March 30 to April 5, 2011
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R5,50 (incl VAT RSA) Reg No. 1920/002058/06
Archbishop Tlhagale on mixed marriages
No 4720
Interview with SA’s deaf and blind priest
Medjugorje, 30 years after first ‘apparition’
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More delays for Radio Veritas in broadcast licence bid STAff RePoRTeR
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Bishop Abel Gabuza greets the faithful after his ordination as bishop of Kimberley. “I have never lived in the Kalahari; I am from the township. So I will have to adapt,” Bishop Gabuza told his new flock. “The most important thing, though, is that I have been sent here to serve you. Your hopes are my hopes. If we are going to make it, we will make it together. This is not my Church; it is our Church. We all belong to the Church.” Archbishop James Patrick Green, the apostolic nuncio, welcomed the newly ordained bishop to “the Red Hat Gang”, saying the occasion was “a historic new chapter in your life”. Addressing the crowd, Archbishop Green said: “Kimberley has sent diamonds to the world. The Vatican has now sent a diamond to you.” (Photo: Mathibela Sebothoma)
FTER a high-powered Church delegation met with the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) to discuss a medium wave broadcast licence for Radio Veritas, station director Fr Emil Blaser OP expressed frustration at the prospect of further delays. The Church delegation included Cardinal Wilfrid Napier of Durban, Archbishops Buti Tlhagale of Johannesburg and William Slattery of Pretoria, the bishops’ communications officer Fr Chris Townsend and Fr Blaser. They met with Icasa chairman Stephen Ncube and some of his staff. Fr Blaser described the meeting as “friendly but frustrating”. “There are two licences under discussion,” Fr Blaser said. “One is a ‘class licence’, which when granted gives the green light to apply for a broadcast licence. We were told that our class licence application needed nothing more. It fulfilled all the requirements.” However, the medium wave frequency which Radio Veritas want is categorised as commercial, and therefore not open to community radio. Icasa’s council has gazetted this matter only recently. “The public is welcome to lodge any objections to the medium frequencies being declared open to community radio. Up to now, no commercial entity has shown any interest. We were told that no one else was interested in the frequency we wanted,” Fr Blaser said. The recategorisation process is expected to conclude on July 13. The priest expressed frustration at a processs that after years of application still remains unresolved. “Two years ago a similar request was issued in the government gazette, but the gazetted information was in many respects
not accurate, to say the least. Some of the requested medium wave frequencies were not listed. Prior to the gazetted matter, Icasa had said publicly that the frequencies would be changed. This did not happen.” Earlier this year, Radio Veritas was told that the process would be finalised by the end of February—but that deadline was also missed, and the Catholic radio station has been told that they will be informed in July whether their application will proceed. “The goal posts have been shifted once more,” Fr Blaser said. “Over the past 11 years we have done everything in our power to move forward but have met with stubborn bureaucracy. For example, Icasa wants to process our class licence at the same time as our broadcast licence. However, one cannot apply for a broadcast licence without first receiving a class licence. We believe the class licence could have been granted without detriment to a possible spectrum licence. But this has become the stumbling block and we have to wait for bureaucratic processes to take place before anything can happen.” Fr Blaser also regretted Icasa’s lack in communications. “Were it not for the fact that I enquired by telephone in January about the progress of our class licence, nothing would have happened; the high ranking delegation would not have taken place.” For now, he said, “there appears to be some light at the end of the tunnel and it appears that Icasa would like to help”. Bureaucratic processes must now take their course, “and we wait in hope”, he said. Fr Blaser encouraged Catholics to voice their concerns to Icasa by e-mail (chair man@ICASA.co.za; with a copy to eblaser@ radioveritas.co.za). In the meantime, he said, “let us keep this matter in our prayers. We have faith that in the end we will achieve our objectives”.
