Category: Publications Page 18 of 41

Various publications; Bulletins, magazines

Newsletter South Africa No 48 – 25th February, 2015

Newsletter South Africa no 48 logo

CJTR Press Release January 2015

Press Release Jan 2015CLEAR POLICY DIRECTION AND IMPLEMENTATION NEEDED IN THE MINING INDUSTRY

As the year begins with the election of a new President and appointment of a new cabinet, it remains to be seen how the economy will be steered to the end of the year. A weakening Kwacha and a slump in copper prices on the local and international fronts respectively could be indicative of a bumpy year ahead of us. It therefore calls for level headed leadership to navigate these challenges. The leadership that has been exhibited on the impasse surrounding the new mining tax regime however does not inspire confidence and is a source of concern to the Jesuit Centre for Theological Reflection (JCTR). It is not clear if the new mining tax regime announced in the 2015 budget is subject to negotiation and who is charge of the negotiation.

This is of serious concern for the Centre due to its adverse impacts on the livelihoods of the mine workers as well as government revenues.  On one hand the jobs of many hang in the balance as the mining companies leverage them for a more favourable tax regime while on the other hand Government’s 2015 budget risks being unbalanced. There is therefore need for good leadership and consistent economic policy from the new Government even as they settle down. The conflicting statements from the President, the Minister of Finance and the Minister of Commerce on the new mining tax regime as to whether to subject it to revision do not reflect well on the Government and risk the stability of the economy and cost of living for the majority Zambians. It should be realised that lives of people are at stake and so care must be taken in handling the issue of mining tax.

The January 2015 Basic Needs Basket for Lusaka stood at K3, 793.59. This shows a significant decrease of K111.63 from the month of December 2014 which stood at K3, 905.22. This can be easily attributed to decreases in the cost of food items such as that of Kapenta which decreased by K67.65 from an average unit cost of K139.08 to K114.90 per kg, Dry fish which decreased by K34.10 from K124.81 to K78.22 per Kg and Beans which reduced by K16.03 from K32.89 to K25.51 per Kg.  Looking at the food items that have led to this significant decrease it can be said that these are due to seasonal changes which at any moment could vary again.

The JCTR therefore calls on government to come up with a clear direction for mining taxation as this could help ease the troubles currently being faced with the falling Kwacha and eminent rising interest rates that would further push up costs of various items on the Basic Needs Basket. Government should also be concise and comprehensive in reducing the cost of living, not just in the short term (e.g. during time of elections) but to find lasting solutions for these inconsistencies in the cost of living.

Prayer for the Year Dedicated to Consecrated Life 2014-2016 – Zambia

Prayer of the Consecrated 01

Br Charles Kabeta , Sr Flora Redder, Fr Serge St-Arneault, Sr Grace Fundafunda, Bishop Patrick Chisanga and Sr Anna Phiri

Br Charles Kabeta , Sr Flora Redder, Fr Serge St-Arneault, Sr Grace Fundafunda, Bishop Patrick Chisanga and Sr Anna Phiri

The National Joint Committee in Zambia, together with the assistance of Bishop Patrick Chisanga, came up with a prayer for the year dedicated to consecrated life 2014 -2016.

You are most welcome to use it for your personal or community prayer.

Mafrwestafrica – Lettre du 14 février 2015

cropped-mafrwestafrica-02.jpgAujourd’hui, les Missionnaires d’Afrique de l’Ouest vous proposent de visiter de nouvelles pages sur leur site www.mafrwestafrica.net :

Dans la rubrique « Actualités » :

« Conférence à la COSMAM », laquelle conférence était donnée par le Père Richard Baawobr, lors de la troisième assemblée de la Confédération des Supérieurs Majeurs d’Afrique et de Madagascar(lire la suite) 

« La paroisse de Zinder sous le choc » suite aux violences du 16 janvier 2015 auxquelles il a déjà été fait allusion sur notre site, quelques images bien réelles publiées sur le site de la paroisse.(lire la suite)

Dans la rubrique « Témoignages »,

« Emmanuel Ngona, 25 ans de serment » : un texte écrit par le Père Emmanuel Ngona, Assistant Général, à l’occasion de son jubilé(lire la suite)

« Livres sur l’histoire des Missionnaires d’Afrique ». Une série de publications diverses existe depuis 2002, et il est possible d’y avoir accès. La dernière parution raconte le voyage du Père Voillard en Afrique(lire la suite)

