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Pope Francis' Criticism Of 'New Colonialism' Disregards Africa's Past

Pope Francis' statements are a testament to the immeasurable and enduring damage that colonialism and transatlantic slavery had on Africa. But Pope Francis' covert finger-wagging to African leaders for their role in what the pontiff called 'new colonialism' seems like an apt distraction from the 'old colonialism' the Church has yet to answer for.
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Pope Francis waves to local residents as he drives to St. Joseph The Worker Catholic Church in the Kangemi slum of Nairobi, Kenya Friday, Nov. 27, 2015. Pope Francis is in Kenya on his first-ever trip to Africa, a six-day pilgrimage that will also take him to Uganda and the Central African Republic. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
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Pope Francis waves to local residents as he drives to St. Joseph The Worker Catholic Church in the Kangemi slum of Nairobi, Kenya Friday, Nov. 27, 2015. Pope Francis is in Kenya on his first-ever trip to Africa, a six-day pilgrimage that will also take him to Uganda and the Central African Republic. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

Thirty years ago Pope John Paul II chose Cameroon as the location to apologize to black Africa for the involvement of white Christians in the slave trade. This time, it is Pope Francis who uses Sub-Saharan Africa as a backdrop to speak out against colonialism.

This week in his inaugural trip to Africa, Pope Francis, criticized "new forms of colonialism" that exacerbate the "dreadful injustice of urban exclusion." The pontiff also condemned unjust distribution of land, poor housing, etc. "These realities ... are not a random combination of unrelated problems. They are a consequence of new forms of colonialism."

Colonialism and sub-Saharan Africa are intrinsically linked.

Colonialism: The policy or practice of a wealthy or powerful nation's maintaining or extending its control over other countries, especially in establishing settlements or exploiting resources.

For centuries after Christopher Columbus 'discovered' a new continent, European nations exercised genocide on the First Nations people of the Americas, all the while importing a workforce to exploit stolen lands. The justification for this inhumane institution lay within the Church's own ideology. Slavery was part of the Christian God's plan, colonizers contended.

It was said that both the Old and New Testament give permission to hold others as slaves. In the Old Testament, God and the Patriarchs approve. As for the New Testament, Jesus and the Apostles show that slavery is permissible. Therefore, slavery was not an anti-Christian institution. It was just the opposite. Furthermore, it is impious to say slavery is anti-Christian because such a conclusion contradicted God. [source]

Both Pope John Paul II and Pope Francis' statements are a testament to the immeasurable and enduring damage that colonialism and transatlantic slavery had on Africa. But Pope Francis' covert finger-wagging to African leaders for their role in what the pontiff called 'new colonialism' seems like an apt distraction from the 'old colonialism' the Church has yet to answer for.

In truth, the peculiar institutions informed European settlements on both sides of the pond: Africa and the Americas. In the name of their European monarchs and with the blessing of the Church, colonizers pillaged human resources from Africa for 315 years. Over 12 million black bodies were transported to the New World. Millions died on the way. Upon arrival, enslaved Africans built the colonies from scratch. The first buildings Europeans erected were churches, of course. Most slave-holders were Christians, and some were even members of the clergy. Even Christian missionaries to the colonies owned slaves. The profitable slave trade filled the Church's coffers. The gold-laden Vatican itself is a repository for the spoils of slavery and colonialism. As a number of American churches and Christian colleges such as Georgetown and Princeton confront their historical and financial ties to the slavery, the Pope's head remains firmly planted in the sand.

Pope Francis, like his predecessors on visits to the New World, made no mention of the racially-based evils which begat colonialism. Slave-decedents still congregate at the bottom of the socioeconomic scale in most of the Americas, alongside survivors of Indigenous genocide. These realities are not a random combination of unrelated problems. They are a consequence of 'old colonialism'. The legitimate grievances of slave-decedents provide nothing more than road kill for the Pope-mobile.

Meanwhile in Africa, Europeans graduated from kidnapping humans to plundering physical resources after slavery was abolished. European powers and the United States gathered in Berlin in 1884 to slice up African land (and its precious commodities) among themselves. By creating unnatural borders, Europeans split African families apart and fueled animosity among opposing tribes. Today, with Europe's grip loosening, China has moved in as chief 'foreign investor' in Africa. Millions of dollars in profits ARE at stake, and none of it, it seems, trickles down to the slums of Nairobi where Pope Francis made his anti-colonialism allocution.

The Church of Rome conceded that the African slave was a human being in 1839. Then-Pope Gregory XVI did not mince words. Almost two hundred years and millions of deaths later, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, a white man, descends on colonized African nations to lecture on 'new colonialism'. Africans and Afro-descendants are still reeling from the 'old colonialism'. A number of Christian churches are discussing reparations. Before Pope Francis can implore progress by addressing unfair distribution of land and resources among Africans, the Vatican must rediscover the righteousness of Christ's teachings and answer for the consequences of its own colonial sins.

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