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John Joseph Hirth

John Joseph Hirth (French: Jean-Joseph Hirth; 26 March 1854 – 6 January 1931) was a Catholic Bishop in German East Africa, known as the founder of the church in Rwanda.

John Joseph Hirth

Vicar Apostolic of Kivu (1912–1921)
Native name
Jean-Joseph Hirth
Installed12 December 1912
Term ended25 October 1920
SuccessorJulien-Louis-Edouard-Marie Gorju
Other post(s)
  • Vicar Apostolic of Southern Victoria Nyanza (13 July 1894 – 12 December 1912)
  • Titular bishop of Teveste (4 December 1889 – 6 January 1931)
  • Vicar Apostolic of Victoria Nyanza (4 December 1889 – 13 July 1894)
Orders
Ordination15 September 1878
by Charles Lavigerie
Consecration5 May 1890
by Léon Livinhac
Personal details
Born(1854-03-26)26 March 1854
Spechbach-le-Bas, Alsace, France
Died6 January 1931(1931-01-06) (aged 76)
Kabgayi, Rwanda
NationalityFrench, German
DenominationCatholic
OccupationPriest

Early years Edit

 
Maison-Carrée, novitiate of the White Fathers.

John Joseph Hirth was born on 26 March 1854 at Spechbach-le-Bas (Niederspechbach), near Altkirch in Alsace.[1] His parents were Jean Hirth, a teacher, and Catherine Sauner.[2] Hirth was fluent in both French and German.[3] After primary school he entered the secondary school at Altkirch, studied at the minor seminaries of Lachapelle-sous-Rougemont and Zillisheim, and then attended the college at Luxeuil-les-Bains. After the German acquisition of Alsace he chose French citizenship in 1872, since he was refused dual citizenship. He studied theology at the Major Seminary in Nancy from 1873 to 1875, and was then admitted to the White Fathers (Society of the Missionaries of Africa) as a novice.[2] He studied under Léon Livinhac.[4]

Hirth completed his religious and sacerdotal education at Maison Carrée, near Algiers, took his oath as a member of the society on 12 October 1876 and was ordained a priest on 15 September 1878.[2] In 1882 he was made the first Director of the minor seminary of Saint Anne in Jerusalem.[4] In 1886, he was made Director of the minor seminary of St. Eugene in Algiers.[5]

Victoria Nyanza Edit

In 1887 Hirth was assigned to Uganda, arriving at Bukumbi on the south shore of Lake Victoria in October 1887. He was given the task of running a school of catechists and a minor seminary.[5] Hirth lived at the Kamoga mission[a] for three years while directing an orphanage of children of former slaves whom the White Fathers had freed and converted to Christianity.[2] At the start of 1890 his superior as Vicar Apostolic, Léon Livinhac, heard he had been appointed Superior General of the White Fathers, and on 25 May 1890 he consecrated Hirth as his successor.[5]

Hirth was appointed Titular Bishop of Teveste and Vicar Apostolic of Victoria Nyanza (now the Diocese of Mwanza)[7] on 4 December 1889.[8] He was consecrated bishop on 25 May 1890.[9] This area included parts of modern-day Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and northern Tanzania. Hirth set the objective of making Buddu a Catholic country by the end of 1892, unleashing a surge of building and evangelical activity.[10] For several years he traveled through his huge vicariate visiting the scattered missions. The missionaries had to deal with rivalries between the local rulers, who were forming alliances with the rival colonial powers of Germany and Britain, and at times with hostility from the colonial authorities.[2]

A civil war broke out in Buganda in 1892, during which the Catholic camp was totally defeated.[11] The war pitted supporters of the French Catholic missions against supporters of the British missions in Buganda, backed by a small force of Sudanese soldiers under Captain Frederick Lugard of the Indian Army.[12] Lugard's maxim gun proved decisive. Hirth and the White Fathers moved to the Bukoba kingdoms of Kiziba and Bugabo in 1892 with about fifty Baganda Christian converts.[13] In December 1892 they founded a mission at Kashozi, in what is now the extreme north of Tanzania.[14]

