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Baba Simon, the missionayçry whit baare feet
Saturday June 10, 2023
Baba Simón, the missionary with bare feet
(From “ECHOES OF THE SAVANNAH”)
On Saturday May 20, the Pope Francis recognized the heroic virtues of the Cameroonian diocesan priest Fr. Simon Mpeke. Thus he became the first Cameroonian “blessed”.
Simon Mpeke was born around 1906 in Pongo, a village in the dense jungle of southern Cameroon, into a family of peasants from the Bakoko ethnic group.
His parents were not Christians since the first Catholic missionaries had arrived on the coast of this country only a few years before his birth, in 1895. After finishing his studies at the Catholic missionary school of the Pallottine missionaries of German origin, he asked for baptism. , which he received on August 14, 1918, when he was 12 years old under the name of Simón. He became a teacher and taught for a while.
Until then the priests were all foreign missionaries, German and French and it was thought that Africans could not be. In 1921, when Simón discovered that “a black man could become a priest”, he did not doubt it. He breaks up with the young woman who had been promised to him and begins to study Latin with a small group of friends. In August 1924 they became part of the Yaoundé Minor Seminary, which had opened its doors in July 1923. There he left the memory of an excellent, serious, very pious and peaceful seminarian.
He is part of the group of the first eight Cameroonian priests ordained on December 8, 1935. He worked for twelve years as vicar in a Mission in the middle of the countryside, where he leaves the memory of a very zealous and very spiritual priest, who amazes people. and it is given without limits.
Marked by the theology of his time, he takes a very firm position against the traditional religious practices of the region. Regarded as a priest of great value, he was appointed in 1947 to the great parish of New-Bell, in Douala, where he was appointed parish priest. Simón gives great impetus to the parish, creating groups, supporting the Catholic Action movements and schools and always being available and with great generosity towards his parishioners.
The establishment of the fraternities of the Little Brothers and Little Sisters of Jesus, at the beginning of the 1950s, made him discover the spirituality of Carlos de Foucauld. In 1953 he became part of the secular Institute of the Brothers of Jesus and asked for a sabbatical year to do his “novitiate” in Algeria.
He will be one of the founders at the international level of the Jesus-Caritas Priestly Union and its first person in charge in Cameroon and in Africa.
A much loved and influential priest, he was even proposed, along with two others, to the position of assistant to his Bishop. Around 1954 he felt the call to participate in the evangelization of the so-called “pagan” peoples of North Cameroon. After having reflected for a long time, carried away by the missionary dynamism of the Encyclical “Fidei Domun”, he would become in 1959 the first secular Cameroonian missionary priest in his own country.
After a brief stay in a community of little brothers of Jesus, he settled in Tokombéré, in the current Diocese of Maroua-Mokolo, more than a thousand kilometers from his town.
In previous centuries, hordes of Muslim horsemen of Peul origin, coming from neighboring Nigeria, had forced the clans that had settled since the dawn of time in that fertile plain to move towards the rocky mountains, to protect themselves from their attacks. These people were called kirdi pejoratively by Muslims, which seems to mean kaffir or uncircumcised.
Immediately he began to be called “Baba Simón” (Papa Simón) by the local population. He traveled the mountains tirelessly preaching the Gospel to the inhabitants of this mountainous region. Living in great simplicity he is called the “barefoot missionary”, he will dedicate his life to fight against the misery in which these people live. Affirming, according to a Muslim scholar, that misery is an «enemy of God».
His intense prayer life and his communicative joy make him a luminous witness of God’s love even in the towns furthest from his vast parish. Under his guidance and his example, a fervent Christian community was born. A single passion animated Baba Simon: to give Jesus Christ to the Kirdi and give them instruments to free themselves from all slavery. Baba Simón insisted on the importance of the school. But, after the first failures, he understood that it was necessary to win the confidence of the Kirdi before anything else. From here was born what was called “the school under the tree”.
Through the school, the health structures, the commitment against injustice, the accompaniment of young people and the call to universal fraternity, it allowed a real promotion of populations underestimated until then. His concern for permanent dialogue with those responsible for traditional religions and the encounter with Muslims has made him a precursor of inter-religious dialogue and has earned him the name by which he is still revered after his death, both by Christians and by not Christians.
A few months before he died, he wrote these notes: “Everything that surrounds me breathes God. The entire universe is a home of life. To stand before God, one does not have to imagine Him anywhere else but in us where He is, in our action where He acts, in our neighbor where He lives.When we die, our body will be buried in the earth of God where it will wither in God and wake up in the Ocean of Eternal Life… To believe is to become aware of the Life… in God”!
