Rwandan President, Paul Kagame, warned the Catholic faithful who embark on visits to pilgrimage sites against practicing “cult-like” rituals which he described as “worshipping poverty.”
The President referenced “Catholic Tourists” from the country who visited sites of Marian apparitions each year, and cautioned them against engaging in practices that glorified poverty and did not paint the government in good light.
Kagame, who spoke at a youth conference in the capital, Kigali, on Thursday, said:
“If I ever hear about this again, that people travelled to go and worship poverty, I will bring trucks and round them up and imprison them, and only release them when the poverty mentality has left them.
“No-one must worship poverty. Do not ever do that again”.
However, government spokesperson, Yolande Makolo, who addressed a press conference after the meeting, tried to clarify Kagame’s comments, saying he was not making reference to the “world-famous” Catholic site in the country located in Kibeho where the Virgin Mary is thought to have appeared.
“President Kagame did not at any point mention a specific pilgrimage site, and certainly not Kibeho,” Makolo said, following an outrage that accompanied Kagame’s statement.
Makolo added that the president was “likely referring to an informal pilgrimage-type event that takes place in Rutsiro district.”
“The aim of the President was to encourage young Rwandans to be ambitious and work hard, instead of being influenced by cult-like rituals,” she said.
According to local media reports, the first Marian apparitions at Kibeho occurred in 1981, and were recognized by the Catholic Church in 2001, with the site becoming a popular place of pilgrimage for Catholics from all over the world, hoping for a miracle or healing.
“Every year, thousands of pilgrims travel, sometimes on foot, to the town of Kibeho, known for several apparitions of the Virgin Mary to three young girls in the early 1980s,” the report said.