In 1894 the diocese was split into Southern Nyanza, south and west of Lake Victoria, an eastern portion called "Upper Nile" that was given to the English Mill Hill Missionaries, and a northern portion called "Northern Nyanza" that covered the south and west of today's Uganda.[15] Hirth was appointed vicar Apostolic of Southern Victoria Nyanza on 13 July 1894.[1] He made Kashozi his Episcopal See.[14] Hirth moved to Rubya, where he had founded a seminary, and was personally involved in training future priests for Bukoba and Rwanda. By 1906 he had five mission posts in the Bukoba region and three in the Mwanza region.[4]Joseph Sweens was appointed coadjutor bishop to Hirth and reached South Nyanza in April 1910. Hirth returned to his old residence at Kashozi, leaving Sweens to live at the seminary of Rubya.[16] The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1912 said the vicariate had about 2,500,000 pagans, 7,000 Catholics, 12,000 catechumens, 30 White Fathers; 23 lay brothers and six Missionary Sisters of Notre-Dame-d'Afrique. There were 15 mission stations and 20 churches or chapels.[1]

Kivu Edit

German forces occupied Rwanda in 1897.[17] In 1899 Hirth traveled to that country.[18] There he tried to develop a relationship with King Yuhi Musinga. Hirth gained permission to found the first Catholic missions in Rwanda at Save, Zaza and Nyundo between 1900 and 1901. The church felt that if the king and the Tutsi ruling class of Rwanda were converted, the rest of the population would automatically accept the Catholic faith, so they focused their effort on the Tutsis. The use of the Hutu peasantry to provide low-paid or unpaid labor in building the mission stations, and identification of the White Fathers with the Tutsis, caused the Hutus to distrust the missionaries. At the same time, the growing power of the missions cause resentment among the Tutsi notables, so progress was slow at first.[19]

However, Hirth's greatest success was in Rwanda, where he had six mission posts by 1906 and ten in 1912, with 8,500 baptized Christians. In 1912 the missions in Burundi, which had been under the Apostolic Vicariate of Unyanyembe, were joined with those of Rwanda to form the Apostolic Vicariate of Kivu[4] (now Bukavu). In 1908 he had a book of prayers published in Rwanda, followed by a catechism and extracts from the Bible in 1911.[20] On 12 December 1912, Jean-Joseph Hirth was appointed the first Vicar Apostolic of Kivu.[9] He was succeeded at Southern Victoria Nyanza by Joseph Sweens.[21] Hirth established himself at Kabgayi and worked with the Rwandan seminarists there until his retirement in 1921. By then there were thirty thousand Christians in the Vicariate.[4]

Hirth retired as Vicar Apostolic on 25 October 1920.[9] He continued to teach at the seminary in Kabgayi.[4] One of his students in 1921 was the young Aloys Bigirumwami, later the first African bishop to be ordained in Belgian Africa.[22] Hirth died at Kabgayi on 6 January 1931, aged 76.[2]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The Kamoga mission had been founded at the village of Laguneda in April 1883, and was named after a local chief.[6]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Herbermann et al. 1912, p. 413.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Blatz 1987, p. 205.
  3. ^ Adekunle 2007, p. 32.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Shorter 2011, p. 79.
  5. ^ a b c Shorter 2011, p. 286.
  6. ^ Faupel 2007, p. 57.
  7. ^ "Mwanza (Archdiocese) [Catholic-Hierarchy]". www.catholic-hierarchy.org. Retrieved 2021-04-21.
  8. ^ "Bishop Jean-Joseph Hirth [Catholic-Hierarchy]". www.catholic-hierarchy.org. Retrieved 2021-04-21.
  9. ^ a b c Metropolitan Archdiocese of Bukavu.
  10. ^ Sundkler & Steed 2000, p. 586.
  11. ^ Minnaert 2008, p. 188.
  12. ^ Jeal 2011, pp. 419ff.
  13. ^ Sundkler & Steed 2000, p. 594.
  14. ^ a b Bukoba Catholic Diocese in Brief.
  15. ^ Shorter 2003.
  16. ^ Gahungu 2007, p. 62.
  17. ^ Sundkler & Steed 2000, p. 597.
  18. ^ Adekunle 2007.
  19. ^ Adekunle 2007, p. 33.
  20. ^ Blatz 1987, p. 206.
  21. ^ Prelates of Mwanza.
  22. ^ Ntamabyaliro 2011, p. 99.

