Augustine Ndeliakyama Shao
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Augustine Ndeliakyama Shao,
CSSp , image = Holy Ghost Fathers seal.png , size = 175px , caption = The seal of the Congregation depicting the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and the Holy Spirit proceeding from the Trinity. , abbreviation ...
, known as Augustine Shao (born 25 September 1951) is a Tanzanian prelate of the Catholic Church who has been bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Zanzibar in Tanzania since 1997. He is a member of the
Congregation of the Holy Spirit , image = Holy Ghost Fathers seal.png , size = 175px , caption = The seal of the Congregation depicting the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and the Holy Spirit proceeding from the Trinity. , abbreviation ...
and was provincial superior of its East Africa Province from 1990 to 1996.


Biography

Augustine Ndeliakyama Shao was born in
Rombo District, Kilimanjaro Rombo is one of the seven districts of the Kilimanjaro Region of Tanzania. The district covers an area of . It is bordered to the north and east by Kenya, to the west by the Siha District and Hai District, and to the south by the Moshi Rural Di ...
, Tanzania, on 25 September 1951 the youngest child of Lusia Manyange and Mwaleli Mabolio Malamsha. His mother died when he was 9 and his father, a coffee farmer and polygamist, when he was a teenager. Despite family opposition, he studied at Usambu seminary in Kenya and Uru seminary in Moshi, Tanzania. He was ordained a priest of the
Congregation of the Holy Spirit , image = Holy Ghost Fathers seal.png , size = 175px , caption = The seal of the Congregation depicting the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and the Holy Spirit proceeding from the Trinity. , abbreviation ...
(known as the Spiritans or Holy Ghost Fathers) on 4 June 1983. He was initially assigned to the Diocese of Monze in Zambia and then worked briefly in the diocese of Livingstone. He studied missiology in Germany at the University of Bonn while engaged in youth ministry in Knechtsteden from 1986 to 1989. He worked in the United States at the University of Duquesne until he was elected to two terms as his order's provincial superior for the East African Province, serving from 1990 to 1996. He then returned to Duquesne and was teaching there when Pope John Paul II named him bishop of Zanzibar in Tanzania on 30 November 1996. He received his episcopal consecration on 27 April 1997 from Polycarp Pengo, Archbishop of Dar es Salaam, assisted by two members of the Spiritans, Bishops Bernard Ngaviliau, his predecessor in Zanzibar, and Dennis Durning, Bishop Emeritus of Arusha. As his episcopal motto he chose "Pax et Unitas" (Peace and Unity). In 2000, he described the role of a 21st-century missionary: On another occasion he explained the evolution of the missionary's appreciation of African culture: "Africans were seen as an empty tin: you had to pour water to fill it... not true. Africans knew God before any missionaries came." On 20 June 2009, Pope Benedict XVI named him a member of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue. At the Synod of Bishops special assembly for Africa in October 2009, he advised that the Catholic bishops of Africa needed to: In a 2010 interview with Vatican Radio, he addressed the question of enculturation of the Catholic faith in Africa, calling for a deeper appreciation of culture based on an examination of local traditions and a detailed understanding of local religious beliefs and practices, which would allow them to be embodied according to Gospel truths. His principal challenge as bishop has been violence against priests on the part of Muslim terrorists.


Publication

* Shao, A., "Interreligious Dialogue in Zanzibar" in ''Spiritan Horizons'', February 2020


References

;Additional sources *


External links


Bishop Augustine Ndeliakyama Shao, C.S.Sp.
on Catholic-hierarchy.org {{DEFAULTSORT:Shao, Augustine Ndeliakyama 1951 births Living people Holy Ghost Fathers Tanzanian Roman Catholic bishops Roman Catholic bishops of Zanzibar People from Kilimanjaro Region 21st-century Roman Catholic bishops in Tanzania Bishops appointed by Pope John Paul II