Kyrgyzstan's only Catholic bishop dies
Bishop Nikolaus Messmer of Kyrgyzstan._RV. |
(Vatican Radio)
The Jesuit apostolic administrator of the Kyrgyzstan, Bishop Nikolaus Messmer
died on Monday at the age of 61. He was the only Catholic bishop in the
mountainous central Asian country.
Born in 1954 to
a family of German descent, Messmer entered the Jesuits in 1975. After his
ordination he went to serve the tiny Catholic community in the only existing
church of St Michael Archangel in the capital Bishkek. The church was built in
1969 by German Catholics who had emigrated to central Asia following Stalin’s
orders to relocate them from the Volga region. The original one story building
was expanded in 1981 to house the growing number of worshippers.
Besides St
Michael Archangel, there are two other parishes in Kyrgyzstan, Blessed Mother
Theresa of Calcutta in Jalalabad and a third in the town of Talas. Jesuit
missionaries and a few sisters have been working in the region for several
years, travelling from these centres to visit other small groups of Catholics
scattered around the country.
In 1997 Pope
John Paul II established a mission territory in Kyrgyzstan and in 2006 Pope
Benedict elevated it to an apostolic administration.
Kyrgyzstan is
one of the five former Soviet republics of central Asia that emerged as
independent countries in 1991. The largely Muslim nation, home to around a
hundred different ethnic groups, shares borders with Kazakhstan, China,
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.
(Philippa
Hitchen)
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