Stan Chu Ilo

Stan Chu Ilo est professeur principal de recherche sur la christianité mondiale, les études africaines et la santé mondiale au Centre pour le catholicisme mondial et la théologie interculturelle de l'Université DePaul, et le responsable du Réseau panafricain catholique de théologie et de pastorale.

Le Pape Léon va-t-il aller au-delà de son pèlerinage en Afrique ?

I stood among the concelebrating priests at Pope Leo’s Palm Sunday Mass in St. Peter’s Square. There, I watched the choreography of solemn ritual, spiritual power, and papal presence unfold. What caught my attention, as a Black Catholic priest, was the quieter symbolism at the altar. Two African priests were among the principal masters of ceremony at the Mass, which…

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Les États-Unis et Israël combattent une guerre injuste en Iran

Reading the recent threats issued on Truth Social by President Trump on Easter Sunday, and his public statements on Easter Monday, threats to completely destroy Iran by Easter Tuesday, to blow up bridges, to dismantle power plants, if the Strait of Hormuz is not opened by Iran, were not only disturbing; they were heartbreaking. It forces one to ask, with…

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La guerre de choix : pourquoi l'Amérique ne doit pas répéter l'Irak en Iran

President Trump is dragging the U.S. into an unnecessary war without any national conversation or the approval of Congress. This military operation is both ill-advised and wrong-headed. President Trump is going into it alone without the consent of any of America’s allies in the Middle East, the G20, NATO, or elsewhere, except Israel. Iran was already negotiating in good faith,…

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Retour à Dieu: Le Pape Léon XIV, Mercredi des Cendres, et la signification spirituelle du Carême

“Remember that you are dust, and unto dust you shall return. Repent and believe the Gospel.” The liturgy of Ash Wednesday places before the Church a truth that is at once sobering and profoundly liberating. “Remember that you are dust.” Humanity is dust—finite, vulnerable, radically dependent on God. Yet this incompleteness is not a defect in our humanity. It is…

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Vous êtes ce que vous portez : Repenser comment les prêtres, les politiciens et les universitaires s'habillent en Afrique

The ongoing cultural debate that erupted at the Ghana–Zambia economic forum in Lusaka between Zambians and Ghanaians over the dress code for African politicians and public officials is both interesting and revealing. It is revealing not because of what people said, but because the debate exposed Africa’s unresolved relationship with identity, dress codes, modernity, and power. The debate was triggered…

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L'héritage éternel de Fela Anikulapo Kuti

The recent Lifetime Achievement Award given to the Father of Afrobeat, Nigeria’s Fela Anikulapo Kuti, calls for celebration and reflection on his enduring legacy. Fela is the first African to win this award, albeit posthumously. While many of his numerous admirers will wonder why he never received it while he was alive, or why it has taken nearly three decades…

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