During Mass at a stadium in the city of Cotonou on Nov. 20, Benedict was expected to present Catholic bishops from across Africa with an authoritative papaldocument about the church’s efforts to promote “reconciliation, justice and peace,” Religion News Service reports.
The document is based on a three-week synod of African bishops held at the Vatican in October 2009. That meeting ended with an unusually strong official statement that blamed violent conflict in Africa on “greed for power and wealth at the expense of the people and nation,” and called on political leaders to “clean the continent of corruption.”
Benedict was also scheduled to speak to Benin’s political, religious, business and cultural leaders at the presidential palace in Cotonou. The Rev. Federico Lombardi, the chief Vatican spokesman, said the speech would touch on issues of concern to all of Africa.
While Catholics make up little more than a quarter of Benin’s population, the country has long been a regional hub of missionary work, Lombardi said. A seminary in the city of Ouidah, which Benedict planned to visit, has been a source of priests for nearby countries, including Ghana, Nigeria and Niger.
Ouidah is also an international center for the indigenous religion of Vodoun, or Voodoo, which is practiced by more than 17 percent of Beninese.
Catholicism’s relationship with traditional African religions is of particular concern to Benedict, who has warned against the danger of melding faiths in non-Catholic cultures.
Late last month at the Vatican, Benedict lamented to bishops visiting from
Angola and Sao Tome and Principe that African converts to Catholicism often persist in “practices that are incompatible with adherence to Christ.”