Sources Edit

  • Adekunle, Julius (2007). Culture and Customs of Rwanda. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-33177-0. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  • Blatz, Jean-Paul (1987). "HIRTH Jean Joseph". Dictionnaire du monde religieux dans la France contemporaine: Tome 2, L'Alsace de 1800 à 1962. Editions Beauchesne. p. 205. ISBN 978-2-7010-1141-7. Retrieved 2013-03-31.
  • . Bukoba Catholic Diocese. Archived from the original on 2013-04-03. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  • Faupel, John F. (2007). African Holocaust: The Story of the Uganda Martyrs. Paulines Publications Africa. p. 57. ISBN 978-9966-21-629-8. Retrieved 2013-03-31.
  • Gahungu, Méthode (2007). Former les prêtres en Afrique: Le rôle des Pères Blancs (1879–1936). l'Harmattan. p. 186. ISBN 978-2-296-04471-5. Retrieved 2013-03-29.
  • Herbermann, Charles George; Pace, Edward Aloysius; Pallen, Condé Bénoist; Thomas Joseph Shahan; John Joseph Wynne; Andrew Alphonsus MacErlean (1912). The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the Constitution, Doctrine, Discipline, and History of the Catholic Church. Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  • Jeal, Tim (2011). Explorers of the Nile. Yale University Press. p. 419. ISBN 978-0-300-17827-2. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  • "Metropolitan Archdiocese of Bukavu". GCatholic.org. Retrieved 2013-03-26.
  • Minnaert, Stefaan (1 April 2008). "Premier voyage de Mgr. Hirth au Rwanda...". Histoire et Missions Chrétiennes N-005. Acculturation, syncrétisme, métissage, créolisation (Amérique, Océanie. XVIe-XIXe s.). KARTHALA Editions. ISBN 978-2-8111-4265-0. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  • Ntamabyaliro, Apollinaire (January 2011). Rwanda pour une réconciliation, la miséricorde chrétienne: Une analyse historico-théologique du magistère épiscopal rwandais (1952–1962). Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-44873-5. Retrieved 2013-03-25.
  • . The Archdiocese of Mwanza. Archived from the original on 2011-11-27. Retrieved 2013-03-29.
  • Shorter, Aylward (2003). . Dictionary of African Christian. Archived from the original on 2011-11-18. Retrieved 2013-03-26.
  • Shorter, Aylward (2011-12-01). Les Pères Blancs au temps de la conquête coloniale: Histoire des Missionnaires d'Afrique (1892–1914). KARTHALA Editions. ISBN 978-2-8111-0575-4. Retrieved 2013-03-26.
  • Sundkler, Bengt G. M.; Steed, Christopher (2000). A History of the Church in Africa. Cambridge University Press. p. 597. ISBN 978-0-521-58342-8. Retrieved 26 March 2013.

