Sunday 10 March 2013

[wanabidii] Re: [UAH] Black pope and the silliness of Africans



On Sun, Mar 10, 2013 at 3:25 PM, jim muwanga <muwangajim@gmail.com> wrote:
Black pope and the silliness of Africans

by Sabella Abidde (sabidde@yahoo.com)

Courtesy of Punch Newspapers, Wednesday, March 6, 2013

"Africans do not have the required experience yet to produce a Pope."

-Monsignor Georg Ratzinger (Elder brother to Pope Benedict XV1)

The Christian Holy Book tells us that Saint Peter, sometimes referred
to as Simon Peter, was a fisherman and one of the 12 apostles of Jesus
Christ. He was also the first Bishop of Rome (Pope). He is
well-regarded within Christian tradition. In the 2000 years history of
the Catholic Church, there have been some 265 popes. While a dozen or
so were in office for 20-plus years, others lasted mere days and or
weeks. Geographically, Africa has produced three popes. The 14th pope,
Victor I (189-199 A.D.) was said to be from North Africa. And while
the 32nd pope, Miltiades (311-314 A.D.), and the 49th pope, Gelasius I
(492-496 A.D.) were born in Rome – both had North African ancestry.

But racially, the continent has yet to produce a Pope. And it is not
likely to produce one anytime within the next 100 years. The papacy,
after all, is a European institution – an institution dominated,
almost exclusively, by the Italians. From the moment Pope Benedict XVI
announced his resignation, speculations began to whirl about whether
or not "the time is here and now" for a pope to come out of
sub-Saharan Africa. On the list of the favoured are Francis Cardinal
Arinze, and Peter Cardinal Turkson.

A lot has been written about the former, but not the later. Peter
Kodwo Appiah Turkson is a Ghanaian who was ordained to the priesthood
in July 1975, and was appointed spokesman for the Second Synod for
Africa in 2009. He is the current president of the Pontifical Council
for Justice and Peace. The PCJP is concerned, first and foremost, with
issues of peace, justice, and human rights as seen through the
sensibility of the Vatican.

Cardinals Arinze and Turkson have what it takes to be the next pope.
But don't hold your breath: neither men will be elected. The odds do
not favour them. Ordinarily, any Catholic male who has reached the age
of reason, but not yet passed age 80, can be elected pope. In reality,
however, only ordained male priests can be electors and with the power
to select the pope. What's more, there are other rules and traditions
that come into play when electing a pope. It is these "rules and
tradition and bigotry" that make it difficult, if not impossible, for
a black priest or cardinal, to emerge a pope. Not now, anyway.

For those who are in doubt, Monsignor Georg Ratzinger (elder brother
to Pope Benedict), already made it clear, unambiguously clear that
"Africans do not have the required experience yet to produce a Pope."
He is not a layman. He is an insider. A deep-throat, if you will.
Sixty years of priesthood has taught and convinced Georg Ratzinger (an
ordained Catholic priest since 1951), that Africans are not ready for
global leadership vis-a-vis the papacy.

Many of the Church's early and significant members from the first
century were Africans. Back then, the Church had four patriarchates:
Jerusalem; Constantinople; Antioch; and Alexandria. Today, there is an
estimated 170 million Catholics in Africa with a sizeable number of
priests, cardinals, and catechists. Yet – yet – these are not enough
for the Vatican and its network and for the likes of Georg Ratzinger
to consider and elect a black pope. No African cardinal or priest is
knowledgeable and advanced enough to be a pope.

Africans have invested untold amount of resources in the Catholic
Church, yet, their investment is, according to the likes of Ratzinger,
not buoyant enough for the top spot. It is all politics, folks:
politics, prejudice and insincerity. Nothing more! In a way, I commend
Georg Ratzinger for voicing the "inner thought and feeling" of the
Church's hierarchy. And as Benedict XVI's elder brother, it is likely
that he was also voicing the Pope Emeritus' view on the matter. The
selection/election will be man's doing; not God's!

As of today, the top contenders for the Bishop of Rome (Pope) are
Cardinal Angelo Scola (71, Italy); Cardinal Peter Turkson (64, Ghana);
Cardinal Marc Ouellet (68, Canada); Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco (70,
Italy); Cardinal Francis Arinze (80, Nigeria); Cardinal Tarcisio
Bertone (78, Italy); Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi (70, Italy); Cardinal
Leonardo Sandri (69, Argentina); Cardinal Odilo Scherer (63, Brazil);
Cardinal Claudio Hummes (78, Brazil); Cardinal Claudio Hummes (78,
Brazil); Cardinal Christoph Schönborn (68, Austria); and Cardinal
Malcolm Ranjith (65, Sri Lanka). Again, the selection/election process
will be man's doing; not God's! And these men have decided that
"Africans do not have the required experience yet to produce a Pope."
What experience is Georg Ratzinger alluding to? How to speak Latin or
Italian, or how to walk in those red shoes?

I don't blame Georg Ratzinger and his type. I really don't! After all,
it was the Africans who rejected and abandoned their ancestral gods –
the most original and authentic of all gods – for the white man's god.
For centuries, the Vatican has been looking down on Africans with pity
and disdain; and treating them like slow-developing children who are
incapable of complicated and uncomplicated tasks. And indeed, other
religious denominations and sects also look down on Africans. The
basic problem of many Africans is that most are fools, imitators, and
are always seeking approval from outside. No one is going to treat us
with respect when we disown our own gods, myth, history, and
traditions. No one! Their gods are not better than ours!

Africans had their own creation stories; and so did every "traditional
society" on the face of the earth. Silly Africans, they condemned
their own stories and belief system and then wholly adopted the
stories from the Middle East (Islam and Christianity). We have
forgotten that everything – everything – points to and confirms Africa
as the beginning of mankind. We had our own creation stories, had our
own gods, and had our own survival mechanism. For thousands of years,
we survived. The biggest calamity which has befallen, and which will
eventually destroy Africa and its people are Islam and Christianity.
And any other imported religion and gods and belief systems.

John Henrik Clarke was infinitely right when he said, "Anytime you
turn on your own concept of God, you are no longer a free man. No one
needs to put chains on your body, because the chains are on your
mind." The Church, especially, is destroying our mind and our
continent.


Posted in Rastas.

2 comments
By Don Jaide – March 9, 2013

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