build on Francis’s legacy of championing the developing world, though the chances of that happening appear slim.

Ghanaian Cardinal Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson, 76

A continent where religion permeates most aspects of private and public life, Africa is where the Roman Catholic Church is growing fastest, according to Vatican figures published last month.

African Catholics attending services honouring Francis after his death on Monday said a Black pope was long overdue.

“To have a Black pope would revive the Christian faith in Africa and change people’s views of Africa, by showing that an African can hold this office,” said Charles Yapi, a Catholic priest in Ivory Coast’s commercial capital Abidjan.

Scholars researching the early Church have cited evidence that some first millennium popes were born in North Africa or were of African descent, though details are scant. One or more may have been Black.

Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo Besungu, the archbishop of Kinshasa, 65

Some African contenders’ names have been circulating, but Vatican insiders are sceptical that any of them have a realistic chance of becoming pope, partly because none have been subjected to the same level of public scrutiny as most Western cardinals.

That is a potential concern for an institution that has been shaken by devastating scandals in recent decades. In any case, forecasting who will become pope is notoriously tricky.

Among African clerics tipped as potential popes are Ghanaian Cardinal Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson, 76, Democratic Republic of Congo’s Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo Besungu, 65, the archbishop of Kinshasa, and Ivory Coast’s Cardinal Ignace Bessi Dogbo, 63.

Africa boasted about 20% of the world’s Catholics in 2023 and added 9 million worshippers the previous year.

Choosing Turkson as pope would be a fitting recognition of that growth and also inspire African prelates, said Archbishop John Bonaventure Kwofie in Accra, who has known Turkson since the 1970s and was ordained by him as a bishop.

“Although it’s something I cannot bet on, as the cardinals who will make the selection will be led by the Holy Spirit, it will be good to have him as the next pope as this will motivate all bishops on the continent,” Kwofie told Reuters.

Ivory Coast’s Cardinal Ignace Bessi Dogbo, 63.

However, some clerics said that a pope’s values mattered more than his home country or race.

“We pray that the Holy Spirit will give the Church a good pastor, one who will guide the Church towards the true God,” said Congolese priest Josue-Misael Mobatila Kwilu after attending a service for Francis in Kinshasa.

“Having a pope from Africa or another continent is not up to us.”

The elevation of an African cardinal to the papal throne would be widely interpreted as a continuation of Francis’s track record of standing up for the poor and oppressed, migrants and civilians fleeing war.

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