« Lien entre famille et vie consacrée », ce qu’en pense un Missionnaire d’Afrique originaire du Burkina. Il a vécu son stage en Zambie, a étudié la théologie à Nairobi, a été nommé à Kinshasa en 2008 et est présentement à Rome. (lire la suite) 

« Qui porte l’Évangile ? » selon le Père Sarti, ce n’est le privilège de personne. Il raconte comment un « païen » l’a évangélisé(lire la suite)

Dans la rubrique « Dialogue interreligieux » :

« Les bienfaits du dialogue et sa nécessité », merci encore au site de l’Action pour la Rencontre des Cultures et des religions en Europe pour toute l’information mise à disposition(lire la suite)

Dans la rubrique « Justice et Paix » :

« Journée contre la traite des personnes », le 8 février 2015, l’Église s’est mobilisée pour la première journée internationale contre la traite des personnes(lire la suite) 

« Éliminer la pauvreté, c’est possible », un article de « Voix d’Afrique » qui détaille ce que sont les OMD (Objectifs du Millénaire pour le Développement) – (lire la suite)

Dans la rubrique « Vu au sud, vu du sud »:

« Habib Bourguiba » un article du dernier numéro de Voix d’Afrique (décembre 2014) au sujet d’un des « Pères de l’Afrique » d’aujourd’hui. (lire la suite)

FENZA Book Launch Invitation – Friday 27th Feb. 2015

FENZA Logo 2

FENZA (Faith and Encounter Centre Zambia)

Cordially invites you to attend the book launch of

Unseen Worlds 01Unseen Worlds: Dealing with Spirits, Witchcraft, and Satanism

By Bernhard Udelhoven

Friday 27th February 2015, 15:00 -17:00 hrs

At Faith and Encounter Centre,

Off Leopards Hill Road, next to Yatsani Radio

 You are welcome to join us on this joyful occasion!

The book (453 Pages) will be sold for K 80.00

See the link:

UNSEEN WORLDS, Dealing with Spirits, Witchcraft, and Satanism

Prayer against human trafficking – 8th February 2015

International Day of Prayer and Awareness against Human Trafficking.

Human trafficking card 1Human trafficking card 2

Human trafficking card 3

Human trafficking card 4

Talitha Kum logo

Newsletter South Africa No 47 – 26th January, 2015

Newsletter South Africa no 47 logo

 

Wake_the_World_-_Year_of_Consecrated_Life

Read the music here

 

Ware the World

 

UNSEEN WORLDS, Dealing with Spirits, Witchcraft, and Satanism

Unseen Worlds 01“This book is dedicated to all those who experience evil or ambivalent spiritual powers in their lives. In a special way, I dedicate it to the people who have shared with me and with our pastoral groups their inner experiences with such powers. They have proven that encounters with these forces do not need to lead to suspicions, accusations, fear and despair. This book is a witness that they can lead to growth, reconciliation, and to a wider sense of belonging.”

Those are the words of the author, Bernhard Udelhoven, M.Afr, who has just published an outstanding book of 453 pages on a very difficult but increasingly important subject in today’s life in Zambia. Themes such as spirits, devil, power, deliverance, prayer, ritual, witchcraft, Satanism, inculturation and the charismatic Church, are abundantly studied in the book. It is a masterpiece that every pastoral worker should read.

How to help people affected by witchcraft or demons. How to intervene when witchcraft accusations rip communities apart. How to help pupils who claim contact with occult forces. 

Bernhard Udelhoven 03Already available at the price of 100 Zambian Kwacha, the book will officially be launch at a later date which will be announced in due time. Please contact FENZA or the Office of the Secretariat of the Missionaries of Africa in Woodlands, Lusaka.

By Bernhard Udelhoven, M.Afr, FENZA Publication, Faith and Encounter Centre Zambia, Lusaka, 2015.

Click on the following picture to order the book on Internet. Then, simply click on “Add to Cart” and follow the normal procedure. Enjoy the reading.

