Frantz Fanon once wrote, “Each generation must, out of relative obscurity, discover its mission, fulfill it, or betray it.” For many African Catholics today, there is a growing sense that God has entrusted our continent with a vital mission—to lead the Church and Christianity into a new era.
It’s true that the Pope is not African, and Africans do not occupy the most powerful positions within the Catholic hierarchy. It’s also true that the African Church is not wealthy in material terms. But it is rich in people—thriving, growing, dynamic people. Africa is rich in faith. Rich in material resources among many other blessings with which God has blessed the African Motherland. As Walter Rodney once wrote, Africa possesses abundant natural and human resources, still waiting to be fully harnessed for the flourishing of the continent and its peoples.
God gives different gifts for different purposes. As the parable of the talents (Matthew 25:28–30) teaches us, if we do not use the gifts we’ve been given, they may be taken away. Africa must not bury its talent.
Since the official launch of VoiceAfrique Catholic News Analysis (VoiceAfrique CNA) last week, we’ve received messages from across the continent and beyond. We are deeply encouraged by your support. We sense a shared mission—to advance the Kingdom of God in Africa and throughout the world. Through this platform, we aim to offer news and commentary about African societies and churches, rooted in faith, committed to truth, and filled with hope. We want to tell a different African story: one of life in abundance.
You can be part of this mission in several ways:
- Subscribe to VoiceAfrique CNA by clicking the green bell at the bottom right, and share with others.
- Write for us—do you have a story to tell or a reflection to share? Reach out and contribute to our opinion section.
- Advertise with us—we are a platform for promoting African Catholic products, services, and events.
- Connect—we have over 30 writers across Africa. Get in touch if you want your voice to be heard. Every African Catholic has a story worth sharing; this is your megaphone.
- Give feedback—tell us what you think about what you read. We’re listening.
While we are at it…Uganda: A President for Life?
Meanwhile, President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda has declared he will run again in the January 2026 elections. At 80 years old, Museveni has promised to grow Uganda’s economy from $66 billion to $500 billion in five years—a bold and, frankly, implausible claim. Known as “M-7” by loyalists, Museveni has held power since 1986 after seizing control following a five-year guerrilla war.
Since then, Uganda has changed many things—except its president. Americans have seen eight presidents since Museveni took power: Reagan, Bush Sr., Clinton, Bush Jr., Obama, Trump (twice), and Biden. Museveni amended the Ugandan constitution to remove term limits, once claiming, “we do not believe in fixed-term limits.” Who exactly is “we”?
It is time for President Museveni to initiate a peaceful transition of power—not to his son, widely rumored to be his heir-apparent, but through free and fair elections. The churches of Uganda must come together and speak prophetically, urging democratic renewal and resisting the grooming of dynastic leadership.
Nigeria: A Deafening Silence
President Bola Tinubu recently visited Benue State, where 218 people—mostly Christians—were massacred in Yelwata during a dawn raid on June 13. Genocide Watch reports that Yelwata, located just 7 km north of Makurdi, is a 98% Christian farming village—97% Catholic—and home to internally displaced persons who had already fled previous Fulani militia attacks.
Tinubu did not visit Yelwata itself. His trip was more of a political rally than a condolence visit. Billboards bearing his image lined the roads, while the victims’ faces—those slain by the militia often mischaracterized as mere “herdsmen”—were ignored.
We thank Pope Leo for his strong condemnation of the killings, a stance that may have pressured the Nigerian government into acknowledging the tragedy. Yet, there has been no serious effort to apprehend the perpetrators, rebuild Yelwata, or protect vulnerable communities across Nigeria. The country feels increasingly like a patchwork of ungoverned spaces and shattered dreams.
VoiceAfrique stands in solidarity with the Christians of Yelwata. We will continue to hold Nigeria’s leaders accountable for their duty to protect citizens. A government that fails to safeguard lives and property is not worthy of its name. Nigerian church leaders must not appease the current government with silence or platitudes. Instead, they must speak prophetically denouncing injustice and calling the nation to repentance, peace, and justice. Theologians in Nigeria must consider it an evangelical mission and vocation to speak forcefully and prophetically, denouncing the federal and state governments for failing the people and abandoning their constitutional duty—hiding behind empty excuses, long-winded condemnations, and promises of action that never materialize—Your brother, Stan Chu Ilo
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