john, joseph, hirth, french, jean, joseph, hirth, march, 1854, january, 1931, catholic, bishop, german, east, africa, known, founder, church, rwanda, mafrvicar, apostolic, kivu, 1912, 1921, native, namejean, joseph, hirthinstalled12, december, 1912term, ended2. John Joseph Hirth French Jean Joseph Hirth 26 March 1854 6 January 1931 was a Catholic Bishop in German East Africa known as the founder of the church in Rwanda John Joseph HirthMAfrVicar Apostolic of Kivu 1912 1921 Native nameJean Joseph HirthInstalled12 December 1912Term ended25 October 1920SuccessorJulien Louis Edouard Marie GorjuOther post s Vicar Apostolic of Southern Victoria Nyanza 13 July 1894 12 December 1912 Titular bishop of Teveste 4 December 1889 6 January 1931 Vicar Apostolic of Victoria Nyanza 4 December 1889 13 July 1894 OrdersOrdination15 September 1878by Charles LavigerieConsecration5 May 1890by Leon LivinhacPersonal detailsBorn 1854 03 26 26 March 1854Spechbach le Bas Alsace FranceDied6 January 1931 1931 01 06 aged 76 Kabgayi RwandaNationalityFrench GermanDenominationCatholicOccupationPriest Contents 1 Early years 2 Victoria Nyanza 3 Kivu 4 Notes 5 References 6 SourcesEarly years Edit nbsp Maison Carree novitiate of the White Fathers John Joseph Hirth was born on 26 March 1854 at Spechbach le Bas Niederspechbach near Altkirch in Alsace 1 His parents were Jean Hirth a teacher and Catherine Sauner 2 Hirth was fluent in both French and German 3 After primary school he entered the secondary school at Altkirch studied at the minor seminaries of Lachapelle sous Rougemont and Zillisheim and then attended the college at Luxeuil les Bains After the German acquisition of Alsace he chose French citizenship in 1872 since he was refused dual citizenship He studied theology at the Major Seminary in Nancy from 1873 to 1875 and was then admitted to the White Fathers Society of the Missionaries of Africa as a novice 2 He studied under Leon Livinhac 4 Hirth completed his religious and sacerdotal education at Maison Carree near Algiers took his oath as a member of the society on 12 October 1876 and was ordained a priest on 15 September 1878 2 In 1882 he was made the first Director of the minor seminary of Saint Anne in Jerusalem 4 In 1886 he was made Director of the minor seminary of St Eugene in Algiers 5 Victoria Nyanza EditIn 1887 Hirth was assigned to Uganda arriving at Bukumbi on the south shore of Lake Victoria in October 1887 He was given the task of running a school of catechists and a minor seminary 5 Hirth lived at the Kamoga mission a for three years while directing an orphanage of children of former slaves whom the White Fathers had freed and converted to Christianity 2 At the start of 1890 his superior as Vicar Apostolic Leon Livinhac heard he had been appointed Superior General of the White Fathers and on 25 May 1890 he consecrated Hirth as his successor 5 Hirth was appointed Titular Bishop of Teveste and Vicar Apostolic of Victoria Nyanza now the Diocese of Mwanza 7 on 4 December 1889 8 He was consecrated bishop on 25 May 1890 9 This area included parts of modern day Uganda Rwanda Burundi and northern Tanzania Hirth set the objective of making Buddu a Catholic country by the end of 1892 unleashing a surge of building and evangelical activity 10 For several years he traveled through his huge vicariate visiting the scattered missions The missionaries had to deal with rivalries between the local rulers who were forming alliances with the rival colonial powers of Germany and Britain and at times with hostility from the colonial authorities 2 A civil war broke out in Buganda in 1892 during which the Catholic camp was totally defeated 11 The war pitted supporters of the French Catholic missions against supporters of the British missions in Buganda backed by a small force of Sudanese soldiers under Captain Frederick Lugard of the Indian Army 12 Lugard s maxim gun proved decisive Hirth and the White Fathers moved to the Bukoba kingdoms of Kiziba and Bugabo in 1892 with about fifty Baganda Christian converts 13 In December 1892 they founded a mission at Kashozi in what is now the extreme north of Tanzania 14 In 1894 the diocese was split into Southern Nyanza south and west of Lake Victoria an eastern portion called Upper Nile that was given to the English Mill Hill Missionaries and a northern portion called Northern Nyanza that covered the south and west of today s Uganda 15 Hirth was appointed vicar Apostolic of Southern Victoria Nyanza on 13 July 1894 1 He made Kashozi his Episcopal See 14 Hirth moved to Rubya where he had founded a seminary and was personally involved in training future priests for Bukoba and Rwanda By 1906 he had five mission posts in the Bukoba region and three in the Mwanza region 4 Joseph Sweens was appointed coadjutor bishop to Hirth and reached South Nyanza in April 1910 Hirth returned to his old residence at Kashozi leaving Sweens to live at the seminary of Rubya 16 The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1912 said the vicariate had about 2 500 000 pagans 7 000 Catholics 12 000 catechumens 30 White Fathers 23 lay brothers and six Missionary Sisters of Notre Dame d Afrique There were 15 mission stations and 20 churches or chapels 1 Kivu EditGerman