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This martyr sowed the seeds of Christianity in DRC

BLESSED ISADORE BAKANJA

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Philip Kosloski - published on 01/31/23

Christianity in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) was sustained by the witness of Bl. Isidore Bakanaja.

While Christianity has its roots in the DRC beginning in 1491, it took many centuries before it began to spread and take hold in this area in Africa.

The DRC has seen many missionaries over the years, but when one of its own was martyred, Christianity started to grow even more.

Meet Bl. Isidore Bakanja

Isidore Bakanja was born in 1887 in Bokendela in Belgian Congo and was evangelized by Belgian Trappist missionaries, receiving the sacrament of Baptism at 18. He was a mild and honest young man who faithfully adhered to everything the missionaries told him. He carried a rosary with him wherever he went and always wore “Mary’s Habit” (the Brown Scapular) underneath his clothing.

Bakanja was zealous in his faith and shared it with whomever would listen. While he was not an official catechist, this did not stop his desire to spread the Gospel to all of creation.

He eventually left his village and moved to a larger city where there were more Catholics. Bakanja sought work from a Belgian company and quickly discovered that they hated Catholicism as much as they despised the native African people. He asked permission to go home and was immediately refused.

One of the agents especially did not like that Bakanja always tried to preach to his fellow workers. He said, “You’ll have the whole village praying and no one will want to work.” The agent demanded that Bakanja throw away his scapular, and when he refused to do so, the agent had him flogged.

The agent flogged him not once, but twice and during the second flogging used a whip with nails at the end of it. Bakanja received over 100 blows and it left him nearly dead. However, since an inspector was due to arrive the agent sent Bakanja away. He was barely able to walk and hid himself by the side of the road until he saw the inspector.

Horrified, the inspector later wrote about what he saw that day, “I saw a man come from the forest with his back torn apart by deep, festering, malodorous wounds, covered with filth, assaulted by flies.” The inspector prevented the agent from killing Bakanja, but it was too late.

He survived for another six months, but in total agony, praying each day and offering his suffering to God. Bakanja told the missionaries who came to give him the Last Rites that he already forgave his attacker, promising prayers for his soul, “Certainly I shall pray for him. When I am in heaven, I shall pray for him very much.”

He died on August 15, 1909, with a rosary in his hand and wearing the Brown Scapular.

Pope John Paul II beatified him on April 24, 1994 and according to Vatican News, Catholicism has been growing over the past century.

Despite the ongoing political instability in the country, the Congolese Catholic Church continues to be one of the most vital Churches in Africa. This is testified by the ever-growing number of Catholics, who account for about 33% of the population (90% of which is Christian); high church attendance even among young people; flourishing vocations; Catholic lay activism and its widespread presence in society and in the media.

Bl. Isidore Bakanja’s inspiring witness continues to be a profound example of holiness in the DRC.

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