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Catholic Bishops in Africa, U.S. Pen Joint Statement Urging “mutual solidarity” for Integral Human Development

Credit: SECAM/EWTN News

Members of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) and the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM) have called for “renewed fraternity and mutual solidarity” in view of realizing integral human development among the people of God in Africa and in the U.S. 

In their joint statement dated February 2, officials of the USCCB’s Committee on International Justice and Peace and SECAM’s Justice, Peace and Development Commission emphasize the Church’s enduring commitment to international cooperation and human dignity and call for the strengthening of bonds of solidarity between the people of God, particularly in the face of global challenges and declining international assistance.

“As brother Bishops, we address the Church in the U.S and Africa with a call to renewed fraternity and mutual solidarity between our peoples. Faithful to the Church’s mission, we affirm that integral human development, the development of every person and the whole person, especially of the poorest and most neglected in the community, is at the very heart of evangelization,” the Catholic Bishops say.

Members of the Standing Committee of the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM). Credit: SECAM

Reflecting on the 2025 Catholic’s Church Jubilee Year, which concluded officially on January 6, the Catholic Church leaders urge the people of God under their pastoral care to “discover hope in the signs of the times that the Lord gives” them.

They also highlight the issue of the reduction in U.S. international assistance programs and express their hope in Jesus Christ during the hard times in Africa and other dependent continents.

“We offer a vision of hope in Jesus Christ, the source of our hope. We remain committed to international humanitarian and development cooperation which saves and affirms human life, and which deeply respects the needs and values of local communities,” the Catholic Bishops say.

The plenary assembly of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops gets underway on Nov. 11, 2025, at the Baltimore Marriott Waterfront. First row, left to right: Father Michael J.K. Fuller, general secretary; Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio, president, and Archbishop William E. Lori, vice president. | Credit: Jack Haskins/EWTN News

They go on to express gratitude for the fruits of the long-standing collaboration between the Churches of Africa and the U.S., saying, “We give thanks for the many fruits of hope as we approach a quarter century since the U.S. Bishops responded to the appeal of the Synod of Bishops for Africa with A Call to Solidarity with Africa, and four years since the Chairman of the U.S. Bishops’ Committee on International Justice and Peace emitted.”

The USSCB and SECAM officials recall their “renewed call to solidarity with Africa, strengthening the U.S. Church’s support for pastoral initiatives across the African continent, and promoting continuous advocacy in favor of justice, peace, and integral development.”

The February 2 joint statement, cosigned by Bishop Stephen Dami Mamza of Nigeria’s Catholic Diocese of Yola, who is the First Vice President of SECAM, and Bishop Abdallah Elias Zaidan of the  Eparch of Our Lady of Lebanon of Los Angeles (Maronite), the Chairman of the USCCB Committee on International Justice and Peace, has been issued ahead of the planned Eucharistic celebration “for Solidarity with the Bishops and Faithful of Africa.”

Credit: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB)

Scheduled for February 4 at the Upper Church of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C. from 4 p.m. local time, the prayerful initiative is to bring together Church leaders from the U.S. and Africa amid renewed international concern over violent conflicts, insecurity, and especially the persecution of Christians in African countries.

Credit: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB)

The USCCB invited the people of God to join the Eucharistic celebration in a notice on their website, indicating that Bishop David John Malloy of the Catholic Diocese of Rockford, Illinois, is to be the main celebrant, while Bishop Mamza is the designated homilist. The Chairman of the USCCB Committee on International Justice and Peace, Bishop Zaidan, the Lebanese member of the Maronite Church, is listed as a concelebrant.

The USCCB members provided logistical details about parking and public transport options near the Basilica to facilitate attendance. They framed the spiritual event as an expression of solidarity with Catholic communities across Africa facing violent conflicts, displacement, and targeted attacks. 

Credit: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB)

In their February 2 joint statement, USCCB and SECAM official highlight a renewed sense of hope inspired by SECAM’s newly established 25-year pastoral roadmap, which seeks to guide the Church’s mission on the continent toward reconciliation, peace, and sustainable development.

They express hope in the future, reaffirming the main principles of Catholic Social Teaching, which they say will guide the cooperation between the people of God in Africa and the U.S. 

“We assert that international assistance is an important means of promoting human dignity, protecting human life, and pursuing the international common good; helping both Africans and Americans to live in security and peace,” they say. 

Members of the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM). Credit: SECAM

The Catholic Church leaders also “proclaim that the Church and the state, both in the U.S. and Africa, have a shared responsibility to promote the inherent human dignity of all, and to take action to protect human life, with special concern for the most vulnerable.”

They also emphasize the shared responsibility of Church and state, on both continents, to defend the inherent dignity of every human person, with particular concern for the most vulnerable.

“We affirm the continued moral and human value of solidarity between our peoples, in the belief that we flourish when we freely share the material resources, human capacities, and rich spiritual gifts with which we have been blessed,” they say.

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The USCCB autumn General Assembly in Baltimore, Md. (CNS photo/Bob Roller)

SECAM and USCCB officials affirm their role to “promote respect for subsidiarity, encouraging responsible stewardship by building up the capacity of local communities and bolstering people’s ability to care for those closest to them.”

“In the face of extreme challenges, we pray for renewed bonds of fraternity between the peoples of the U.S. and Africa, rooted not in paternalism or extractivism, but in mutual solidarity,’ the say, and note that the relationship between the people of God in Africa and in the U.S. is mutually enriching and deeply rooted in shared faith, mission, and hope. 

“We reject a one-sided vision of fraternity and solidarity that undervalues the tremendous contributions of the African Church and African diaspora communities to the life of the faithful in the United States,” they say, and add, “The American Church is strengthened by the witness of the African saints and modern-day martyrs and enriched by the wisdom of African theologians.”

Archbishop Thomas Robert Zinkula, Chairperson of the USCCB Subcommittee on the Church in Africa, during the 20th SECAM Plenary Assembly in Rwanda’s capital, Kigali. Credit: ACI Africa

The Catholic Bishops underscore the importance of the African Clergy to the people of God in America, saying, “African clergy and religious generously share their missionary gifts in service of the American Church, with a close and tangible presence every day.”

“The faithful of the U.S. and Africa are gifts to one another. Together, we call for robust lifesaving and life-affirming U.S. assistance to the continent, grounded in thoughtful partnership, and pray for the flourishing of an ever-deeper fraternity,’ they say, and implore, “May the Lord bless our peoples, as we walk together as brothers and sisters in hope.”

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