Credit: Courtesy Photo
Two years into his Episcopal Ministry, Bishop Macram who had won the hearts of many for speaking out against human rights abuses paid the huge price of being exiled from his country when he faced a major threat on his life.
Details of how the Sudanese Bishop fought enslavement, religious persecution, forced starvation and mass murders in the country that also experienced many years of civil war are found in the 2021 publication, “An Angry Shepherd”.
Authored by Mr. Ashworth, a lay missionary from England who worked with Bishop Macram for almost four decades, the book that the Nairobi-based Paulines Publications Africa published explores the experiences of an African Catholic Bishop who knew all manner of suffering and who put his life on the line on countless occasions for the love of his people.
Even in exile, he continued to reach out to the vulnerable groups in the Northeast African nation, helping them both materially and spiritually.
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In March 2022, Bishop Macram expressed concern about inter-communal violence in the Abyei Administrative Area (AAA) in the Northeastern African country along the border with South Sudan.
Credit: Courtesy Photo
The founder of Bishop Gassis Relief & Rescue Foundation called on the warring parties to “seek a nonviolent resolution to their conflict through dialogue.”
In December 2021, the predecessor of Bishop Yunan Tombe Trille Kuku, the current Local Ordinary of El Obeid, decried the persistent instability in Sudan, saying, “people are suffering in violence and poverty.”
On social media, Bishop Macram is being eulogized as a fallen hero.
“Our hero has fallen, may your humble soul rest in peace dear Bishop Macram Max Gassis till we meet again in heaven,” Okeny Paul says on Facebook.
Credit: Courtesy Photo
On his part, Makuc Francis Atem says, “It shocked me that Bishop Macram Max Gassis has passed away. Dear Bishop, you saved a lot of lives, in particular both South and North Sudan, may your soul rest in peace.”
“He gave us the chance to be Catholic Church Christians, he built a better Hospital in my Hometown, he built countless schools in my hometown,” Mayomsson Deng Sr. says.
Deng Sr. adds in reference to Bishop Macram, “He brought Kenyan teachers so that those who couldn't afford to study in Kenya would get the opportunity to enjoy that service in their Home villages. We're where we are today because of this man.”
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