Africa: Pope Leo to Make 10-Day Africa Trip in April

Africa: Pope Leo to Make 10-Day Africa Trip in April


Vatican — Pope Leo XIV will make a ten-day Apostolic Journey to Africa and two others in Europe, the Holy See Press Office announced on Wednesday.

The first visit will be a day trip at the end of March in the Principality of Monaco, followed by the Africa Journey in April, and finally the six-day Journey in Spain and in the Spanish archipelago of the Canary Islands in June.

After the significant journey to Türkiye and Lebanon at the end of 2025 and after the announcement of the upcoming pastoral visits in Italy that will take him as far as Lampedusa, Pope Leo is resuming his pilgrimages throughout the world.

Africa


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The longest from 13 to 23 April–will be the one that will take him in the footsteps of Saint Augustine in Algeria, where he will visit Algiers and Annaba; then visiting Cameroon in Central Africa, with stops in Yaoundé, Bamenda and Douala; Angola, where he will visit Luanda, Muxima and Saurimo; and finally, Equatorial Guinea, where he will visit Malabo, Mongomo and Bata.

This will be a complex trip, which is at the same time a journey in the memory of the saint of Hippo, to whose figure the Successor of Peter is linked, and then touching two developing countries, with particular attention to the least, the poor and those who care for them.

Moreover, the Journey will be focused on peace.

In fact, Pope Leo will go to the Anglophone region in the north of Cameroon, where for ten years a civil war has been underway involving the regular armed forces and the separatists.

The final stage of this African Journey will be to Equatorial Guinea, the only Spanish-speaking African country.

The length of this Papal Visit nearly approaches that of Pope Saint John Paul II in 1985 when he visited seven countries in 11 days.

Monaco

Yet a lightning European day trip to the Principality of Monaco, scheduled for 28 March, on the eve of Holy Week, will inaugurate the Holy Father’s Apostolic Journeys for the first half of 2026.

The Pope wished to respond positively to the repeated invitations made by the Monegasque authorities first to Pope Francis and then to him.

The Principality is a European reality where Catholicism is the State religion and where dialogue between civil institutions and the Church maintains a concrete importance also in the public debate.

Also significant is the Principality’s commitment to peace, which will welcome a Pope for the first time in the modern era.