Unseen Worlds createspace.com pageSee also the following link: 

http://www.mafrome.org/livre_bernhard_udelhoven.htm

Mafrwestafrica – Lettre du 31 janvier 2015

cropped-mafrwestafrica-02.jpgAujourd’hui, les Missionnaires d’Afrique de l’Ouest vous proposent de visiter de nouvelles pages sur leur site www.mafrwestafrica.net :

Dans la rubrique « Actualités » :
« Lettre de Laghouat Ghardaia, Janvier 2015 »
, la dernière édition de la publication de ce diocèse d’Algérie, écrite par Mgr Claude Rault- (lire la suite) 
« 20ème Anniversaire de la mort des Pères de Tizi Ouzou »
. C’était il y a un mois que cette commémoration a eu lieu, puisque c’est le 27 décembre 1994 que les 4 pères ont été assassinés. (lire la suite)

Dans la rubrique « Témoignages » :
« Partager et vivre l’Evangile » : 
une publication du Supérieur Général des Missionnaires d’Afrique, le père Richard Baawobr. (lire la suite)
« Jésus nous libère » un article du Père Bernard Delay paru dans Voix d’Afrique du mois de décembre 2014 : quel dialogue entre la foi chrétienne et la religion traditionnelle du peuple Sénoufo ? (lire la suite)

Dans la rubrique « Dialogue interreligieux » :
« Semaine pour l’unité des chrétiens »,
 qui s’est tenue du 18 au 25 janvier 2015. Nous reproduisons quelques textes soumis par le conseil pontifical pour l’unité des chrétiens. (lire la suite) 
« Les chrétiens du Niger soumis à la violence 
» Il est difficile de comprendre le pourquoi de la violence des actes anti-chrétiens commis par de nombreux manifestants, tout particulièrement à Zinder et Niamey. (lire la suite) 
« Quel dialogue islamo-chrétien aujourd’hui ? »
 quelques réflexions qui permettent de considérer sous divers angles les événements récents qui mettent en péril ce dialogue (lire la suite)
« 50 ans du PISAI » L’Institut Pontifical d’Etudes Arables et islamiques célèbre ses 50 ans d’existence à Rome (lire la suite)
« Bulletin ARCREn° 107 du 29 janvier 2015 » quelques extraites de la dernière édition de cette publication de l’Actioni pour la Rencontre des Cultures et des Religions en Europe (lire la suite)

Dans la rubrique « Justice et Paix » : 
« Le Pape François et les migrants »
, la journée de prière pour les migrants a été fixée au 18 janvier 2015, même si le message du pape dans ce domaine date du mois de septembre 2014. (lire la suite)

Dans la rubrique « Vu au sud, vu du sud » :
« L’Afrique et les écoles primaires » 
un article qui souligne les difficultés que rencontre l’enseignement des enfants en Afrique subsaharienne, mais laisse percer l’espoir d’une bonne évolution. (lire la suite)

Maize and Ivory, report about the life of the people of Chiawa village in Zambia

Maise and Ivory 06 - CopieMaize and Ivory, by Barbara Brustlein, pictures by Jörg Böthling.

Barbara and Jörg spent few day at Woodlands at this time of the rainy season in 2014. We are privilege to publish in SAP Blog their article published Missio Mafazin, Jan./Feb. 1/15, 2015

People live in a buffer-zone where humans and wild animals cohabit just outside the Lower Zambezi National Park. The farmers are allegedly profiting from the tourists attraction only to be threaten by elephants and hippos which are destroying their crops.

Every night, while watching their fields in turn, Starfred Chimwanja, 56, and his wife Mebo are paying attention to any sound. It has been like this for weeks. “The corn is ripe. If we go to sleep this evening, our field will be stripped bare”, says Starfred. So, they stay awake, armed with a shot-gun to give warnings against the intruders: elephants, porcupines, hippos and baboons. Those animals are attracted by the ripe corn. Chiawa, their village, is situated just outside the Lower Zambezi National Park. From the point of view of the farmers, the game management authority of the National Park favour the animals rather than assisting the farmers in protecting their crops.

Maise and Ivory 01Only few safari-tourists are coming in this rainy season. Roads turn into ponds of mud. Even four wheel drive vehicles cannot pass. Being only at two hours drive from Lusaka in dry season, Chiawa is secluded or cut off at this time of the year.

In a couple of weeks, when the rainy season is over and some roads can be used, the tourists will come and fill the lodges that are located alongside the slow stream of the river Zambezi like pearls on a string. It costs 200 dollars per night in a lodge which are only accessible by speedboat.

The tourists are an important source of income for many people such as Dasmat, a 40-year old man with the AK-47 in his hands. He is usually employed by one of the lodges to escort holiday-guests on their tours. As the luxury lodges are still more or less empty, he is currently busy with his second job: “I protect animals from poachers and I protect people’s fields from the animals.”

