John Olufemi Onaiyekan
“I see the elevation as a great honour to Africa, Nigeria, my country
and (Nigeria’s capital) Abuja,” the 68-year-old told AFP by phone from
Rome.
“It is an encouragement for me to continue the good works that I have been doing for humanity,” he added.
Onaiyekan has won widespread
respect for his efforts to ease religious tensions in Africa’s most
populous nation, where divisions have led to deadly clashes.
He has used the pulpit to speak against misgovernance and build
bridges between Islam and Christianity in a country almost evenly
divided between the two faiths.
With Nigeria facing a deadly insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram, a number of Evangelical leaders have ominously raised the possibility of Christians being forced to defend themselves.
Onaiyekan has however been a voice of reason and has urged calm,
saying Boko Haram extremists were not representative of average Muslims
in the country.
He co-chairs a key inter-religious forum with Nigeria’s top Islamic leader, Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar.
Joseph Faniran of the Catholic Institute of West Africa told AFP Onaiyekan “richly deserves” the appointment.
Onaiyekan, who holds a doctorate in biblical theology, was ordained
as a Catholic priest in 1969 and appointed by the late Pope John Paul II
as a permanent member of the Synod of Bishops in Rome.
American James Michael Harvey, Lebanon’s Bechara Boutros al-Rahi,
India’s Baselios Cleemis Thottunkal, Colombia’s Ruben Salazar Gomez and
Filipino Luis Antonio Tagle, were the other prelates named to the
College of Cardinals on Wednesday.
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