Baba Simón listens, heals and helps. He tries to understand. He, who in his first parish in the South, in 1936, broke the drums of traditional religion, delves into his spiritual vision of men and of God. He sees the suffering of these peoples. Throughout his walks in the mountains and his meetings, everything becomes clear: announcing Jesus means building man, the whole man, through the Good News. These men, considered slaves, listen to Baba Simon tell them that they are children of God, loved by God. And that they are brothers.
Over the years, Tokombéré became the site of an unusual pastoral experience of human and spiritual promotion. On August 13, 1975, he died, completely exhausted, at the end of a life entirely consecrated to God and men.
We entrust this region of the Far North of Cameroon, so permanently exposed to the terrorist group Boko Haram, to the intercession of Baba Simon, so that Christians keep their coolness and continue to bear witness to “the Good News of Jesus”.
(Français) La correspondance entre Charles de FOUCAULD et Marie MOITESSIER
(Italiano) Piccoli Fratelli di Jesus Caritas. Maggio 2023
Diary of Matthias KEIL, Rome, 13-25 Mai 2022. Canonization Charles de FOUCAULD and international council in Graz
Friday, 13.5 2022
In the morning I arrive in Roma Termini by night train. On the train I met the Little Sisters Marianne and Helene and Daniela, one of their friends. At the station we buy a weekly ticket for the public transport system and have our first Italian caffè and a small breakfast. Then I take tram H across the Trastevere district to the outskirts of the city and after a short walk I find Via della Nocetta 111, the Generalate of the Societá Missione Africane (SMA). The house is close to the large Villa Pamphilii park. Andrea Mandonico, whom I know from the Nazareth Month 2013 in France, made it possible for us, the International Council, to stay in his house. On arrival, he is just at the front door and takes me straight to lunch.
Read the full document in PDF: Diary of Matthias KEIL. Rome, 13-25 Mai 2022
(Español) San Carlos de Foucauld, a un año de su canonización. Fernando TAPIA
Jacques GAILLOT. Testimony of Jean-François BERJONNEAU
Jacques GAILLOT sometimes said “If there was only one priest left in the diocese, I would appoint him prison chaplain. It was a priority for him.
It was there that he lived this evangelical preference for the lost sheep.
It was there that he put into practice this audacity of Christ which consists in leaving the 99 sheep of the fold to go in search of the one who has lost his way on hazardous paths.
And he accepted that I assume the ministry of vicar general while being prison chaplain so as not to lose the relationship with the excluded.
Similarly, he then chose Roland DOLLÉ as vicar general in connection with his ministry as chaplain of the psychiatric hospital.
For him prison was the place where the Church could be in direct contact with the cry of the excluded, the marginalized, the “battered by existence” as Abbé Pierre said.
And he let himself be touched by these cries.
And he never stopped showing them their dignity despite their heavy past
We have lived a beautiful partnership in this ministry which consists in being witnesses of hope to those who lack it so much and who sometimes think that they no longer have a future.
Of course, he came to celebrate Mass on major holidays with this intramural parish.
And we met in the morning before leaving for the Maison d’Arrêt in the garden of the bishopric to pick the flowers in the spring to decorate the room that served as our chapel.
But he also liked to participate in chaplaincy meetings, to listen to the suffering, the cries of revolt, the abysmal questions posed by these people awaiting trial.
And I remember that at certain times, he left the chaplaincy room explaining that he was not only there for the guys who frequented the chaplaincy but for the others too.
And he went with the key of the chaplaincy to meet the prisoners whatever their religion, their origin or the offense committed in their cells.
He lived there on short visits where he could exercise his extraordinary ability to put himself within reach of people, to understand them and to show them this friendship which gave them confidence and which allowed him to hear so many confidences.
And he wasn’t just being with it.
He also knew how to get wet and commit to contributing to the reintegration of guys coming out of prison.
He went so far as to open a few rooms on the second floor of the bishopric to accommodate men coming out of prison as part of the Pause café association.
It was not easy because one day he was called by a jeweler from Évreux to whom one of his hosts had tried to resell his pectoral cross which he had stolen from the bishopric.
He also carried this concern in partnership with associations such as Pause café, ,shelter, habitat, and humanism, the Catholic relief to contribute to this long journey of the obstacle represented by reintegration.
Finally, he never ceased to challenge all the Christian communities gathered in his diocese on their ability to open up to these distresses of the excluded and to implement concrete solidarity.
He said :
“Our Church lacks the poverty of risk.
What are our boldnesses now?
The Church is a servant when, in fact, she is on the side of immigrants, the unemployed, prisoners, the excluded, minorities…
Credibility obliges to be true in any situation.
When you do things, you can’t cheat.
If the Church does not serve, it is useless.”
Thank you, Jacques, for having served our diocesan Church by placing the poor at the heart of fraternal communion.
With you, we have understood that a Church can only be faithful to the Good News of Christ by being in close solidarity with all those whom the world neglects.
PDF: Jacques GAILLOT. Testimony of Jean-François BERJONNEAU en