Fridolin Ambongo Besungu | |
|---|---|
| Archbishop of Kinshasa | |
Besungu in 2019 | |
| Church | Catholic Church |
| Archdiocese | Kinshasa |
| See | Kinshasa |
| Appointed | 1 November 2018 |
| Installed | 25 November 2018 |
| Predecessor | Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya |
| Other posts |
|
| Previous posts |
|
| Orders | |
| Ordination | 14 August 1988 |
| Consecration | 6 March 2005 by Joseph Kumuondala Mbimba |
| Created cardinal | 5 October 2019 byPope Francis |
| Rank | Cardinal-Priest |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Fridolin Ambongo Besungu (1960-01-24)24 January 1960 (age 66) Boto,Belgian Congo |
| Alma mater | Alphonsian Academy |
| Motto | Omnia omnibus (All things to all) |
| Coat of arms | |
Fridolin Ambongo BesunguOFMCap (born 24 January 1960) is aCongolese Catholic prelate who has served asArchbishop of Kinshasa since 2018. He was previouslyBishop of Bokungu-Ikela from 2004 to 2016,Apostolic Administrator of Kole from 2008 to 2015,Archbishop of Mbandaka-Bikoro from 2016 to 2018, Apostolic Administrator of Bokungu-Ikela from 2016 to 2018, and Coadjutor Archbishop of Kinshasa in 2018. He is a member of theOrder of Friars Minor Capuchin.
Ambongo served as a parish priest and as a professor before his episcopal career and since becoming a bishop has been a leading voice among his conferees for national peace.[1][2] Pope Francis raised him to the rank ofcardinal on 5 October 2019. In 2023 he became president of theSymposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar. He is a member of theCouncil of Cardinals.
Fridolin Ambongo Besungu was born in Boto on 24 January 1960 and prepared for thepriesthood by studyingphilosophy in Bwamanda andtheology from 1984 to 1988 at the Saint Eugène de Mazenod Institute.[3] He also entered theOrder of Friars Minor Capuchin where he made his initial vows in 1981 and hisperpetual profession in 1987.[4] He later obtained adegree inmoral theological studies from theAlphonsian Academy inRome, and he speaks Italian.[5]
Ambongo wasordained to the priesthood on 14 August 1988 following the completion of his education. He worked as a parish priest in Bobito from 1988 until 1989 and then as a professor at the Catholic Faculties of Kinshasa.[6] He taught moral theology at the Mazenod Institute from 1995 to 2005.[3] He also served as both the major superior and the vice-provincial for his order for the vice-province of the Congo.[4]
Pope John Paul II appointed himBishop of Bokungu-Ikela on 22 November 2004.[6] He received hisepiscopal consecration on 6 March 2005 fromJoseph Kumuondala Mbimba with theco-consecrators Giovanni d'Aniello and CardinalFrédéric Etsou-Nzabi-Bamungwabi in an open-airMass in front of the Bokungu Cathedral. On 30 October 2008Pope Benedict XVI named himapostolic administrator for Kole, a post he held until 9 August 2015. He made his first "ad limina" visit to Francis on 12 September 2014.
