MCCJ

The 27th of July 2023 marks the centenary of the splitting of the Comboni inheritance, with the signing of the document with which Propaganda Fide made official the division of Daniele Comboni’s inheritance into two congregations: the Sons of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (FSCJ), with headquarters in Verona, and the Missionaries Sons of the Sacred Heart (MFSC), with headquarters in Brixen (Bressanone). Propaganda Fide had come to this decision on 27 November 1922, in plenary session; but it waited to make it public, once the question of a mission territory for the MFSCs had to be first been resolved (this was done by the assignment to the MFSCs of the Apostolic Prefecture of Lydenburg, in South Africa).

A centenary, this one, certainly not to be celebrated, but nevertheless to be remembered for two reasons: first, to understand how this split came about (the causes, the protagonists of this turning point); and, secondly, to learn the lessons that must be learnt from this stage in the history of the Institute and from the sometimes tumultuous coexistence of the various cultures and souls that make up the Comboni heritage.

The historical context

The reader who is familiar with the development of the Comboni Institutes from their foundations (1 June 1867 for the Comboni Missionaries, 1 January 1872 for the Comboni Missionary Sisters) until the year 1923, will find this outcome of the division (we prefer to speak of reconfiguration) surprising and abrupt.

The unexpected death of the founder Daniele Comboni (10 October 1881, in Cartum) left his legacy in a situation of uncertainty that was overcome with the first reconfiguration: that is, with the transformation of the Missionary Institute founded by Comboni into a Religious Congregation, at the hands of the Jesuits of the Refoundation, in Verona, in 1885 . Towards the end of the 19th century, Comboni’s male heirs appeared internally consolidated, with two important steps: they took over the direction of the Institute, which had become a religious congregation; and held its first general chapter (1899) and elected Fr. Angelo Colombaroli as their first Superior General. The FSCJ number 91 missionaries: 21 priests, 42 scholastics and 28 brothers.

In the meantime, the spread of the Mahdist revolution in Sudan (1881-1898) had wiped out the signs of the missionary presence in the country and of the Comboni foundations in Cartum, El Obeid and the Nuba Mountains, leaving a group of Comboni missionaries prisoners of the Mahdi (first in El-Obeid and then in Ondurman). But the resolution of the revolution in favour of the British (1898) again opened the door to the presence in Sudan of Comboni’s heirs, with the return of the first FSCJs to Ondurman, in 1899, and the intensification of the Comboni presence in southern Sudan, under the leadership of an FSCJ, Mgr Antonio Roveggio (appointed in 1885 to replace Mgr Francesco Sogaro, Comboni’s successor in Cartum and Apostolic Vicar from 1882 to 1894). 

Mgr Roveggio died exhausted in Berber, on 2 May 1902, but his premature death did not stop the development of the mission in the Vicariate, which was led by Mgr Franz X. Geyer, who pushed the missionary presence towards the south of the Vicariate, as far as its border, northern Uganda (17 February 1910).

The first two decades of the 20th century were thus a time of intense development in Central Africa, also followed by the expansion of Comboni’s heirs in Europe: in addition to Verona, Brixen (Bressanone) and Trent, Brescia was opened and the FSCJ opened a community in England (Sidcup, in 1903, for the study of English) and in Austria (Messendorf, in 1908). In the second general chapter (3 to 12 October 1909) the FSCJ already numbered 127: 64 priests, 46 brothers and 17 students. In this chapter, as well as electing the General Directorate (Fr Federico Vianello was elected superior general), they verified their life and mission and prepared the Constitutions that guide them (which were approved on 19 March 1910). By the third General Chapter, in September 1919, there were already 150.

Unresolved issues

This external context of favourable development, both in Europe and in Central Africa, does not help Comboni’s heirs to find a solution some unresolved questions left by the first configuration of the Comboni Institute as a religious Congregation or which emerged in the years that followed. On the contrary, it seems that the growth of the FSCJs, in Africa (with the expansion into southern Sudan and the creation of a new vicariate) and in Europe (with the affirmation of the formation given in Brixen and Austria) intensified them. 

Let us briefly review these issues. First, the difference of views between the FSCJ religious missionaries and the Comboni missionaries, i.e., the priests who did not join the religious congregation and continued to work in the Central African Vicariate, both in Cairo and Cartum (different views on mission priorities: baptise or promote, regenerate?). Second, the formation and involvement of the laity (brothers) in the mission. Third, the relationship between religious authority (the superior of the religious community in the mission) and apostolic authority (the Apostolic Vicar responsible for the apostolate in the missions). Fourth, the unrelenting tendency of missionaries to cluster along cultural or ethnic lines, in Africa as well as in Europe, and the consequent emergence of leading personalities who ride the waves (generally of dissatisfaction) and become personalities of reference for each group. Fifthly, the succumbing to the nationalist spirit and mutual prejudices between the various groups of missionaries (not even Fr Colombaroli’s insistence on fraternal charity has succeeded in marginalising this corrosive element of coexistence among FSCJ missionaries).

