Haiti's first cardinal-designate highlights nation's struggles
Port au Prince, Haiti, 15 Jan 2014: The president of the Haitian Bishops’ Conference
voiced hope that his recent appointment to become a cardinal will raise the profile
of the nation, which is still recovering from a devastating 2010 earthquake.
Bishop
Chibly Langlois of Les Cayes is one of 19 men who will be made cardinals at a consistory
at the Vatican on Feb. 22. He is the first cardinal ever to be named from Haiti. Pope
Francis announced the appointment of the new cardinals on Jan. 12, the four-year anniversary
of the Haiti earthquake.
“The appointment this January 12, 2014 will help focus
attention on Haiti, especially on our Roman Catholic Church in Haiti, where the realities,
the needs and the challenges will be brought up to a much higher level,” Cardinal-designate
Langlois said in statements to Alter Presse.
Some analysts suggested that the
Pope’s decision to announce the cardinal appointments on the four-year anniversary
of the earthquake may have been a sign of special consideration for the devastated
country.
The 2010 earthquake killed more than 200,000 people in Haiti and left
more than 1 million homeless. It destroyed dozens of churches, including the archdiocesan
seminary. Archbishop Serge Miot of Port-au-Prince also perished in the quake.
As
president of the Haitian bishops, Cardinal-designate Langlois has worked in recovery
efforts. He has also led the Church’s mediation efforts in talks between Haitian President
Michel Martelly, the opposition and the parliament, in order to help carve out a path
towards rebuilding the country.
The cardinal-designate was born Nov. 29, 1958,
in the southeastern city of Vallee. He entered the seminary at Port-au-Prince in 1985,
where he studied philosophy and theology.
Ordained a priest on Sept. 22,
1991, he served as vicar of the Cathedral of Jacmel and director of catechesis for
the diocese before going on to study pastoral theology at the Pontifical Lateran University
in Rome.
In 1996, Cardinal-designate Langlois was appointed administrator of
diocesan pastoral and catechetical formation. Three years later, he was sent to the
Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in the region of Des Oranger and was professor
of pastoral theology at the Major Seminary of Notre Dame in Turgeau.
He was
named Bishop of Fort-Liberte on April 8, 2004, and was ordained to the episcopate
by Bishop Hubert Constant on June 6 of the same year. On Aug.15, 2011, after seven
years in his first diocese, he was named Bishop of Les Cayes.
That same year,
he succeeded Archbishop Louis Kebreau of Cap-Haitien as president of the Haitian Bishops’
Conference. Source: CNA/EWTN