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Congolese Community in Rome Organizes March to St. Peter’s Square for Peace in DRC

A poster announcing the March 10 Eucharistic Celebration and a march for peace amid persistent violence in the Eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Credit: Br. Adolphe

The Congolese Chaplaincy in Rome has announced a Eucharistic Celebration and a march for peace amid persistent violence in the Eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

In a press release issued Tuesday, March 5, the Chaplain, Fr. Roger Balowe Tshimanga said the Mass and march for peace is scheduled for Sunday, March 10, and will end in St. Peter's Square, where they will pray the Angelus with Pope Francis.

“This event aims to raise awareness and mobilize the Congolese people and their supporters in support of peace and territorial integrity,” Fr. Tshimanga said.

He added, “Mass will start at 9:00 am at the Congolese Chaplaincy in Rome, followed by a peaceful march to St. Peter's Square for the Angelus with Pope Francis at noon.”

He said participants in the march will carry flags, banners and rosaries, and sing songs invoking peace. “On placards and banners, all are invited to inscribe the phrase Pope Francis uttered during his visit to the DRC from January 31 to February 3, 2023: ‘Hands off the Democratic Republic of the Congo!’,” the Congolese Catholic priest said.

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He said the message the Pope delivered on the first day of his visit to DRC “calls on the entire human community to open its eyes to the unprecedented tragedy raging in the east of the DRC, with the complicit silence of the international community.”

The Chaplain said DRC is a victim of the “ambitions and appetites” of foreign countries that continue to illegally exploit its wealth, through multinationals. 

The situation, he said, makes the DRC “a martyred country before and after colonization, and plunges it into undeserved poverty and misery”.

Fr. Tshimanga said, “The activism of armed groups is sowing terror and desolation, causing massacres and displacing people both internally and externally.”

“The plight of these populations, more than alarming...does not seem to preoccupy international human rights institutions, nor move the solidarity of nations, nor challenge the conscience of the human community,” he said.

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Fr. Tshimanga continued, “Everything shows that we are victims of an international conspiracy that does not speak its name.”

“The Congolese people are determined to defend themselves and the integrity of their territory. They are also determined to make their voices heard and stop this hemorrhage which is decimating our populations, pitting them against each other and spreading a culture of hatred with uncontrollable consequences,” he added.

Violence in Eastern DRC has created a severe humanitarian crisis with more than 5.5 million people displaced from their homes, reportedly the third-highest number of internally displaced people in the world.

A February 14 United Nations report indicates that civilians in Eastern DRC “are bearing the brunt of localized violence, amid a sharp uptick in fighting between Government forces and the M23 armed group.”

More than 120 armed groups are fighting for control of the Eastern DRC, a region rich with natural resources.

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On February 20 Catholic Bishops in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) appealed to the people of God in the Central African nation to show their solidarity with the inhabitants of the Eastern part of the country through intensified prayers. 

In response, the Archbishop of DRC’s Kinshasa Archdiocese condemned countries that neighbor the DRC for working in cahoots with multinationals to rob the country of its natural resources.

Jude Atemanke is a Cameroonian journalist with a passion for Catholic Church communication. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Journalism and Mass Communication from the University of Buea in Cameroon. Currently, Jude serves as a journalist for ACI Africa.