Pope's Benin trip to bring hope to whole of Africa
(Nov. 16, 2011) The director of the Vatican press office said Pope Benedict XVI's
trip to Benin this Friday aims to encourage the whole African continent. Jesuit Father
Federico Lombardi said this when he presented the Nov. 18-20 papal trip at a press
conference on Monday. This is the Holy Father's second journey to Africa. He visited
Angola and Cameroon in 2009. Fr. Lombardi said the Pope's first priority in Benin
will be the signing of the postsynodal apostolic exhortation of the Second Special
Assembly for Africa of the Synod of Bishops. The signing ceremony is due to take place
in the presence of 35 presidents of national Episcopal conferences, and the seven
heads of the continent's regional conferences. Fr.Lombardi noted Benin's unique
role in the Church in Africa. Though there are scarcely nine million inhabitants in
the small country, it was from Benin that evangelization spread to neighbouring countries,
starting 150 years ago. “The visit will certainly arouse an atmosphere of hope for
the African Church, and be an encouragement to the continent of Africa as a whole,"
Fr. Lombardi said. Another key moment will be the Pope's visit to the tomb of
Beninese Cardinal Bernardin Gantin, who died in 2008 but is still much loved by his
people. This affection is shared by the Holy Father because Cardinal Gantin "was very
close to the Pope for various reasons, having been prefect of the Congregation for
Bishops at the time that Cardinal Ratzinger (the present Pontiff) was prefect of
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and having been his immediate predecessor
as dean of the College of Cardinals," the spokesman explained. "In Benin," Father
Lombardi noted, Cardinal Gantin is "considered as a national hero, a person who enjoys
truly immense public affection. For this reason, the Pope's visit to his tomb will
be one of the most significant episodes of the trip," he added. Benin has a population
of nearly 9 million, of whom some 3 million are Catholic .