forces occupied Rwanda in 1897 17 In 1899 Hirth traveled to that country 18 There he tried to develop a relationship with King Yuhi Musinga Hirth gained permission to found the first Catholic missions in Rwanda at Save Zaza and Nyundo between 1900 and 1901 The church felt that if the king and the Tutsi ruling class of Rwanda were converted the rest of the population would automatically accept the Catholic faith so they focused their effort on the Tutsis The use of the Hutu peasantry to provide low paid or unpaid labor in building the mission stations and identification of the White Fathers with the Tutsis caused the Hutus to distrust the missionaries At the same time the growing power of the missions cause resentment among the Tutsi notables so progress was slow at first 19 However Hirth s greatest success was in Rwanda where he had six mission posts by 1906 and ten in 1912 with 8 500 baptized Christians In 1912 the missions in Burundi which had been under the Apostolic Vicariate of Unyanyembe were joined with those of Rwanda to form the Apostolic Vicariate of Kivu 4 now Bukavu In 1908 he had a book of prayers published in Rwanda followed by a catechism and extracts from the Bible in 1911 20 On 12 December 1912 Jean Joseph Hirth was appointed the first Vicar Apostolic of Kivu 9 He was succeeded at Southern Victoria Nyanza by Joseph Sweens 21 Hirth established himself at Kabgayi and worked with the Rwandan seminarists there until his retirement in 1921 By then there were thirty thousand Christians in the Vicariate 4 Hirth retired as Vicar Apostolic on 25 October 1920 9 He continued to teach at the seminary in Kabgayi 4 One of his students in 1921 was the young Aloys Bigirumwami later the first African bishop to be ordained in Belgian Africa 22 Hirth died at Kabgayi on 6 January 1931 aged 76 2 Notes Edit The Kamoga mission had been founded at the village of Laguneda in April 1883 and was named after a local chief 6 References Edit a b c Herbermann et al 1912 p 413 a b c d e f Blatz 1987 p 205 Adekunle 2007 p 32 a b c d e f Shorter 2011 p 79 a b c Shorter 2011 p 286 Faupel 2007 p 57 Mwanza Archdiocese Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved 2021 04 21 Bishop Jean Joseph Hirth Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved 2021 04 21 a b c Metropolitan Archdiocese of Bukavu Sundkler amp Steed 2000 p 586 Minnaert 2008 p 188 Jeal 2011 pp 419ff Sundkler amp Steed 2000 p 594 a b Bukoba Catholic Diocese in Brief Shorter 2003 Gahungu 2007 p 62 Sundkler amp Steed 2000 p 597 Adekunle 2007 Adekunle 2007 p 33 Blatz 1987 p 206 Prelates of Mwanza Ntamabyaliro 2011 p 99 Sources EditAdekunle Julius 2007 Culture and Customs of Rwanda Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 33177 0 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Blatz Jean Paul 1987 HIRTH Jean Joseph Dictionnaire du monde religieux dans la France contemporaine Tome 2 L Alsace de 1800 a 1962 Editions Beauchesne p 205 ISBN 978 2 7010 1141 7 Retrieved 2013 03 31 Bukoba Catholic Diocese in Brief Bukoba Catholic Diocese Archived from the original on 2013 04 03 Retrieved 2013 03 30 Faupel John F 2007 African Holocaust The Story of the Uganda Martyrs Paulines Publications Africa p 57 ISBN 978 9966 21 629 8 Retrieved 2013 03 31 Gahungu Methode 2007 Former les pretres en Afrique Le role des Peres Blancs 1879 1936 l Harmattan p 186 ISBN 978 2 296 04471 5 Retrieved 2013 03 29 Herbermann Charles George Pace Edward Aloysius Pallen Conde Benoist Thomas Joseph Shahan John Joseph Wynne Andrew Alphonsus MacErlean 1912 The Catholic Encyclopedia An International Work of Reference on the Constitution Doctrine Discipline and History of the Catholic Church Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 26 March 2013 Jeal Tim 2011 Explorers of the Nile Yale University Press p 419 ISBN 978 0 300 17827 2 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Metropolitan Archdiocese of Bukavu GCatholic org Retrieved 2013 03 26 Minnaert Stefaan 1 April 2008 Premier voyage de Mgr Hirth au Rwanda Histoire et Missions Chretiennes N 005 Acculturation syncretisme metissage creolisation Amerique Oceanie XVIe XIXe s KARTHALA Editions ISBN 978 2 8111 4265 0 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Ntamabyaliro Apollinaire January 2011 Rwanda pour une reconciliation la misericorde chretienne Une analyse historico theologique du magistere episcopal rwandais 1952 1962 Harmattan ISBN 978 2 296 44873 5 Retrieved 2013 03 25 Prelates of Mwanza The Archdiocese of Mwanza Archived from the original on 2011 11 27 Retrieved 2013 03 29 Shorter Aylward 2003 Bishop Streicher Henri 1863 to 1952 Dictionary of African Christian Archived from the original on 2011 11 18 Retrieved 2013 03 26 Shorter Aylward 2011 12 01 Les Peres Blancs au temps de la conquete coloniale Histoire des Missionnaires d Afrique 1892 1914 KARTHALA Editions ISBN 978 2 8111 0575 4 Retrieved 2013 03 26 Sundkler Bengt G M Steed Christopher 2000 A History of the Church in Africa Cambridge University Press p 597 ISBN 978 0 521 58342 8 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Joseph Hirth amp oldid 1022480407, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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