Credit: Spiritans/Tanzania
Archbishop Amani went on to recall that in 2013, the late Fr. Nolasco willingly volunteered to be commissioned to South Sudan to be part of the pioneer Spiritans in the East African nation that had gained independence from Sudan in July 2011.
He recalled, “After serving at Usa River Seminary, he volunteered to go to South Sudan to establish a mission. Those living there testify that it is only by God’s providence that they are able to live in peace. Such places require extraordinary courage and steadfast faith from those who choose to serve there, and he was among them.”
“People were fleeing, government officials were running away, leaving everything to God and His people. But he said, ‘I will remain there,’ and he battled with the challenges of his work until he was called by his Creator,” recalled the 74-year-old Tanzanian-born Catholic Archbishop, who has been at the helm of Arusha Archdiocese following his appointment in December 2017.
Credit: Spiritans/Tanzania
(Story continues below)
He noted that, even amid the challenges of mission and declining health, he remained unwavering in his relationship with the person of Jesus Christ.
“He lived his vows faithfully and left us the witness of a life of love, courage, sacrifice, and endurance. He believed in eternal life and taught others to know, love, trust, and serve God,” Archbishop Amani said of the late Spiritan Priest, who passed on aged 55.
The Catholic Church leader noted that the late Fr. Nolasco’s “teaching and example lives on in those who heard him and keep his memory alive.”
Credit: Spiritans/Kenya
“Even in his final suffering,” Archbishop Amani recalled, Fr. Nolasco, “embraced the cup of illness with faith and patience,” offering a lesson on the wise use of health: not to harm ourselves or others, but to serve God and one another in love.
“The work the Priest did was to lead many to live righteously: in our marriages, in our families, at work, in politics, in the economy, to live justly,” he further said about the late Spiritan, who had been ordained a Priest in May 2006.
In his August 21 homily at the Funeral Mass, Archbishop Amani emphasized the need for the people of God to embrace justice as the true foundation of peace, without which, he said, all efforts amount only to noise and struggle, without lasting peace.
Nicholas Waigwa is a Kenyan multimedia journalist and broadcast technician with a professional background in creating engaging news stories and broadcasting content across multiple media platforms. He is passionate about the media apostolate and Catholic Church communication.