Washington D.C., 26 October, 2025 / 8:13 PM
African Catholics have marked this year’s Feast Day of St. John Paul II against the backdrop of two commemorations: 40 years since the late Pope’s August 1985 pastoral visit to Cameroon and 30 years since his 14 September 1995 post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation on the Church in Africa and its evangelizing mission towards the year 2000, Ecclesia in Africa, which he issued in the same Central African nation.
Ahead of the October 22 Feast, hundreds gathered at the St. John Paul II National Shrine in Washington D.C. for a vibrant celebration of the saint’s enduring legacy and his prophetic vision of Africa in the twin anniversary of events that impacted the people of God on the continent he called “the continent of hope.”
The September 13 three-part event – a Pontifical High Mass, a keynote lecture, and panel discussions – honoured the enduring spiritual, theological, and cultural impact of St. John Paul II’s relationship with Africa.
“Africa in Miniature”: Remembering a historic visit
“Isn’t Cameroon like Africa in miniature, a melting pot of many ethnic groups with rich traditions, a crossroads of all the major religions of the African continent, at the crossroads of the French-speaking and English-speaking worlds, with a remarkable demographic expansion and a very large youth population? This country has been spoken of as an island of peace,” St. John Paul II said upon arriving in Cameroon on 10 August 1985.
During that first visit, Pope John Paul II presided over four Eucharistic celebrations in Cameroon’s four Metropolitan Sees, emphasizing family, unity, and faith.
A decade later, on 14 September 1995, he returned to Cameroon’s capital city, Yaoundé, to sign Ecclesia in Africa, the Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation that summarized the reflections of the 1994 Synod of Bishops for Africa. The exhortation laid the foundation for the “Church-as-Family of God” model that continues to shape African ecclesiology today.
African Liturgy at the Shrine
Organized under the Shrine’s mission of “worship, religious formation, and cultural renewal”, the September 13 event, which was jointly hosted by the African Catholic Association (ACA) of the Washington D.C. Metro area brought together over a dozen African Priests, women and men Religious, and Laity with Bishop Michael Bibi of Cameroon’s Buéa Diocese as main celebrant and homilist.
The Cameroonian Catholic Bishop brought personal memories of the impactful Polish-born Pontiff, who was the second-longest-serving Pope in modern history with 27 years of pontificate, and the first non-Italian Pontiff since the Dutch Pope Adrian VI in 1523.
As a young altar boy, Bishop Bibi had served at Pope John Paul II’s 1985 Mass for families on 12 August 1985 in his native Catholic Archdiocese of Bamenda.
The September 13 Eucharistic celebration that provided an opportunity to revisit St. John Paul II’s prophetic vision for Africa and renew the missionary commitment of African Catholics in the diaspora incorporated vibrant African elements — lectionary and offertory processions accompanied by rhythmic dances, and prayers rendered in multiple African languages.
The offertory featured the Congolese song Eh, Eh Eh Mfumue, first sung at St. Peter’s Basilica during the 1994 Synod opening Mass. Among those presenting the gifts was Sr. Marie Agatha Ozah of the Handmaids of the Holy Child Jesus (HHCJ), who had taken part in that very offertory procession in Rome 30 years earlier.
The colourful celebration underscored the theme of inculturation, one of the central pillars of “Ecclesia in Africa”, alongside the vocation of the family and the call to be “personally rooted in Christ” — themes highlighted in Bishop Bibi’s homily.
Inculturation, the family, and faith
Reflecting on “Ecclesia in Africa”, Bishop Bibi said inculturation “is not a superficial celebration of human culture,” but “an interaction between the Gospel and our cultures, an interaction marked by a twofold process: the Gospel penetrating our cultures, and in return uplifting aspects of culture that are compatible with it or are a preparation for it.”
He reminded African Catholics, especially those in the diaspora, to promote the values that enrich Africans’ witness to the Gospel, including “the sense of the sacred, the belief in God the Creator, solidarity and community spirit, love and respect of life, the welcoming of children as gifts, respect for human life from conception until its natural end, and the respect for elders.”
Bishop Bibi who started his Episcopal Ministry in March 2017 as the Auxiliary Bishop of his native Archdiocese of Bamenda urged families to live the Exhortation’s call to evangelize through their witness.
“The evangelization of families through families,” he said, is the heart of the African Church’s mission. Recalling Pope John Paul II’s 1985 homily in Bamenda, Bishop Bibi echoed the late Pontiff’s exhortation to families: “Learn to build your family life on love! Do not give in to the forces which weaken and destroy the unity, stability and happiness of your families.”
