---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "John Ashworth" <[email protected]>
Date: 18 Aug 2017 09:04
Subject: [sudans-john-ashworth] Papal visit to South Sudan possible in 2018?
To: "Group" <[email protected]>
Cc:

"The war in the country has no meaning. There's really no proper
political agenda for that war. There's no way it can be justified.
This war has got to stop."

Sudanese bishop: papal visit to South Sudan possible in 2018

Aug 16, 2017
by Joshua J. McElwee
National Catholic Reporter

ROME — The head of the Sudanese bishops' conference says recent
discussions with the Vatican's secretariat of state gave him hope Pope
Francis will be able to visit war-torn South Sudan some time next
year.

Bishop Eduardo Hiiboro Kussala, president of the bishops' conference
for Sudan and South Sudan, said in an Aug. 11 interview that he is
expecting a team from the secretariat to visit his country in coming
months and they "might indicate that [Francis] is going to come."

"It is something that we have to work on to get on the list of the
calendar for 2018," said the bishop. "That's why I'm here [in Rome],
in fact, to insist: let it be fixed, brought back on the calendar for
2018 of the Holy Father."

Kussala, who heads the diocese of Tombura-Yambio in South Sudan, spent
about two weeks in Rome in early August to meet with officials at
various Vatican offices.

While Francis hoped to visit South Sudan in 2017, the Vatican
announced in May that the trip would not take place this year. Media
reports indicated the pope postponed the trip due to security concerns
in the country, which has been in a state of civil war since 2013.

In a half-hour interview with NCR, Kussala said he came to Rome to
"raise up the interest of the people of South Sudan that the Holy
Father should come."

The bishop said that in his discussions at the secretariat of state,
officials used the word "postponement" instead of "cancellation" for
the planned trip in 2017.

"We are going to be committed to praying to God to make it happen, and
also to prepare ourselves — looking at what didn't go well, why the
Holy Father did not come," Kussala said of Catholics in South Sudan.
"We will try our best, both in the church and in the community ... to
put ourselves in order so that the Holy Father can come."

South Sudan is one of the world's newest countries, becoming
independent from Sudan in 2011. A political struggle broke out in the
country in December 2013, leading to a civil war in which an estimated
300,000 people have died and some 3 million have been displaced.

Due to the ongoing war, services available in the country are minimal.
The arrivals section at the Juba airport, where Francis would likely
land for any papal visit, is currently a small outdoor area with
wooden planks covering muddy soil.

Kussala said that while the logistics of planning a papal visit in
such circumstances are daunting, he does not think such concerns would
stop Francis from visiting.

"My thinking is that the Holy Father would choose to come just for the
love of his flock in South Sudan," he said. "The issue of the airport
is still being worked on and the roads are not in the right way. But
if that would become the standard, the Holy Father would never come."

"I think there's a need for the Holy Father to go, like when he went
to the Central African Republic," said Kussala, referring to the
pope's previous visit to Africa in 2015. "It's just like, 'I go
because my people are there.' "

When officials from the secretariat of state visit South Sudan in
coming months the bishop hopes they will explain to Catholics there
the current possibilities for the pope's visit. He said that when the
2017 trip was postponed people in his country were not given a good
indication of why.

"An official, clear message from the side of the Holy Father, why he
is not coming, was not made," said Kussala. "It was privately said
without definition."

"Since people were already aroused to this news, it's good for the
secretariat of state to come in and say what the Holy Father is
intending to do," he suggested. "And it's probably during such a visit
they might indicate that he is going to come and you people have got
to fix one, two, three things."

Kussala was made the head of his bishops' conference in October 2016.
He said he also came to Rome to meet people at the various Vatican
offices.

The bishop wants to "understand where we are as a church — where are
we moving and what is taking place — to update myself, to inform
myself about my church and how I can best be able to get my brothers
in South Sudan and Sudan to move according to the spirit within the
church now."

One request Kussala made of the Vatican is to appoint bishops to the
four dioceses in South Sudan that are currently operating without
them.

"The dioceses have been too long without bishops," he said. "Without
these bishops, the conference itself is weak."

"I am also here to ring the bell and say, 'Look, the Holy See has got
to do something,' " said Kussala. "We have good priests, we have good
people but we need to know what's the program and how we can get new
bishops in."

Kussala, who has led his diocese since 2008, described the situation
in his country as dire. He said that widespread famine is likely to
occur if the fighting does not stop, as people who normally grow crops
have been unable to do so.

International monitoring groups say millions in South Sudan face
possible food shortages. In a February report, Mercy Corps put the
number at risk of starvation as high as 4.8 million.

"In South Sudan we are anxious for peace, desperately longing for
peace," Kussala said. "All of us are very unhappy and we can't realize
our plans and programs. The presence of war in South Sudan ... it
takes hostage many initiatives."

"The war in the country has no meaning," he said. "There's really no
proper political agenda for that war. There's no way it can be
justified. This war has got to stop."

[Joshua J. McElwee is NCR Vatican correspondent. His email address is
[email protected]]

https://www.ncronline.org/news/vatican/sudanese-bishop-
papal-visit-south-sudan-possible-2018

END
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