Luanda, 06 May, 2025 / 5:18 pm (ACI Africa).
For centuries, Catholic missionaries and devoted Christians have played an important role in Angola’s state of progress as a “pillar” in championing justice and the country’s education and health sectors, Archbishop Zacarias Kamwenho has said.
In his keynote address during the third gathering of former Seminarians and friends of the Catholic Diocese of Sumbe, Archbishop Kamwenho recognized the significant role of the Catholic Church institution in awakening national consciousness and shaping the Angolans’ moral and intellectual identity.
“Since the arrival of the first missionaries in 1491, the Church has been a pillar in building a more just, educated, and hopeful Angola,” the 90-year-old Angolan Catholic Archbishop said at the May 3 event that was held at the Social Welfare Fund Conference Hall of the Armed Forces in Angola’s Cuanza-Sul Province.
The Angolan Catholic Church leader, who was at the help of Lubango Catholic Archdiocese till September 2009 when he retired at the age of 75 added, “The missionaries were the first to create schools, health centers, and boarding institutions. They taught us to read and write, cared for the sick, and opened up the minds of young Angolans.”
He highlighted the Catholic Church’s impact on national leadership, noting that the institution was “the spiritual and intellectual mother of many of the country’s political and religious leaders.”






