Fr. Maravilla Explores Kazakhstan
as Possible Salesian Mission
(ANS – Atyrau, Kazakhstan – May 28, 2024) – Fr. Alfred Maravilla, general councilor for the missions (5th from left in photo), was on an exploratory visit to Kazakhstan from May 24 to 28 at the invitation of Fr. Peter Sakmar, apostolic administrator of Atyrau. “I accepted the invitation because it is the task of the general councilor for the Missions to explore new possible frontiers for the Congregation” he explained. The general councilor arrived on the solemnity of Mary Help of Christians. During the Eucharist in the main church of the apostolic administration in Atyrau, he entrusted this visit to “She who did everything.”
As early as the 4th century, Christianity was
present in this part of Central Asia, the world’s largest landlocked country,
known today as Kazakhstan. Franciscan William of Rubruck traveled to Kazakhstan
in 1254 and met Möngke Khan and Sartaq Khan, great-grandson of Genghis Khan. A
few years later Pope Nicholas III established the Diocese of Kipchak, in the
Kipchak steppe. The Kipchak people practiced Tengrism, but some of them
converted to Christianity.
Paradoxically, it was Joseph Stalin, as leader
of the Soviet Union, who caused a great increase in the Catholic population of
Kazakhstan, through the deportation of Catholics of Polish, German, and
Lithuanian ethnicity and their clergy to the country’s concentration camps.
Some of these priests helped to found the Church, within which the most widely
used language is Russian.
In 1960 there were two officially registered
Catholic churches. After the fall of communism in 1991, Pope John Paul II
established an apostolic administration for all of Central Asia. But, after the
fall of the Berlin Wall, many German Catholics returned to Germany, decreasing
the Catholic population. In 1997 the other Central Asian countries became
separate apostolic administrations. In 1999 Pope John Paul II divided
Kazakhstan into a diocese and three apostolic administrations. In 2003 Pope
John Paul II elevated the diocese of Astana, the capital, to an archdiocese,
and Almaty and Karaganda to a diocese. In 2020, 104 priests and 133 nuns served
81 parishes across the country.
Kazakhstan is a secular state whose
Constitution guarantees religious freedom. “Discrimination on religious grounds”
is prohibited and everyone is guaranteed the “right to determine and indicate
or not their ethnic, party and religious affiliation.” The recent census
indicates that the total population is 20,075,271 people. 69.3% are Muslim and
17.2% are Christian. The free practice of religious belief and the
establishment of full freedom of worship have led to an increase in religious
activity. Since 1990, hundreds of mosques, churches and other religious
structures have been built within a few years. There are conversions between “cultural
Muslims” and “cultural Christians,” since conversion is a guaranteed
constitutional right.
The apostolic administration of Atyrau is
a sui iuris pastoral zone covering the western part of
Kazakhstan, bordering Russia, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. It has 7 parishes
spread over an area of 287,278 square miles (larger than Texas). Most of the
country’s oil fields are located in this western part. Catholics represent 0.1%
(2,650) of the population of Western Kazakhstan. In many young people today
there is a desire for transcendence and a search for something that cannot be
identified. Therefore, the current situation is an excellent ground for the
first proclamation of the Gospel and for pastoral care to strengthen the faith
of the few Catholics.
Unlike other dioceses, the Church of Atyrau is
really in its infancy. The 7 parishes of the apostolic administration are small
and far from each other. Some are only in houses without a real cult building.
The challenge now is to reach the Kazakh-speaking ones. In fact, some of these
parishes are located in places where 70% are ethnic Kazakh. Diocesan priests
from Poland, Slovakia, and the Philippines work in the apostolic administration.
There is only one group of nuns working in Atyrau.
The apostolic administrator explained that he
sought unsuccessfully the help of the male and female religious congregations
in the promising but demanding work of first proclamation. He took Fr.
Maravilla to visit some parishes and to meet some parishioners and young
people. “I saw the need to reach young people, many of whom are looking for
something they can’t name,” Fr. Maravilla explained.
During their talks, he explained to the apostolic
administrator the criteria of the Congregation for accepting the opening of a
new presence in a country and the preferred beneficiaries of the Salesians of
Don Bosco: young people, especially those who are poor, marginalized and at
risk. “I just came for an exploratory visit. It is up to the apostolic administrator
to take the next step” he said. Fr. Peter Sakmar assured that these criteria
and the conditions presented by Fr. Maravilla will be discussed in their presbyteral
council.
“The rest we leave to the Holy Spirit who
blows where he wants,” Fr. Maravilla concluded.
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