Pope Francis first named himapostolic administrator for Mbandaka-Bikoro on 5 March 2016[7] and then Archbishop of that see on 12 November, while retaining responsibility for Bokungu-Ikela as Apostolic Administrator.[8] He was installed in his new see on 11 December 2016.[9]
In 2016–18 he decried the repeated attempts of Congo PresidentJoseph Kabila to push backthe election in the Congo believing that it sets an alarming precedent and demonstrates the President's unwillingness to relinquish power.[1] He defended those Catholics who organized pro-democratic demonstrations that drew violent responses from police forces. After these violent clashes he signed a statement on behalf of the bishops stating that the prelates "deplored the attack on human life" while offering their condolences to the families of "innocent victims" killed in the clashes.[1] The statement further called for a "serious and objective investigation" to determine those responsible for the extreme violence. Ambongo opposes Kabila's candidacy for another term as president. Ambongo later led a mission of bishops toLusaka,Zambia, to meet with Zambian PresidentEdgar Lungu to urge him to support holding peaceful elections in the D.R.C. in December 2018. In their message to Lungu, the bishops urged support for a "credible, transparent, inclusive and peaceful election" to solve "the socio-political crisis" plaguing the nation. Ambongo also celebrated a Mass in Zambia on 9 September 2018 urging Zambians never to lose peace in their nation.[2]
On 30 May 2018, Ambongo issued a statement in Mbdanka-Bikoro announcing that there would be a suspension of those sacraments that require physical contact to administer due to an outbreak ofEbola in the area. He said that "this is to prevent the spread of Ebola hemorrhagic fever". He also advised giving thesign of peace verbally rather than physically.[10]
Ambongo condemns the exploitation of natural resources and believes thatrenewables will help alleviate the impact ofclimate change in the world. In a 4 March 2015 interview inRome, Ambongu said that "the future is this renewable energy, namely solar panels" in order to reduce climate change, highlightingsolar panels as an effort to shift gradually to renewables.[11] He continued that "we, as the Church, are not opposed to the exploration of natural resources", though asserted that such exploration needed to be both legal and transparent. Ambongo also collaborated with CardinalChristoph Schönborn to secure a meeting between the German and Congo environmental ministers to discuss what the countries could do to improve the quality of the environment in their respective nations.[11]
In March 2015 he reported that he has received death threats: "I am a person in danger in Congo." With a nervous laugh he told a French radio outlet: "I am in danger. This is true."[11]
In June 2016 he was elected vice-president of theEpiscopal Conference of the Congo (CENCO).[12]
On 6 February 2018, Pope Francis appointed Ambongo thecoadjutor forthe Kinshasa archdiocese,[12] to succeed CardinalLaurent Monsengwo Pasinya upon his resignation. He was presented to the archdiocese as coadjutor on 11 March 2018. He became Archbishop when Francis accepted Pasinya's resignation on 1 November 2018.[13] He was installed there on 25 November 2018.[14]
On 5 October 2019, Pope Francis made himCardinal-Priest ofSan Gabriele Arcangelo all'Acqua Traversa.[15] He was made a member of theCongregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life on 21 February 2020.[16] On 15 October 2020, Pope Francis appointed him to theCouncil of Cardinal Advisers.[17] He participated as acardinal elector in the2025 papal conclave that electedPope Leo XIV.[18]
In February 2023, Ambongo was elected president of theSymposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM).[19]
In this role he wrote a statement insisting the bishops of Africa enjoy communion with Pope Francis, Cardinal Ambongo Besungu said African Bishops nevertheless "believe that the extra-liturgical blessings proposed in the declarationFiducia Supplicans cannot be carried out in Africa without exposing themselves to scandals."[20]
Following his opposition to Fiducia Supplicans, he wrote a document with CardinalVíctor Manuel Fernández that refuses any blessing of homosexual couples, arguing that such blessings "cannot be carried out in Africa without exposing themselves to scandals". It was submitted to Pope Francis and also signed by Fernández.[21] In a latter stated in an interview with French-language Catholic television channel KTO, Ambongo stated that the African rejection of the document was due it being perceived as "a kind of Western imperialism", and to force same-sex blessing on African culture would be akin to "cultural colonization".[22]
In a 2024 audio recording, Ambongo can be heard sayingWesterners have "decadent morals", since "they do not like children" he wishes them "a good demise".[21]
In April 2024, the prosecutor general of theCourt of Cassation ordered the opening of a judicial investigation against Fridolin Ambongo Besungu. Fridolin Ambongo Besungu is accused of seditious remarks constituting "false rumors, inciting populations to revolt and attacks against human lives".[23]
| Catholic Church titles | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Joseph Mokobe Ndjoku | Bishop of Bokungu–Ikela 22 November 2004 – 12 November 2016 | Succeeded by Toussaint Iluku Bolumbu |
| Preceded by Joseph Banga Bane | Vice-President of the Congolese Episcopal Conference 24 June 2016 – | Incumbent |
| Preceded by | Archbishop of Mbandaka–Bikoro 12 November 2016 – 6 February 2018 | Succeeded by Ernest Ngboko Ngombe |
| Preceded by | Archbishop of Kinshasa 1 November 2018 – | Incumbent |
| Preceded by | Cardinal-Priest of San Gabriele Arcangelo all'Acqua Traversa 5 October 2019 – | |