Home » News » South Sudan. “If I meet the Pope, I’ll thank him for bringing us hope”

South Sudan. “If I meet the Pope, I’ll thank him for bringing us hope”

Sister Beta Almendra, a Portuguese Comboni missionary in Wau, South Sudan, can hardly hide her excitement at the visit of Pope Francis, which begins this Friday, 3 February.

In a message sent to the national office of Aid to the Church in Need in Portugal, she explains that she is already on her way to cover the 800km between Wau and the capital, Juba. Luckily, she says, it is dry season, which makes things easier, as the dirt roads will be easier to drive on.

“We are on our way to Juba. We are so happy to be preparing to welcome the Pope. We are travelling in a convoy, and it should take us two days to reach Juba. We are well prepared”, she says.

The Pope in South Sudan

This visit is a landmark in the history of the youngest country on earth, a country which only gained its independence in 2011. Nobody wants to be left out, Sister Beta explains. “Everybody is paying close attention to the news, expectations are high, there is much joy and hope. Lots of hope!”

“Those who are travelling to Juba want to participate, they want to see the Pope and to pray with the other Christians, and those who stayed behind will be following on the radio, or television, if they can. They don’t want to miss out on anything that is happening during these days that are so important for South Sudan.”

Peace is not yet a reality

Pope Francis is travelling to South Sudan with a message of unity and of peace, which is vital to a country split between tribal loyalties and which has been at war for most of the past 50 years, including the decade after independence.

“Fighting continues in some parts of the country, peace is not yet a reality. It is something we are trying to achieve, and that is why the Pope is coming on this pilgrimage, along with other Christian leaders. They are coming to ask, they are coming to promote dialogue so that peace might become a concrete reality, that has to be won bit by bit”, the Portuguese nun stresses.

The Pope in South Sudan
Sister Beta Almendra preparing to welcome the Pope

In this spirit, she adds that if she should be fortunate enough to get to exchange some words with the Pope, she knows what she will say. “The first thing I will do is say thank you. Thank you for coming to South Sudan to visit these people, to pray with us, and to give us real hope, in the name of the whole Church and of the world. It is good to know we are united, that we stand together, and that this is a synodal Church that walks together, and where people help each other to achieve their goals.”

Pope Francis will be in South Sudan from 3 to 5 February.

Don't miss the latest updates!

New mass abduction of schoolgirls in northern Nigeria

The attack represents “a major blow to the education of…

Four Christians killed, villages razed in fresh attack in Mozambique

An estimated 128,000 people have had to flee the affected…

Nigeria: Priest abducted in the Archdiocese of Kaduna

The west African nation has been classified as suffering from…

Red Week 2025: A global cry for religious freedom

Over half a million people are expected to take part…

ACN expresses solidarity with Cuba after the devastating passage of the hurricane

The organisation Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) expresses…

Burkina Faso: Two dioceses hit by new wave of attacks

The international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need…

New mass abduction of schoolgirls in northern Nigeria

The attack represents “a major blow to the education of young girls, which is already quite rare in these parts of the country”, say local sources. The abduction of around...

Four Christians killed, villages razed in fresh attack in Mozambique

An estimated 128,000 people have had to flee the affected region, according to UN estimates. At least four Christians were murdered by jihadists in northern Mozambique over the past days,...

Nigeria at the crossroads

The situation in Nigeria - Africa’s most populous country - is very complex, as factors of violence often overlap. For example, the issue of conflicts over land is as old...