The protagonists

It is not only the unresolved issues that weigh in the events that lead to the unravelling of the Comboni legacy; in reading these pages of Comboni history, the role played by some prominent personalities emerges. Let us recall the most important ones.

First, the missionary Franz Xavier Geyer, the dynamic superior of the community of Brixen, under whom the Comboni presence in this city knew a time of expansion and development, and who (finally) was elected successor to Comboni in Cartum and Apostolic Vicar (consecrated bishop on 8 November 1902 in Munich). To him we owe the development of the Central African mission to South Sudan and North Uganda. But he was also responsible for a move that greatly influenced the process we are analysing: the grouping of missionaries according to nationality. In the external reorganisation of the Central African mission, already in 1913, Archbishop Geyer proposed the creation of groups of missionaries according to nationality, with missionaries assigned to specific vicariates: the German-speaking ones to the Vicariate of Cartum; the Italian ones to the Vicariate of the South. 

The Superior General, Fr Vianello, who was initially opposed to this proposal, had to give way, in part, by accepting that, without undermining the authority of the Superior General over all the missionaries, the Germans should be assigned mainly to Cartum, under Mgr Geyer, and the Italians to the Apostolic Prefecture of Bar El Gazhal, under Mgr Stoppani. As events unfolded, Mgr Geyer became the catalyst for the group of German missionaries in Cartum and, leaving the Vicariate in 1922 after an intense life spent on its development, he sided with this group that advocated division and total independence. In the report he prepares for Propaganda Fide and personally presents to Cardinal Van Rossum (April 1922) he says that in his heart he cannot blame those in Cartum and his pro-division stance.

A reading of the correspondence between the Apostolic Vicar and the Superior General, for the agreement of 1913, shows that the religious superior of the FSCJs in Cartum, Fr Paolo Meroni, ended up supporting the proposal of the division into groups, for reasons of his own and opposed to those of Geyer, reflecting the difficulties of understanding between the two missionaries.

With the name of Fr Paolo Meroni we come to the second prominent figure in this affair. The Superior General Fr. Vianello called him to Verona as General Secretary, to take care of the organisation of the third general chapter, the first after the war, which took place in 1919. At this chapter, Fr Meroni was elected Superior General. Towards the end of the chapter, “Father Alois Wilfling proposed that a province be created for the German-speaking houses: the chapter approved and the president (Father Meroni) assured them that it would be dealt with as soon as the political horizon was clear.” 

In September 1921, Father Meroni promoted a survey among the Austro-Hungarian and German FSCJs (20 replies in favour of the creation of the province, 5 against, 3 null votes…). But not even in the face of this result did he carry out the chapter decision, closing himself off in the conviction that the creation of the province was an unbearable burden for the Congregation. Instead, he sought a radical remedy: “to put the Austro-Germans before the alternative of complete absorption (suppression of the existing formation houses to give all members a single formation in the common novitiate) or complete separation.” 

Meticulous and persistent as he was, Fr Meroni did not impose his view but, rather, waited for it to emerge as a need arising from the complex situation of the missions and the congregation, and/or from the missionaries themselves… which was to happen when Fr Kauczor wrote a letter from Cartum (2 February 1922), defending the separation and passing it off as the wish of the missionaries of Cartum. The sensitivity of the German-speaking FSCJ group in Cartum seems, in fact, to play a role in the progress of the process leading to the division, so that the group can also be considered as protagonist in the affair.

By 24 January 1922, however, Fr Paolo Meroni had already completed his report to Propaganda Fide and left Verona for Rome, where he remained until June, to plead his cause. His action proves effective, as he succeeds in changing Propaganda Fide’s opinion. The Cardinal Prefect, Van Rossum, in the first meeting still expresses himself in favour of the constitution of a German province and against the division; later on, he writes a letter to Fr Meroni with questions about province/separation to be sent to all the FSCJs, which Fr Meroni disputes with the argument that the Italian side is in the dark about the issue. 

In April, Van Rossum also meets with Bishop Geyer and a change of opinion comes to its end. The way is open for the presentation of the problem in the plenary session of the cardinals in November 1922 and the following steps taken in the first part of 1923. It is surprising that Propaganda Fide, which had traditionally accompanied Comboni affairs closely, both in Africa and in Europe, taking its time, changes its opinion in a short space of time and on the opinion of two of the protagonists, thus adding itself to the list of the protagonists of this affair with the decree of 27 July 1923.

External influences

Some external elements, in the political sphere, also played a role in the process that led to this split. It is only right to recall them, albeit briefly. The first, the so-called interference of the Austro-Hungarian government on the Vicariate of Central Africa. An interference facilitated by the protection demanded by the missionaries, practically from the beginning of the vicariate, and which offered Austria space to seek diplomatic influence in a strategic geographical space, already disputed by the British over Egypt and Sudan and by the French over the territories of Palestine and with the protection of the Holy Places. 

