Vocation Story: Brother Philosopher

He had always wanted to be a ‘techie’, but the surprise was round the corner. He met with philosophy and fell in love with it, to the point of becoming a philosopher. Bro. Jean-Marie Mwamba tells us his story.

I was born in 1974, in Kolwezi, the capital city of Lualaba Province, in the south-eastern part of the DR Congo, in a Catholic family of eight children. From my childhood, my mother made me get used to going to morning mass with her. I have no doubt that this is where my desire to serve the Lord was born, first as an altar boy, then as a reader of God’s word, and eventually, as a young man, to consecrate myself to God for mission as a Comboni Brother.

Even today, I value the ministry of reading the Holy Scriptures during liturgical ceremonies. So much so, that I continue to be a ‘lector’ in my home parish. Whenever I go home for my holidays, I exercise with deep joy this apostolate as a member of the liturgical group.

I did my primary and secondary education in Catholic schools. It was during secondary school that the desire to consecrate myself to religious life matured in me. It was a perspective that was constantly before my eyes during the years I spent at Mutoshi Technical Institute in Kolwezi, where I studied industrial electronics.

After secondary school exams, I moved to Kinshasa to continue my university studies. In the capital city, I got to know the Comboni missionaries through the friendship I developed with one of them, a native of the Central African Republic, who had come to Kinshasa to finish his theology courses. He is now a priest. I will eternally be grateful to him, because it was through the many conversations, I had with him that I began to know and savour the Comboni charism and style of life.

Through reading the life of Comboni and the testimonies of some Combonian missionaries, I was more and more motivated to become a Comboni missionary. 

Although my friend was studying to become a priest, the vocation of the religious Brother was still clear to me, but now it became an impellent call and commitment to human advancement.

After some time of discernment, I began my training as a Comboni Brother. And here I must reveal an almost inexplicable ‘conversion’. I had always dreamed of continuing with my technical studies and acquiring a trade or technical profession. However, during the first years of Postulancy, I came across a science that fascinated me: philosophy. Its beauty bewitched me irreparably. A beauty that increased with the passage of time, mostly spent devouring books and philosophy texts. Today I am happy and proud to be a philosopher.

After my undergraduate studies at the Edith Stein Philosophy School in Kisangani, in 2003, I was admitted to the novitiate at Kimwenza, in Kinshasa, where I spent two years. In 2005, after my first religious vows, I was sent to the International Centre of the Brothers, in Nairobi, to continue my formation. In agreement with the superiors, I was able to enrol in a graduate programme in philosophy at the Catholic University of the Eastern Africa (CUEA). Obtained the master’s degree in 2008, then I was assigned to the Comboni Province of Togo-Ghana-Benin, as a member of the formation team of the institute’s Postulancy, at Adidogomé (western suburb of Lomé) and teacher of philosophy in the School of Philosophy.

I have never limited myself to teaching philosophy. I always wanted to carve out time to devote to pastoral ministry. In Adidogomé, I worked with the parish youth group. In 2011 I went back to Kinshasa where I did my perpetual religious profession. Immediately after, I returned to Nairobi for my doctoral studies in philosophy at CUEA, which I finished by defending my thesis in November 2015. My superior appointed me as a teacher of philosophy at the Edith Stein Philosophy School in Kisangani.  The following year, I was appointed Rector of that institution, a position that I hold to this day.  And here I am now, a Comboni missionary Brother, engaged mostly in the field of teaching.

WELCOME TO COMBONI MISSIONARIES IRELAND

The Comboni Missionaries are an international Catholic religious and missionary Order founded by Bishop Daniel Comboni in Verona (Italy) in 1867, specifically to serve the missionary endeavour of the Catholic Church.