CARDINAL GUGLIEMO MASSAIA
Cardinal Gugliemo Massaia (June 8, 1809-August 6, 1889), born Lorenzo Antonio Massaia, was an Italian Catholic missionary who worked for 35 years in Ethiopia, organizing missions, chiefly in the south and southwest.
Born at Piova in the kingdom of Piemonte (Piedmont), not then united to Italy, he was ordained with the name Father Gugliemo. After the receipt in Rome of reports on Ethiopia from the French explorer Antoine d’Abbadie and Father Giuseppe Sapeto, Massaia was sent to Ethiopia in 1846 to evangelize the Galla, with the title of Apostolic Vicar of the Galla. He was known in Ethiopia as Abuna Masseyas, and, when he travelled incognito in Gojam, as Signor Bartonelli, because of anti-Catholic sentiment.
In January 1849, he consecrated as bishop Monsignor Giustino de Jacobis, a Lazarist priest who subsequently played a major role in promoting the Ethiopian rite of Catholicism, and in 1853 he ordained an Ethiopian Catholic priest, Dabtara Haylu. Massaia was compelled to leave Ethiopia in 1879, and in the following year held a conference at the Convent of the Capuchin Fathers in Toulouse, France, where he announced that he had resigned as head of the Apostolic Vicariate. He also asked for new missionaries for the Galla missions.
On November 10, 1884, Massaia was elected a cardinal by Pope Leo XIII (in office 1878-1903). He died at Frascati, Italy. Seventy-five years after his death, the Italian Fascists attempted to represent Massaia as a precursor of the Italian occupation of Ethiopia, although there is no evidence in Massaia’s career of his having had any political interests. Emperor Menilek II, who became a good friend of Massaia, printed Massaia’s grammar in Amharic and Oromo (Galla) at his own expense. At the Pope’s order, Massaia wrote the record of his apostolate. Entitled I miei trentacinque anni dimissione nell’alta Etiopia, it was published in
Rome, and is a fascinating account, containing acute observations about men and manners. It was later translated into English, French, and German. His letters were collected and published in 1936.
ANDRÉ CLAIS