Lilongwe, 18 July, 2024 / 10:01 pm (ACI Africa).
The people of God in the Southern African nations of Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe have to be vocal about the phenomenon of poverty in their respective countries, Archbishop George Desmond Tambala of Malawi’s Catholic Archdiocese of Lilongwe has said.
In his homily during the opening of the July 14-19 meeting of the sub-region Conference of Catholic Bishops in Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, Archbishop Tambala also highlighted the disintegration of African traditional family structures a “wolf” that is attacking the people of God in the three neighbouring countries.
“When we put our countries on the global level, we seem to be at the bottom of all the countries in terms of economic growth and development,” he said in his Tuesday, July 16 homily during Mass to open the five-day assembly of the members of the Episcopal Conference of Malawi (ECM), the Zambia Conference of Catholic Bishops (ZCCB), and the Zimbabwe Catholic Bishops’ Conference (ZCBC) taking place at Sigelele Hotel in Salima, Central Malawi.
The Malawian member of the Order of the Discalced Carmelites (OCD) added, “We have seen poverty in the villages; we are serving people who at times go for a day without a meal; some cannot even afford school fees for their children and also expensive treatments in the hospital.”
“These are the people we are serving, and poverty is the wolf that the Church should not stay quiet about,” the Local Ordinary of Lilongwe Archdiocese, who doubles as ECM President emphasized, addressing himself to members of ECM, ZCCB, and ZCBC, who meeting for the second time to deliberate on the possibility of constituting a regional Conference of Catholic Bishops.