
Africa’s catholic churches face competition and a troubled legacy as they grow
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Pope Francis has completed his seven-day tour of three African countries: Mozambique, Madagascar and Mauritius. It was a significant trip for a number of reasons. During his visit, the pope
spoke on issues of peace and ecological sustainability that these countries are facing. Mozambique recently signed a peace accord with longtime rebels, and the country is still recovering
from the cyclone earlier this year that killed over 1,000 people. Madagascar faces severe deforestation, and Mauritius too faces risks from climate change. Africa has the world’s third
largest Catholic population, after the Americas and Europe. Nearly 1 out of every 5 Africans – 19.2% – is Catholic. The Pew Research Center expects the number of African Christians south of
the Sahara, including Catholics, to double by 2050. From my perspective as a scholar of African religions, however, the pope’s visit needs to be understood against the background of the
church’s longer history in Africa and the current challenges Catholicism faces in the continent. EARLY CATHOLIC HISTORY IN AFRICA Although Catholicism in Africa expanded dramatically under
European colonialism in the 19th and 20th centuries, the church’s roots in Africa go back to its earliest days. Christianity emerged in Africa among first-century Jewish communities in
Alexandria, Egypt. Many early, influential church figures were North African. After the Islamic conquest of North Africa – from 634 to 711 A.D. – however, Islam grew faster than
Christianity, making it the region’s dominant religion. Muslim traders then took Islam across the Sahara Desert to West Africa and over the Indian Ocean to eastern Africa. SPREAD OF
CHRISTIANITY The later arrival of Catholic missionaries on the western, central, southern and eastern coasts of Africa spread Christianity across the continent. In the 15th and 16th
centuries, the Portuguese came to Africa by ship and began winning converts in the Central African kingdom of Kongo. On the other side of the continent, in today’s Mozambique, missionaries
established Catholic communities that would eventually become the contemporary Mozambican Church. French missionaries arrived in Madagascar in 1640. With the help of early converts, they
produced a Catholic catechism, or teaching manual, in Malagash, the island’s indigenous language. Because Catholic Portugal, and later France, expanded the trans-Atlantic slave trade, both
priests and slave merchants followed in their wake. African Catholics and European missionaries nonetheless protested against the slave trade. Even the Vatican condemned slavery in the
1680s. But many bishops and priests already possessed slaves, and the Vatican enslaved Africans to man its ships. The church’s complicity in Africa’s subjugation only intensified in the
colonial era in the 19th and 20th centuries as the church founded parishes, schools and hospitals across the continent, often with the encouragement of colonial authorities. REFORMS AND END
OF COLONIALISM Catholic missionaries worked mostly in European languages, contributing to the continent’s linguistic and cultural colonization. In fact, colonization and evangelization
occurred in lockstep. The Portuguese colonized Mozambique; the French, Madagascar; and Britain, after initial French occupation, Mauritius. But Catholic missionaries also criticized
colonialism. In 1971, for example, authorities in Mozambique, still under Portuguese rule, expelled a Catholic order for criticizing the colonial regime for preventing missionaries from
properly serving Mozambicans. Elsewhere on the continent, during Africa’s transition from colonial rule to independence, from the late 1950s to 1980, many priests supported emerging ethnic
and nationalist movements. The long-term outcomes of these Catholic-backed independence movements have been mixed. In what was to become Zimbabwe, for example, bishops supported resistance
against white-led Rhodesia from the 1960s to 1980 but unwittingly brought dictator Robert Mugabe, who died recently, to power. But in Malawi, Catholics in 1994 helped unseat the repressive
president, Hastings Banda, and establish multiparty democracy. And in many French-speaking African countries, bishops served as neutral mediators who led national conversations between
autocratic rulers and civilians throughout the 1990s, often achieving democratic reforms. RISE OF PENTACOSTALISM, ISLAM To many Africans today, in the wake of independence and the church’s
support for it, the Catholic Church has distanced itself from its colonial past to become an institution associated with sociopolitical reform, education and health care. This accounts in
part for its substantial growth in the three countries visited by the pope. In Mozambique, Catholics are 30.3% of the population, the country’s largest religious group, surpassing indigenous
religious practitioners and Muslims. In Mauritius, at 27.2%, Catholics take second place to Hindus but outnumber Muslims. And in Madagascar, they come in third at 21.7%. But the church
faces new challenges. In 1970, Pentecostals represented less than 5% of all Africans. They now stand at 12%, a significant shift. In Mozambique alone, Pentecostals are the second largest
Christian community. And Islam is growing faster in Africa than Christianity. By 2050, African Muslims south of the Sahara are expected to increase from 30% to 35% of Africa’s population.
The pope’s visit, then, reflects a strategic commitment to the continent, for good reason. The battle for souls is a struggle for statistics, enmeshed in the changing loyalties of the
world’s largest Christian church. [ _Like what you’ve read? Want more?_ Sign up for The Conversation’s daily newsletter. ]