Nairobi, 04 July, 2025 / 11:00 pm (ACI Africa).
Three of the 22 new members that Pope Leo XIV has appointed to the Vatican Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue are from Africa, serving as Catholic Bishops in Kenya, South Africa, and Burkina Faso.
In the latest Vatican appointments made public Thursday, July 3 by the Holy See Press Office, the Holy Father appointed Bishop Willybard Kitogho Lagho of Kenya’s Catholic Diocese of Malindi, Bishop Sithembele Anton Sipuka of South Africa’s Mthatha Catholic Diocese, and Bishop Ollo Modeste Kambou of Gaoua Catholic Diocese in Burkina Faso as members of the Dicastery that “promotes and supervises relations with members and groups of non-Christian religions.”
The scope of the Dicastery for Interreligious Diocese does not extend to Judaism that belongs to the Vatican Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity, which is tasked with engaging “in timely ecumenical initiatives and activities, both within the Catholic Church and in relations with other Churches and Ecclesial Communities.”
Bishop Willybard Lagho, 67: Malindi Diocese, Kenya
Born in 1958 in the Kenya’s Catholic Archdiocese of Mombasa, Bishop Lagho was ordained a Priest of the same Archdiocese in April 1987 after completing his Theological and Philosophical studies at St Thomas Aquinas Seminary and St Augustine’s Seminary Mabanga, respectively.