Joy as Kimberley diocese gets a diamond BY MATHIBelA SeBoTHoMA
‘E
k is hier om te bly” (I’m here to stay), said Bishop Abel Gabuza at his first Mass taking charge of the cathedra, or bishop’s chair, at St Mary’s cathedral in Kimberley. He became the sixth bishop of Kimberley and the diocese’s first black bishop, succeeding Bishop Erwin Hecht OMI, who retired in December 2009. Almost all the region’s bishops, more than 100 priests, scores of deacons, dozens of women religious and about 5 000 of laity, travelled from all over South Africa, saw Bishop Gabuza, 56, ordained and installed. During his homily at the installation Mass at St Patrick’s cricket grounds, Archbishop George Daniel, retired of Pretoria, sketched a picture of God’s providence in the life of Bishop Gabuza, who was born in Alexandra township and raised in Tembisa. He encouraged the new bishop to be a “father to all families and individuals” in his diocese. The rejoicing wasn’t just limited to Kimberley, the whole country, including Lesotho, Botswana and Namibia, was represented.
“He really was very happy and thrilled about the support he got from the archdiocese of Pretoria,” said Ignitia Motiang from Mabopane. “His race does not matter. Leave that to politicians. They have picked the right man for the job,” said Mpho Mashamaite, the former altar girl of the bishop. Khabo Mahlangu, a nurse, said the appointment of black bishops is long overdue “because there are few black bishops in South Africa”. Sheila Masilo said the new bishop “can identify with our needs and culture as he is local, and local is lekker.” “I hope he will resuscitate discussions on inculturation,” said Sr Letta Mosue. She said the Catholic Church is losing members to Charismatic groups and African Initiated Churches because of the Church’s preference for a Eurocentric style of worship. Gideon Huma, a former classmate, thought the appointment of a black bishop was significant as “it demonstrates the aspired transformation within the Catholic Church”. “For too long diamonds has been exported in its raw and unprocessed form out of the Northern Cape and returned in a processed, more expensive product. This is indeed a moment of rarity where a diamond
has been given to the people of the Northern Cape, in refined form, moulded in the engine rooms of the Catholic doctrine,” Alvin Botes, MEC for social development in the Northern Cape, told The Southern Cross. “Our wish is that Bishop Gabuza will translate his youthful activism into the terrain of leading the fight against poverty, with the many partners of the Church,” Mr Botes said. Qopane, a seminarian, encouraged the people of Kimberley to “drink from their own wells”. He says, unlike Bishop Hecht, the new bishop does not have benefactors in Germany. “Together with the new bishop they need to learn to take care of their own diocese and sustain it themselves.” Bishop Gabuza has profound pastoral experience. In Pretoria he held positions of seminary lecturer, dean, vicar-general and apostolic administrator. He is the first president of African Catholic Priests Solidarity Movement. Bishops Xolelo Kumalo of Eshowe and Sithembele Sipuka of Mthatha are former members of the movement. Victor Sofala of the Marriage Preparation Team in Garankuwa said Bishop Gabuza will boost marriage and family life in Kimberley. He attributes his 30 years of marriage to Vic-
toria to the support they received from the new bishop. “He is very inspirational and a good preacher,” says Jury Tshoke of Christ the New Man parish. This was evident at the ordination as people laughed out loud and clapped hands at his humour and wisdom. Pritchard Boyce from Tembisa was impressed by hundreds of people who came from the archdiocese of Pretoria to support their former priest. Jackson Maphanga says “the son of the soil is multilingual”. He speaks English, Sepedi, Sesotho, Tsonga and isiZulu fluently. To everyone’s amazement, Bishop Gabuza spoke Setswana and Afrikaans at the ordination ceremony. Mr Maphanga predicted that the bishop will soon master all the languages spoken in his new diocese, including isiXhosa. Dr Linda Zwane of Witbank advised his former seminary classmate “to form a strong pastoral team of priests around him as he is new to Kimberley and in a sense an outsider. This will do him good”. “He is here to stay and he will be a good bishop even more than a diamond” concluded Fr Bernard Seane, a senior priest in Kimberley.