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“Jesus drew people to himself”: Participants Share Joy of Over 30,000 at Tanzania’s Fifth Eucharistic Congress

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

Uhuru National Stadium in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania’s major city and commercial port on the country’s Indian Ocean coast, was fully packed during the concluding Mass of the fifth Eucharistic Congress in the East African nation, which took place from September 12-15.

The stadium has a 30,000-seating capacity. Those who did not find seats made themselves comfortable on the grass while thousands of others followed the event from outside the stadium.

Participants in the event that coincided with the weeklong 53rd International Eucharistic Congress (IEC 2024) that also concluded in the South American nation of Ecuador on September 15 say that they witnessed the power of the Eucharist, with the Eucharistic Jesus “drawing people to himself.”

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

“While organizing for the event, we never knew we could see such a huge attendance. But starting from the Eucharistic procession yesterday (Saturday, September 14), we saw the first miracle of the Eucharistic Jesus who drew so many people from near and far to himself,” Sarah Pelaji, a member of the Commission for Social Communications of the Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC) said in her testimony at the end of the Holy Mass.

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Sarah added, “On the streets, people left their shops and properties unattended and gazed upon the Eucharistic Jesus.”

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

In a Tuesday, September 17 interview with ACI Africa, the Secretary General of TEC, Fr. Charles Kitima, said that more than 10,000 people participated in the September 14 four-kilometer Eucharistic procession in Dar es Salaam. 

Describing the procession as “a very intense occasion”, Fr. Kitima said he witnessed the “hunger that people have for Jesus”.

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

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“I lack words to describe the beauty of the procession,” he said, and added, “You could see the hunger in the people to see the Eucharistic Jesus who was made public for them. People saw the meaning of the real presence of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist. You could see the vibrancy of the Catholic Church in the country.”

The Secretary General of TEC said that everyone, Catholic and non-Catholic, saw how the Eucharist is valued as the centre of the Catholic faith.

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

The 2024 Eucharistic Congress is the fifth in the East African nation that has realized the event every four years for the past 12 years. Tanzania’s fourth Eucharistic Congress took place in 2020 in the Archdiocese of Tabora. The Catholic Archdiocese of Mwanza and the Diocese of Iringa hosted the 2016 and 2012 Eucharistic Congresses respectively. The country realized its first National Eucharistic Congress in the year 2000 in the Archdiocese of Dodoma

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

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In the September 17 interview with ACI Africa, the Secretary General of TEC lauded the efforts of the organizers of the 2024 Eucharistic Congress that had started off with a call on participants to realize their call to be witnesses of the person of Jesus Christ, relying on the grace of God through the Holy Spirit.

A lot of preparations went into preparing for the Eucharistic Congress, he said, and added, “We also encouraged each Diocese to take part in the celebrations by organizing seminars, retreats and reflections that were centered on the Eucharist.”

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

Fr. Kitima said that the four days of reflection prepared people for the Sacrament of Reconciliation before they proceeded to adore the Blessed Sacrament.

Tanzania has 40 Catholic Bishops including those in active service and Auxiliaries. More than 25 Bishops were at the Sunday Mass, which has well over 500 Priests in attendance and “a sea of Religious Sisters and Brother,” Fr. Kitima told ACI Africa. 

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Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

The East African country also has over 100 female Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life (ICLSAL) and all of them were massively represented at the Eucharistic Congress.

Children participating in the Sunday Liturgical celebration were clad in their characteristic yellow and white attire, adding more color to the event.

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

“Tanzania pays close attention to Holy childhood and we had hundreds of children from across the country who were given special formation on the sidelines of the Eucharistic Congress,” Fr. Kitima said.

Catholic Bishops at the four-day Eucharistic Congress gave messages on the status of the Catholic Church in Tanzania and how to further evangelize the East African country. 

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

Public figures also participated in the spiritual event, including government officials who spoke Tanzania’s political status.

Fr. Kitima told ACI Africa that it was necessary that Tanzania’s government officials condemn the recent unfortunate trend of the kidnappings and killings of politicians in the country. 

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

One of the latest incidents is the killing of Ali Mohamed Kibao, a senior member of the main opposition Chadema party, who was found dead after two armed men forced him off a bus heading from Dar es Salaam to Tanzania’s city of Tanga.

“The Eucharistic Congress was an occasion to bring politicians together for purposes of reconciliation. Catholic politicians, specifically, were challenged to spread the message of the Gospel in their daily political activities,” the Tanzanian Catholic Priest said, adding that one of the Eucharistic miracles that were witnessed at the Congress was the fraternal love that was demonstrated by opposing politicians who participated in the event.

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

Regarding the recent abductions and killings in Tanzania, Bishop Eusebius Alfred Nzigilwa of Tanzania’s Mpanda Catholic Diocese and TEC’s Vice President said, “Tanzania has always been known as an Island of peace.”

He said that owing to the kidnappings and killings of some politicians, the Church in Tanzania “strongly condemned the incidents of abductions and killings that are going on in the country and want the relevant state institutions to live up to their responsibilities and restore the honor of Tanzania as an Island of peace.”

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

On the Sidelines of the Eucharist Congress, the Church in Tanzania also celebrated the over 70,000 Small Christian Communities (SCCs) that are evangelizing at the grassroots in the country. 

Fr. Kitima told ACI Africa that SCCs are the way in which the Catholic Church in Tanzania reaches the people in far-flung areas owing to the country’s shortage of Priests.

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

“We don’t have enough Priests to take care of our large population of the faithful. The Church in Tanzania relies on SCCs to reach our families and to bring Christ to the people where there is so much need,” he said.

Credit: Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC)

Conveying Pope Francis’ greetings to the Catholic faithful of Tanzania, the Apostolic Nuncio in the East African country, Archbishop Angelo Accattino, underlined the need for more vocations in the country.

“To celebrate the Eucharist, Priests are needed. The Church all over the world has a shortage of Priests,” Archbishop Accattino said, and added, “Let’s continue praying for marriages and families from which we get the Priestly vocations.”

Agnes Aineah is a Kenyan journalist with a background in digital and newspaper reporting. She holds a Master of Arts in Digital Journalism from the Aga Khan University, Graduate School of Media and Communications and a Bachelor's Degree in Linguistics, Media and Communications from Kenya's Moi University. Agnes currently serves as a journalist for ACI Africa.