The second, more decisive external element was the outbreak of the First World War (1914-1918) that saw Germany and Austria on one side against England and Italy on the other. The impact between the FSCJs was negative in a double way: on the one hand, it exasperated the feelings of patriotism connected with the respective nationalisms, adding tension to the relations between Italian and German missionaries; on the other hand, while the Italian missionaries in Cairo and Sudan could continue their activities, the German missionaries encountered increasing difficulties (they were, in fact, taken prisoners and brought to camps). With the end of the war this situation was maintained and worsened for the German missionaries, who were unwanted and disliked by the British authorities.

The Great Forgotten

The reader of this Comboni history (from 1895 to 1923) and of this surprising outcome of the Comboni inheritance, even the most distracted, is surprised to find no mention, no reference to Daniele Comboni. The great missionary of central Africa, founder of the Comboni Institutes, is the great absentee in this whole affair and in the folds of history that led his heirs to it.

Not that his position on the issues that led to this second reconfiguration of his institute was not clear to him: his ideal of the institute as a cenacle of apostles accentuates the communitarian dimension of evangelisation, a mission to be carried out in fraternity, beyond the cultural and ethnic origins of each missionary; the accent on the catholicity of the mission and its work was clear enough not to be forgotten in the hour in which it had to be kept in mind; the invitation to each missionary to be a hidden stone warded off any temptation to leadership and the search for popularity and domination over others; the ideal of a mission lived in collaboration and subsidiarity, in the convergence of different ministries and charisms, was the antidote to any fractionism; the conviction that “the work must be Catholic, not Spanish, French, German or Italian” warded off any nationalism.

Of course, this is not the time to clarify the reasons for this forgetfulness of Daniele Comboni. It is sufficient for us to point out how far one was from the sentiment and attitude of those who took up and lived under the banner of Daniel Comboni’s testimony: ‘When difficult moments arise, then I ask my unforgettable Episcopus Daniel for advice and I think: what would he do and how would he answer me. Moreover, there is the promise, which six hours before his death he received from me, and this is for me a sacred bond.” 

Daniele Comboni’s forgetfulness has also led to the forgetfulness of the Comboni methodology for missionary discernment: “Come evening, we take advice on how to get out of this predicament. We propose, we discuss, we pray’ (“vademecum of solidarity between believers who share the same undertaking’ and seek a solution”). It is surprising that the reconfiguration of the Institute took place without the convocation of a general special chapter and without the consultation of the FSCJs. 

At the General Chapter that followed, in 1925, the person who was largely blamed by history for the division, took it in these words: “A point had been reached where it was no longer possible to go forward – I do not intend to blame anyone for this state of affairs. The separation was a necessity in order to save the Institute: it was absolutely necessary that the two parts, which already existed within the Congregation, like Esau and Jacob while they were in their mother’s womb, come out and each have their freedom of life and movement. It was a painful step; a dura lex sed lex. It was two years of torment and anguish for the leaders of the Institute. But it was salvation for all. Now, the Germans have constituted themselves into a flourishing congregation; to them, I, interpreting the sentiments of all, send greetings and best wishes for a prosperous life; and our fundamental institute in Verona now finds itself restored to itself and to a new life”. 

Comboni history, however, has its surprises… and its irony: Fr Paolo Meroni is also the person who decides on the introduction of Daniele Comboni’s cause for beatification. The process of historical research and the rediscovery of the Founder has brought the FSCJ and MFSC back on a path of reunification, which took place and was sealed in the General Chapter of 1979; an event that the heirs of Daniele Comboni (now baptised MCCJ) consider a grace, this one to be remembered and celebrated, in the memory of the founder recognised by the Church, in the canonisation of 2003, as a master of Christian life and mission.

Conclusion: learning lessons

By way of conclusion, it is not out of place to ask ourselves what lessons we can learn from revisiting (albeit briefly, as we do here) this page of Comboni history. Let us indicate some of them, leaving it to the interested reader to identify others.

First, that problems, when and how they arise, are to be solved; if not, they tend to become loose land mines that can explode at any moment when touched by the surprises of history. Second, that unity and communion are not to be taken for granted in the intercultural context in which we live; they can be tested by many elements (cultural, linguistic, political, social, ecclesial…). The Church of our time reminds us that only the synodal context of mutual listening can guarantee the discernment and preservation of communion and unity. Thirdly, that the exercise of authority must be regulated and carried out according to clear rules and the principles of subsidiarity and respect for competences; trampling on rules never augurs well, as we see in this process (extra-ordinary chapter not convened, decisions not executed, meetings of the general council done without minutes, etc); an end considered good cannot justify the temporary cancellation of procedures.

Fourth and most fundamental lesson: in resolving disagreements, one must always return (to the Gospel, certainly, and) to the founder and the founding charism, which are a guarantee of fidelity and a source of fruitfulness.

P. Manuel Augusto Lopes Ferreira, mccj

27 July of 2023