Sudan. Missionaries involved in education.
Since the start of the evangelisation of Sudan,
education has been a priority for missionaries. And continues to be so for the
local Church.

In 1867, Mons.
Daniele Comboni worked out his Plan for the regeneration of Africa, placing
education at the centre of his work and opening a number of schools in Sudan.
Comboni died in 1881 at the age of fifty and, four years later, Mohammed Ahmed
Al-Mahdi [1844-1885] successfully waged war against the Ottoman-Egyptian
military government and gained a notable victory over the British. He then
created an Islamic state which wiped out the Christian presence. His
successors, called 'Mahdists', led by his successor (khalīfa) ʿAbd
Allāh al-Taʿāysh,
were defeated by the British in 1898. Soon afterwards, the missionaries could
return to Khartoum.
In 1900, the
first two schools after the Islamic revolution were opened in Omdurman: the
Comboni Boys and St. Joseph’s Girls School.
Even today, both schools are continuing their work of education. The girls’ school is now called Comboni Girls' School, and there are 160 pupils in the nursery school, 915 in the primary school and 97 in the secondary school. The Headmistress, Comboni Missionary Sister Cristina Maestroni tells us: “Judging by the number of applications for admission that we receive every year, we may say that the school is highly regarded for its educational standard”.
Even today, both schools are continuing their work of education. The girls’ school is now called Comboni Girls' School, and there are 160 pupils in the nursery school, 915 in the primary school and 97 in the secondary school. The Headmistress, Comboni Missionary Sister Cristina Maestroni tells us: “Judging by the number of applications for admission that we receive every year, we may say that the school is highly regarded for its educational standard”.
Fr. Jervas
Mayik , Headmaster of the Boys’ School emphasises: “The school has always been
considered a centre of excellence. We have many applications every year”. In order to respond to so many requests, the
Combonis have opened three large schools in the outskirts of Khartoum. Father
Salvatore Marrone, manager of the schools comments: “In reality the periphery
schools came about as emergency schools in the eighties when the war in the
South caused an enormous influx of South Sudanese to Khartoum and Omdurman.
With time, we managed to order and consolidate the educational situation. At
the moment, the pupils, boys and girls, number 1424”.
Today, in the
Archdiocese of Khartoum alone, around 26,000 students frequent the 59 schools
that bear the name of Comboni. Among the various educational institutions,
Comboni College of Khartoum (CCK) stands out.
The CCK began
as a quality secondary school. The British colonial government, with a document
issued in 1929, authorised the school only for non-Sudanese students. It was
inaugurated that same year with just fifteen students.
The school
enjoyed immediate success and the school authorities of the time began to
pressure the British government to allow Sudanese students to attend the
school. The British gave in in 1936 and the Sudanese enrolled en masse: many of them would make up the
section of society that achieved independence in 1956.
The present
Headmaster, Father Norberto Stonfer, recalls that, “in the CCK alone, there
were 24 Comboni Missionary Brothers and Fathers, totally dedicated to teaching.
They gave a very sound formation. Those were the golden years that forged the
'Comboni Trademark' which still continues to this day". For many years,
the examination results of the CCK students were the best in the country and
the students immediately found work. An example of the appreciation of Comboni
College occurred in 1964 when the Sudanese government ordered the expulsion of
all the missionaries in the country with the exception of those working in the
College. Father Norberto is in no doubt that it was the former students of the
CCK who appealed to the government over the expulsion. They saved the mission”.
This year, the
school has 1,100 students who may study in Arabic or English, even though it is
a challenge to find Sudanese teachers with a good standard of English. In 2014
a female section was opened with 300 students to allow South Sudanese
adolescents, who fled from the bordering country due to the civil war of 2013,
to continue their secondary education.
It is important
to remember as well the primary school that is part of the CCK and was founded
in 1949. At present it has 1150 pupils in 23 classes, with an average class
size of 50. The Headmaster, Fr. Diego Dalle Carbonare, says that this limit has
been established to improve the standard of teaching, "since the average
class size in Sudanese schools is between 70 and 80 pupils".
A third of the
students are Christian – mostly from South Sudan – and the rest are Muslim.
Besides being a compulsory subject, religion carries most points in the
official exam after primary school. Students in Catholic schools may choose
either Christianity or Islam but elsewhere the only option is Islam. "This
is to force them to study the Koran and there are also exams, which is a way of
inducing Christians to convert”, Father Diego asserts.
Nevertheless, it is possible that things may change in September this year with
the introduction of the new academic curriculum which is more universal and is
open to interreligious dialogue.
Since 1999, a group of CCK teachers have been insisting that those in charge should provide a broader range of courses. With the support of some Sudanese Muslims and that of Cardinal Gabriel Zubeir, the Catholic higher institute of education in Sudan, Comboni College of Science and Technology (CCST), was established.
Since 1999, a group of CCK teachers have been insisting that those in charge should provide a broader range of courses. With the support of some Sudanese Muslims and that of Cardinal Gabriel Zubeir, the Catholic higher institute of education in Sudan, Comboni College of Science and Technology (CCST), was established.
From its
beginnings, the CCST was open to boys and girls regardless of origin or
religious affiliation, and it stands out as a centre of interreligious dialogue
and encounter. It is the only university with chapels and rooms for Muslim
prayers. Over the years, the CCST has
opened new courses. Today it offers four university qualifications, two
three-year specialisation courses, courses of ongoing formation in Italian,
Spanish and English, teaching techniques, informatics, and a pioneering course
in Sudan on palliative care for health workers.
Enrique Bayo
Enrique Bayo