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A Drum, Other Elements on South Sudanese Cardinal-Designate’s Coat of Arms Explained

The Coat of Arms of Cardinal-designate, Stephen Ameyu Martin Mulla of Juba Archdiocese in South Sudan. Credit: ACI Africa/Eye Radio

The Vicar General of South Sudan’s Catholic Archdiocese of Juba has explained the symbols and motto represented in the coat of arms of Cardinal-designate, Stephen Ameyu Martin Mulla.

Archbishop Ameyu is among the 21 Catholic Church leaders, to be made Cardinals during the next Consistory, which the Holy Father said would take place on September 30.

In an interview with ACI Africa on Thursday, September 28, in Juba, Fr. Nicholas Kiri said the elements in the coat of arms of the Cardinal-designate are episcopal elements that symbolize his authority in his Episcopal See as an Archbishop.

Fr. Nicholas Kiri, Vicar -General of the Catholic Archdiocese of Juba. Credit: ACI Africa

“This coat of arms reflects everything someone is going to do, irrespective of the length of time one may be in office,” Fr. Kiri who has been serving as the Vicar-General in the Catholic Archdiocese of Juba since 2020 said.

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“Miter in the coat of arms serves to bring the Word to be made flesh,” Fr. Kiri said.

“The drums on it symbolize our local elements that reflect the joy,” he said.

“The spears stand for our traditional way of living,” the Catholic Priest said, and explained, “In the past people carried them as a sign of protection and for hunting. Other than our traditional way of living, the spears also refer to Christ who has been pierced and through his sacrifice we are made clean, we are sanctified and saved.”

Credit: Juba Archdiocese

The Vicar General explained that the ropes on the Cardinal-designate’s coat of arms are the episcopal cinctures he uses symbolizing “a sense of discipline to make the Word become flesh through the way of life that he lives.”

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The South Sudanese Catholic Priest said that the cross on the coat of arms symbolizes traditional elements in the coat of arms that “make the Word become flesh.”

Fr. Kiri continued, “The Chalice is a sign of the Eucharist and the suffering of Christ.”

Fr. Kiri explained that the Cardinal-desingate’s coat of arms has taken a lot from the former symbols used by the former Archbishop Paulino Lukudu Loro.

“Half of the wording explaining the coat of arms is actually of the former Archbishop who said that in his pontificate it is the Word that becomes flesh. He said that the Word that was eternal that was with God and is God has become flesh,” the Priest said.

Asked why the Cardinal-designate maintains some wordings of the former Archbishop instead of coming up with his own, he said, “The Cardinal-designate is building up on something. He is building up on what was there before. This is his emphasis.”

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Kerbino Kuel Deng is a South Sudanese journalist who is passionate about Church communication. He holds a Bachelor's Degree in Social Communications from the Catholic University of Eastern Africa (CUEA). He currently works as a Journalist for ACI Africa.