EXCLUSIVE: Catholic Mission and Cardinal Marengo discuss deepening ties and Pope Francis’ landmark visit to Mongolia

06 Jul 2023

By The Record

Cardinal Marengo
Cardinal Giorgio Marengo, Apostolic Prefect of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, centre, is pictured celebrating Mass in a 31 March 2018, file photo. Photo: CNS/courtesy AfMC Torino.

Apostolic Prefect of Ulaanbaatar Cardinal Giorgio Marengo has shared his enthusiasm and hope about the upcoming visit of Pope Francis to Mongolia.

Catholic Mission’s International Programs Coordinator Pisey Soeurn, who is based in Cambodia and travelled to meet with Cardinal Marengo in Mongolia, spoke about Catholic Missions long-term partnership in the country.

Then newly appointed Cardinal Giorgio Marengo, Apostolic Prefect of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, is pictured at the Vatican press hall prior to a consistory for the creation of 20 new cardinals by Pope Francis at the Vatican, 27 August, 2022. Photo: CNS/Carol Glatz.

Cardinal Marengo, who first arrived in Mongolia as a missionary in 2003, is the youngest Cardinal in the Catholic Church, ordained in August 2022, at just 49 years of age.

The meeting last month came at a key moment, a week after the announcement of a possible journey to Mongolia for Pope Francis later this year.

The visit of Pope Francis is to be the first papal visit to Mongolia.

Pope Francis accepts a gift during an audience with Buddhist leaders from Mongolia at the Vatican 28 May 2022. Now Cardinal Giorgio Marengo, Apostolic Prefect of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, who was named a cardinal by the Holy Father in May 2022, is pictured during the presentation of the gift. Photo: CNS/Vatican Media.

Catholics within the country only number 1,300, making it one of the smallest Catholic populations in the world. This visit is a significant and long-awaited moment.

“For the Catholic community in Mongolia, the Pope’s visit is both a sign of closeness and a source of encouragement,” Cardinal Marengo shared.

“By coming here, 9,000 kilometres from Rome, the Holy Father is demonstrating the attention of the Successor of St Peter to local realities and to what he calls the “peripheries”, i.e. distant countries, because he believes that their witness, the way they live, is a gift and a teaching for the whole universal Church,” he said.

With the upcoming papal visit to Mongolia, Apostolic Prefect of Ulaanbaatar, Cardinal Giorgio Marengo sat down with Catholic Mission’s International Programs Coordinator Pisey Soeurn in what was a key moment to discuss the importance of carrying on the great work of mission in the country. Photo: Supplied/Catholic Mission.

This meeting between Catholic Mission’s representative and Cardinal Marengo was also a key moment to evoke the long-standing relationship and the importance of carrying the great work of mission in the country, that is not often spoken about on the international scene.

Visiting places where Catholics are a minority is also part of Francis’ policy of drawing attention to people and problems in what he has called the peripheries of society and of the world.

“In fact, there is a kind of freshness and spiritual fervour here, typical of the early Churches and reminiscent of the Acts of the Apostles in the Gospel: small, simple communities, lively and open, where people pay attention to each other,” says Cardinal Marengo.

“It is also an encouragement for our young Church to continue along the path we have begun, a path of dialogue and friendship, in the footsteps of the missionaries who have gone before us, and who silently gave their lives for the Gospel and for this people,” he continued.

Pope Francis accepts a gift during an audience with Buddhist leaders from Mongolia at the Vatican 28 May 2022. Now Cardinal Giorgio Marengo, Apostolic Prefect of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, who was named a cardinal by the Holy Father in May 2022, is pictured during the presentation of the gift. Photo: CNS/Vatican Media.

Working hand-in-hand with local partners for over a decade, this trip comes ten years after the visit of the late Bishop Wenceslao Padilla, CICM, Bishop and Prefect of the Apostolic Prefecture of Mongolia, at the occasion of World Mission Month in 2013.

He was one of the key founders of the Catholic Church in Mongolia.

Invited by Catholic Mission to Australia, Bishop Wenceslao Padilla shared the missionary journey of the Catholic Church in Mongolia, stating that:

Cardinal-designate Giorgio Marengo, apostolic prefect of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, is pictured posing with a child 9 June, 2022. Photo: CNS/courtesy AfMC Torino.

“There was nothing. There was no church structure. There was no Catholic – no Mongolian Catholic. We really started from zero”.

Catholic Mission, as part of Pontifical Mission Societies, was able to help this young Church by funding the construction of Ger churches and purchasing of furniture, as well as providing support to communities most in need by supporting programs for children with disabilities.

Continuing this long-standing relationship, early this year, Catholic Mission’s Regional Mission Development Office in Cambodia welcomed one of the Cardinal’s delegates to engage in workshops and visit several Catholic Mission supported projects in Cambodia, a great opportunity for collaboration and developing further opportunities.

Catholic Mission is now supporting the Salesian Fathers Vocational Training Centre in Mongolia, dedicated to providing skills training for young people. Over the coming years, Catholic Mission’s commitment will extend to facilitating the upgrading of equipment and the launching of an electrical training program. This project is in addition to supporting the Prefecture in launching the House of Mercy Project.

Catholic Mission is looking forward to continuing to accompany the Church in Mongolia in the coming years.

Pope Francis greets then Bishop Giorgio Marengo, Apostolic Prefect of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, during an audience with Buddhist leaders from Mongolia at the Vatican 28 May 2022. Bishop Marengo was named a cardinal by the pope the next day. Photo: CNS/Vatican Media.
Pope Francis places the red biretta on Cardinal Giorgio Marengo, Apostolic Prefect of Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, during a consistory for the creation of 20 new cardinals in St Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican, 27 August 2022. Photo: CNS/Vatican Media.