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Irish Spiritan Cleric Who Served in Kenya and Nigeria Buried after Succumbing to COVID-19

The Late Fr. Frank Caffrey, Irish Spiritan Priest who served in Kenya for decades after he had been expelled from Nigeria during the Biafran war.

The Irish Spiritan Priest, Fr. Frank Caffrey, who served in Kenya for decades after he had been expelled from Nigeria during the Biafran war, was laid to rest in Ireland Saturday, April 18 after succumbing to COVID-19.

Fr. Caffrey died Tuesday, April 14 in Kimmage, the Irish headquarters of the Religious Missionary Congregation of the Holy Spirit (Spiritans) located on the South side of Dublin, the capital of the Republic of Ireland. He was aged 86.

He was among the brave cohort of priests and nuns expelled from Nigeria for their efforts to feed and protect people from government forces during the Nigerian-Biafran war, the civil war that was fought between the government of Africa’s most populous nation and the secessionist State of Biafra from July 1967 to January 1970.

Ordained in 1963 in Clonliffe College by Archbishop McQuaid, Fr. Caffrey was then commissioned to Nigeria. From 1964 to 1967 he taught Science at St. Patrick’s Secondary School, Obollo Eke in the Diocese of Enugu, where he added a laboratory to the school, the Congregation of the Holy Spirit – Irish Province reported

On leave when the Nigerian Civil War began, he taught for a year in St. Mary’s College, Rathmines, an inner suburb on the southside of Dublin. He then spent a year teaching and in pastoral ministry in Spring Lake, New Jersey, USA. 

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Back in Nigeria in 1969, he was involved in relief work and the spiritual care of civilians in Oballo-Afor, Owerri, Imo state.

In January 1966, a group of Nigerian Army Officers overthrew the Nigerian Government. This led to much bloodshed and turmoil in the country in which the young Father Caffrey was then engaged in teaching and missionary work, according to a report.  

In July 1967 Nigerian troops invaded Biafra where there was a higher concentration of Holy Ghost Fathers than anywhere else in Nigeria.  Amongst them was Fr. Caffrey who was then serving in Obube, a locality in Owerri North Local Government of Imo state. 

The outbreak of violence interrupted the usual work of the local people so that the planting season passed without crops being sown.  Inevitably starvation followed and Fr. Caffrey with his helpers tried as best they could to feed up to 6,000 children twice a week and another 1,000 or so children four times a week in a desperate attempt to keep them alive. Children were given priority but arrangements were also put in place to feed widows and the elderly, both of which groups were also extremely vulnerable in the war-torn territory of Biafra.

All of this relief work went on while the Civil War was in progress. Fr. Caffrey had to take evasive action on several occasions to avoid the menacing attention of Nigerian airforce planes.  An Irish colleague, Sr. Cecilia of the Presentation Nuns, was a martyr of the Biafran War, shot and killed when a car in which she was travelling was attacked by a Nigerian fighter plane.

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In January 1970 the Biafran Army resistance collapsed and the Nigerian Army took control of the Eastern part of the country. Missionaries living or working in Biafra were arrested and confined under house arrest.  These included Fr. Caffrey who was detained with 28 fellow Missionaries including nine nuns and Bishop Joseph Whelan of Owerri. 

All were charged with illegal entry into Nigeria and working in that country without permits.  Fines were imposed but although the fines were paid the Missionaries were kept in detention. Police vans arrived to where they were under house arrest in Port Harcourt to take them to prison. The Missionaries, priests and nuns alike, staged a sit down in the street demanding to be released as the fines imposed on them had been paid.

The local police and the military authorities could not agree as to what to do with the recalcitrant Missionaries but eventually the impasse was resolved and they were all lodged in a local prison. Cell blocks originally built to accommodate two prisoners were for the next six or seven days home to groups of ten Irish clerics.  Fr. Caffrey and his colleagues were eventually taken from the prison and brought to the local airport where on the instructions of the Police Inspector General they were flown to Lagos from where they were deported from Nigeria.

The fate of the Irish Missionaries who had been the backbone of the Biafran relief effort was later reported in the Evening Herald of 16th February 1970 under the headline, “Jail Protest - Nuns and Priests sit in street.”

After being expelled from Nigeria in February 1970, Fr. Caffrey was assigned to Kenya the following year. He taught Applied Mathematics at Polytechnic School in Kenya’s second largest city, Mombasa until he took up pastoral ministry in the late 1970s. 

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He served in Mwatate Mission, in Kenya’s Taita County from 1979-1983 before moving to St. Mary’s School, in the capital Nairobi where he spent over a decade as bursar before returning to Ireland in 1995.

A fine cook who was renowned for his hospitality and welcome, Fr. Caffrey was known to like parties and enjoyed having visitors for dinner.

He also applied his interests in mathematics and science wherever he was, deriving much satisfaction from the use of technology to improve the quality of life of those living or working with him. A keen reader and fond of travel, he never lost contact with friends and family.

Having done pastoral work in Penascola, Florida for a short time, Fr. Frank returned to Ireland in 1996. He served in St. Michael’s parish, Athy in the Diocese of Kildare and Leighlin until 2003 when he moved to the Parish of the Resurrection, Bayside on Dublin’s northside.

Community Bursar at the Spiritan Provincial House in Ireland from 2007 to 2012, Fr. Caffrey was then appointed to Kimmage where he served until his death on April, 14.

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His niece, Fiona MacCarthy mourned him on Twitter April 17: “Tomorrow we will bury my wonderful uncle, Fr. Frank Caffrey, who died Tuesday of Covid-19. He was among the brave cohort of priests and nuns expelled from Nigeria for their efforts to feed and protect people from government forces during the Biafran war.”

Jude Atemanke is a Cameroonian journalist with a passion for Catholic Church communication. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Journalism and Mass Communication from the University of Buea in Cameroon. Currently, Jude serves as a journalist for ACI Africa.