He further emphasized that the future of the world and of the Church “passes through the family,” noting that the Sacrament of Matrimony reflects “the union of Christ and the Church.”
“No marriage is perfect,” Bishop Bibi said, and continued, “By the grace of God and human cooperation and commitment of spouses, two imperfect persons can make a bond that lasts till death separates them.”
In his September 13 homily, the Catholic Church leader who has endured resistance to his administrative decisions through online attacks, social media petitions against him, and Facebook posts appealed to parents to raise children with faith and discipline, instilling respect for elders and Christian virtues amid growing secular pressures.
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Bishop Bibi anchored his message in the Christ-centred spirituality of St. John Paul II, recalling the late Pontiff’s words at the start of his papacy: “Do not be afraid! Open wide the doors to Christ.”
This call remains vital for Africans navigating the challenges of modernity and secularism, the Cameroonian Bishop said at the Eucharistic celebration at the Redemptor Hominis Chapel — named after John Paul II’s first Encyclical Letter, Redemptor Hominis (The Redeemer of Man).
He explained, “When we open up to Christ and his saving power, we lose nothing; instead, we gain everything.”
Besides the Pontifical High Mass, the day featured keynote reflections, and cultural performances that brought together faith and African heritage in joyful harmony.
Personal encounters and the philosophy of the human person
After the Eucharistic celebration, participants gathered for the academic portion of the event, which featured a keynote address by Fr. Michael Niba, a member of Clergy of Bamenda Archdiocese.
Fr. Niba, who had played the lead xylophone during the 1985 papal Mass in Cameroon, shared personal reflections later published in his book “Encounters with John Paul II”.
“When you truly encounter a person, you also want to know what the person thinks,” he said, alluding to how successive encounters—through reading, liturgy, and personal audience—shaped his understanding of St. John Paul II’s personalist philosophy.
Fr. Niba characterized St. John Paul II as a “fearless theorizer and defender of who the human person is,” noting that the late Pontiff “salvaged the concept and reality of the human person—used, abused, refused, and dumped into disuse—from the tyrannies of the negative, oppressive isms of our time.”
The Cameroonian Catholic Priest emphasized that, for St. John Paul II, every human being is “an image of God, who bears a divinely crafted, imprinted and bequeathed dignity and respect that is non-negotiable.”
The late Polish Pope, Fr. Niba went on to say, made clear that “holiness is not the privilege of a few,” pointing to his beatification and canonization of Africans such as Blessed Isidore Bakanja of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Blessed Cyprian Michael Iwene Tansi of Nigeria, and St. Josephine Bakhita of Sudan as evidence of his belief that sanctity knows no borders.
Panels on faith and family
Two panel discussions followed the keynote address. In the first one, Deogratias Kawunde of Uganda and Sr. Joanna Okereke of Nigeria focused on devotion to African Saints and advancing causes for future ones.
The other panel discussion, which featured Emmanuel and Thérèse Mulumba of DRC and Chioma Chidume, a youth representative, explored how African families and youths can live out the Gospel in secular societies.
The conversations emphasized what the speakers of the day had underscored, that “Ecclesia in Africa” is not merely a document but a living reality—the Church in Africa as a vibrant, missionary family.
A celebration worth repeating
For participants, the September 13 commemoration was both nostalgic and forward-looking.
Sir Barbie Orusakwe, President of ACA D.C. Metro area, recognized with appreciation the very good attendance and that “it brought back the good memories of this traveling Pope.”
The Chairman of the Good Shepherd Cameroon Catholic Community in Baltimore, Kenneth Wirlen, said he was deeply moved by Bishop Bibi’s and Fr. Niba’s testimonies: “They both highlighted the role they played during that visit and how this impacted their lives today.”
Dr. Sofia Maurette, Director of Intercultural Ministry at the St. John Paul II National Shrine, expressed her satisfaction at the event’s success, saying, “With the celebration of the 30th anniversary of Ecclesia in Africa, the Saint John Paul II National Shrine is blessed to continue to preserve our Patron Saint's legacy and his vision for the African Church.”
A living tribute
As the Washington D.C. event which Fr. Herbert Niba, a Cameroonian Catholic Priest pursuing doctoral studies in Theology at the John Paul II Institute for Marriage and Family Studies, concluded, participants left inspired by the memory of a Pope who once called Africa “the continent of hope.”
Four decades after his first visit and 30 years after “Ecclesia in Africa,” the message of St. John Paul II – rooted in family, culture, and faith – continues to find new life among African Catholics both on the continent and in the diaspora.
Lambert Mbom contributed to this story in a submission to ACI Africa, which Catholic365 published on October 22
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