The last missionary we will consider to end the month dedicated to missionaries is BISHOP CARLOS FILIPE XIMENES BELO. He was born in 1948 in the village of Wailakama ,
near Vemasse, on the north coast of Portuguese
Timor. His religious life openly denounced the brutal Indonesian occupation of his country.
In 1996, he shared the Nobel Peace Prize with José Ramos-Horta for working "towards a just and peaceful solution to the conflict inEast Timor ".
A member of the Salesian Society, he studied in Portugal and Rome before ordination to the priesthood. He returned
to Timor in 1981, where he taught.
In 1996, he shared the Nobel Peace Prize with José Ramos-Horta for working "towards a just and peaceful solution to the conflict in
On the resignation of Martinho da Costa Lopes in 1983, Father
Belo was appointed Apostolic Administrator of the Dili diocese, becoming
head of the East Timor church and directly
responsible to the Pope. On 6 February 1989, he was consecrated titular Bishop
of Lorium.
Father Belo was the choice of the Vatican 's
Pro Nuncio in Jakarta and
the Indonesian leaders
because of his supposed submissiveness, but he was not the choice of the
Timorese priests who did not attend his inauguration.
However within only five months of his assuming office, he
protested vehemently, in a sermon in the cathedral, against the brutalities of
the Kraras massacre (1983) and condemned the many Indonesian arrests. The church
was the only institution capable of communicating with the outside world, so
with this in mind the new Apostolic Administrator started writing letters and
building up overseas contacts, in spite of the isolation arising from the
opposition of the Indonesians and the disinterest of most of the world.
In February 1989 he wrote to the President of Portugal, the
Pope, and the UN Secretary-General, calling for a UN referendum on the future
of East Timor and for international help for the East Timorese, who were
"dying as a people and a nation", but when the UN letter became
public in April, he became even more of a target of the Indonesians.
After
a second massacre in the Santa Cruz
cemetery in 1991, the bishop hid a number of fleeing resistance leaders and
publicized the events to the world. As a result, he was put under surveillance,
was prohibited from travelling, and survived two attempts on his life.
Bishop
Belo's labors on behalf of the East Timorese and in pursuit of peace and
reconciliation were internationally recognized when, along with José Ramos-Horta, he was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize in December 1996.
Bishop Belo
capitalized upon this honor through meetings with Bill Clinton of
the United States and Nelson
Mandela of South
Africa . In 1995, he also won the John Humphrey Freedom Award from the
Canadian human rights group Rights & Democracy. "Let it be
stated clearly that to make peace a reality, we must be flexible as well as
wise. We must truly recognize our own faults and move to change ourselves in
the interest in making peace... Let us banish anger and hostility, vengeance
and other dark emotions, and transform ourselves into humble instruments of
peace."
In the
aftermath of East Timorese independence on 20 May 2002, the pressure of events
and the ongoing stress he endured began to show their effects on Bishop Belo's
health. Pope John Paul II accepted his resignation
as Apostolic Administrator of Dili on 26
November 2002.
"During
the Portuguese time the Church was there. During the Indonesian time the Church
was the same and now the Church will be present and preach the same values of
the gospel -- justice, peace and reconciliation -- and try to work together
with the social organizations."
In a
statement released on 8 June, Bishop Belo said that, following two meetings in
2003 and in 2004 with the Prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelisation
of Peoples, he would go on a mission to the Diocese of Maputo,
the capital of Mozambique ,
as he had wanted to since his youth. He started in July 2004; the same year he
was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from CEU Cardinal Herrera University.
In February 2011 Bishop Belo received the Prize for Lusophonic Personality of the Year, given by MIL: Movimento Internacional Lusófono in the Lisbon Academy of Sciences.
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