Dasmat is paid by the Zambian Wildlife Authority (ZAWA). How is he performing in his task is highly controversial. “A wild elephant devastated our field for three days” says Ekrin Mpona, 43, a local farmer. Only when our crops were completely smashed that a ZAWA man shot the elephant down. She stands in the middle of her field pointing at the remains of her crops as well as some huge bones of the elephant. “People cooked the meat of the elephant and celebrated for four days”, says Father Paul Sakala. “That is terrible. Someone has to see the point of view of these people. They have always been here and they have to survive from their land.”

Father Paul, 55, has come from Lusaka. He has been sent as a priest to the surrounding of Chiawa four years ago where humans and wild animals are expected to coexist.

He lives at the shore of the Zambezi in a renting house provided by the Chief of Chiawa, a Lady-Chief called Christine Mambo. A flock of visitors stands waiting in front of her house. The 64 year old lady is sitting on a white plastic chair some metres in front of her house door. Her advisors are on her left and right sides. The people who are waiting are overweight White people in khaki trousers and half open shirts. “Investors from Zimbabwe or South Africa”, guesses Father Paul who is familiar to see crowds around the house of his influential neighbour. “This land belongs to the clan. Nothing is agreed upon without the signature of the Chief.”

Before the investors are allowed to speak, they have to go through the traditional greetings of respect. One of the advisors is showing the correct movements while the visitors try to imitate him. Christine Mambo watches silently without moving a lid. “This is a world of its own”, says Father Paul. “Those who do not respect the traditions are leaving empty hands.” That is obviously not the intention of today’s visitors. Each one performs the exercises according to the procedure. Will the visit pay off? The Chief says: “You all want to build lodges and build them alongside the Zambezi. We have really got enough of them. But the country is lacking infrastructures and people have no jobs. I would still see some possibilities there.”

As a matter of fact, 18,000 people live in and around Chiawa, their ancestors’ land. The National Park is within its boundaries. “Foreigners come to see our elephants. But they don´t see the damage that they cause”, says the Chief. “But without the park, we would be without wildlife anymore. How can you convince people that they should stop poaching when they can make quick and good money doing it?”

The government wants to make money too. In 2010, Zambia wanted a limited opening for ivory trade but did not succeed. If they had been successful, it would have been fatal for the elephant population. Animal rights activists were relieved.

What shall be done to make people and wild animals coexist around the National Parks? Some demand that the government supply them with electric fences. For Father Paul, this is not a solution. “It may be good in some cases but people forget that they will be fenced themselves like in a zoo”. That’s not too implausible as some lodges offer jeep-tours around the village. According to Isaiah Museto “the tourists come to look at us like animals in a zoo”. Museto works at the local court. He is also a member of the village council. “It is annoying but what is really upsetting us is the issue of land property traditionally under the ‘ownership’ of the Chief acting on behalf of the community. The government wants to get rid of this concept. If happening, we would be left unprotected”.

“I am honestly sorry for the local population”, says Davie Visser, 55. “They go nowhere and there is a number of reasons for that.” Visser gaze glides from the terrace behind his house over a vast field covered with ripe corn. Zimbabwe is on the other side of the Zambezi. The view is fabulous. It used to be his family home for three generations until Robert Mugabe confiscated the land and chased them all.

Crossing the river, Visser rented a fertile land and started rebuilding his existence. “I also have the hippos in my fields every night”, he says. “And since the baboons have no natural enemies like leopards and lions anymore, thing have gotten terrible with them.”

There is nothing that the farmers have not tried to keep the animals away: drums, burning chili, plastic or tyres. At the end, animals got used to anything. “They follow ancient routes. One can make them choose another way but it will only be in somebody else’s field. We have to face the fact that we live with animals and will always lose part of our crops”.

Visser adds: “There´s one more thing. What I have achieved so far, a Zambian could never achieved it for a very simple reason. With the first signs of success, his relatives are in front of his door asking for their share.” Father Paul nods while the framer speaks. Four years in these surroundings have taught him to be thankful for the achievement made. “Hopefully, in one or two generations, the people in this surrounding will no longer be poor workers instead of a lucky few who profit from rich tourists. It is also my dream that they will protect wild animals.”

A big challenge for the people of Chief Mambo. Chinese firms are not building roads for nothing. Indeed, copper and gold lie beneath the hills of Zambia. It is the case where Starfred Chimwanja and his wife Mebo cultivate. Some signatures on a possible contract and the night vigils to guard the field would be history. What would it means for wild animals is a different story. “The most terrible predators are humans”, says Davie Visser while looking at the Zimbabwean side of the river Zambezi.

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