San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Immigrants filling pews for Black Catholics

- By Yonat Shimron

DURHAM, N.C. — The congregati­on at Holy Cross Catholic Church is an anomaly in one sense: a historical­ly Black congregati­on led by the Rev. Pius Wekesa, one of just 250 or so Black priests in the United States.

Many Black Catholics, a minority within a minority, rarely see a Black priest celebrate Mass at their church. Founded by the Jesuit order in 1939, Holy Cross has about 400 families, 70 percent of whom are Black. But it never had a Black priest before Wekesa became pastor last July.

Wekesa, and some in his congregati­on, are typical of Black Catholics in one way: They are immigrants.

Black Catholics, at about 3 million total, comprise only 6 percent of U.S. Blacks, most of whom are Protestant. And they’re an even smaller share of U.S. Catholics — 4 percent, according to a new analysis of Black Catholics published Tuesday by Pew Research.

The study, which included 562 Black Catholics among 8,660 Black adults, found that most Black Catholics worship in predominan­tly white churches. Only about 25 percent of Black Catholics

attend churches where the majority of congregant­s are also Black.

The Catholic Church has 798 predominan­tly African American congregati­ons across the country, according to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. Most of those are on the East Coast and in the South.

The study, originally fielded in 2019 and 2020 , found that 68 percent of Black Catholics are U.S.-born. A growing number — about 12 percent — are, like Wekesa, from Africa. The rest were born in the Caribbean (11 percent) or in other parts of the Americas (5 percent).

Wekesa, 59, was ordained a priest in his native Kenya and came to the Diocese

of Raleigh in 2005 to work with the growing numbers of Swahili-speaking Catholics.

The Diocese of Raleigh, which spans the 54 easternmos­t counties of the state, has 12 Black priests.

The bigger reason why Black Catholics are such a small population is that they are the least likely of all Catholics to remain in the fold. While Catholics generally are prone to religious switching, Black Catholics have the highest rates. Only 54 of U.S. Black Catholics who were raised in the faith remain so as adults (compared with 61 percent of white Catholics and 68 percent of His

 ?? Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press ?? Cardinal Wilton Gregory, the archbishop of Washington, is the first African American to be elevated to the College of Cardinals.
Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press Cardinal Wilton Gregory, the archbishop of Washington, is the first African American to be elevated to the College of Cardinals.

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