Saturday, January 31, 2026
  • Who’sWho Africa AWARDS
  • About TimeAfrica Magazine
  • Contact Us
Time Africa Magazine
  • Home
  • Magazine
  • WHO’SWHO AWARDS
  • News
  • World News
    • US
    • UAE
    • Europe
    • UK
    • Israel-Hamas
    • Russia-Ukraine
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Column
  • Interviews
  • Special Report
No Result
View All Result
Time Africa Magazine
  • Home
  • Magazine
  • WHO’SWHO AWARDS
  • News
  • World News
    • US
    • UAE
    • Europe
    • UK
    • Israel-Hamas
    • Russia-Ukraine
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Column
  • Interviews
  • Special Report
No Result
View All Result
Time Africa Magazine
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • WHO’SWHO AWARDS
  • News
  • Magazine
  • World News

Home » Interviews » Cardinal Arinze Shares Memories of Iwene Tansi Who Could Become Nigeria’s First Saint

Cardinal Arinze Shares Memories of Iwene Tansi Who Could Become Nigeria’s First Saint

By COURTNEY MARES

January 31, 2026
in Interviews
0
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The cardinal was baptized at the age of 9 by Blessed Cyprian Michael Iwene Tansi, a Nigerian priest known for his holiness, pastoral zeal and asceticism, in 1941 and says the priest left an indelible mark on his life and vocation.

Nigeria is home to an estimated 35 million Catholics and has one of the highest rates of Mass attendance in the world. Yet despite Catholicism’s rapid growth, Africa’s most populous nation has never had a native canonized saint.

That could change with Blessed Cyprian Michael Iwene Tansi, a Nigerian priest known for his holiness, pastoral zeal and asceticism. Beatified in 1998, Tansi now needs one more miracle attributed to his intercession to be declared Nigeria’s first saint.

Cardinal Francis Arinze, now 93, one of Africa’s most prominent Catholic leaders and a retired Vatican prefect, has been a strong proponent of Tansi’s cause for sainthood. Cardinal Arinze was baptized at the age of 9 by Father Tansi in 1941 and says the priest left an indelible mark on his life and vocation.

‘He was the first priest I knew.’: Cardinal Francis Arinze recalls the witness of Blessed Cyprian Michael Iwene Tansi during an EWTN News interview. EWTN News
‘He was the first priest I knew.’: Cardinal Francis Arinze recalls the witness of Blessed Cyprian Michael Iwene Tansi during an EWTN News interview. EWTN News (photo: Daniel Ibañez / EWTN News)

“He was the first priest I knew,” Cardinal Arinze told EWTN News. “He brought me into the Church: baptism, first Communion. I was his Mass server in 1945; my first Communion at his hands. He prepared me for confirmation.”

Cardinal Arinze remembers Tansi as a tireless missionary with an extraordinary prayer life who traversed eastern Nigeria by bicycle to preach the Gospel.

“He was a parish priest single-handedly in what is now 40 parishes,” Cardinal Arinze said.

“He hadn’t a car. He had a push bicycle and a motorcycle, which functioned sometimes. He was extraordinary,” he added.

The spiritual legacy of that ministry, Cardinal Arinze said, can be clearly seen today.

“Two hundred priests have arisen from those areas; three or four bishops, one cardinal, religious sisters, more than 200 seminarians. Why? Because of this man,” Cardinal Arinze said.

“He was like fire. Fire is warm. If you are near fire, you cannot be indifferent. You will be affected,” he added.

A Life Shaped by Sacrifice

Father Tansi was born in 1903 into a poor, non-Christian family in what is now southeastern Nigeria. His childhood was marked by tragedy. His mother died after being accused by a medicine man of causing the deaths of several children in the village and was sentenced to death by poison.

Afterward, his father remarried and hoped his son would pursue education to lift the family out of poverty. Tansi was sent to a school run by the Holy Ghost Fathers, part of the early missionary presence in the region. He was baptized on July 7, 1913, taking the Christian name Michael.

“The first missionaries came to the eastern part of Nigeria in 1885. So we are new Christians, not up to 200 years yet,” Cardinal Arinze said.

At the time, most priests in Nigeria were European missionaries. Tansi was among the first cohort to study at St. Paul Seminary in Igbariam from 1925 to 1937.

“The seminary began in 1924 in that area, the first seminary in the eastern part of Nigeria,” Cardinal Arinze said. “He is [in] the second group of Nigerians who [were] then priests east of the River Niger, eastern Nigeria. In 1937, he was ordained a priest. There were three of them.”

Blessed Cyprian
This painting of Blessed Cyprian hangs in Cardinal Arinze’s apartment.(Photo: Courtney Mares)

Tansi was ordained on Dec. 19, 1937, at the Cathedral-Basilica of the Most Holy Trinity in Onitsha, for the Archdiocese of Onitsha. Cardinal Arinze met him four years into his priesthood.

“I was one of the children in the primary school which he ran,” he said.

Father Tansi also oversaw a boarding school for boys ages 10 to 12, where discipline and prayer shaped daily life.

“They had to live there from Sunday evening until Friday morning,” Cardinal Arinze said. “He read to them the life of Dominic Savio. It was like a small seminary, and they took turns serving Mass.”

“Being his Mass server, assisting him at the altar, being near him was very powerful,” he recalled.

“When he was our parish priest, to see him was like a homily, like a sermon, even when he did not speak,” he added. “To see him celebrate Mass, you could not be indifferent.”

‘His Prayer Life Was Extraordinary’

According to the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Causes of Saints, Father Tansi was deeply attentive to families, promoted chastity and the dignity of women, and emphasized the education of girls.

He lived more austerely than those he served, building his home with traditional materials, sleeping on uncomfortable beds and eating poorer food than the local people.

“His prayer life was extraordinary. His mortification, his ascetic life, he could not hide it,” Cardinal Arinze said. “Those who knew him, one person who cleaned his room revealed to people that there were little stones in his bed.”

“He ate very little, but he was always very kind to visit us and to seminarians,” he said. “He said to seminarians, ‘Eat; eat more.’ … And he would laugh and be jolly, but he would not eat much himself.”

In 1950, drawn to monastic life, Father Tansi was sent to the Trappist Abbey of Mount St. Bernard in England. He took the monastic name Cyprian and hoped to return to his native continent to help establish a monastery in Africa. His plans to found a monastery in Cameroon were cut short by failing health.

He died in England on Jan. 20, 1964, at age 61, from arteriosclerosis and a ruptured aneurysm. He was later reinterred in the Cathedral-Basilica of the Most Holy Trinity in Onitsha, Nigeria.

He was known for saying, “If you want to become a Catholic, live as a faithful Catholic, so that when people see you, they know that you are a Catholic. If you are going to be a Christian at all, you might as well live entirely for God.”

Pope John Paul II beatified Tansi on March 22, 1998, in Oba, Nigeria, making him the first West African to be beatified.

“The life and witness of Father Tansi is an inspiration to everyone in the Nigeria that he loved so much,” John Paul II said at the beatification.

BLESSED MICHEAL TANSI
An undated file portrait shows Father Cyprian Michael Iwene Tansi, who was beatified March 22, 1998, by Pope John Paul II during a Mass in Oba, eastern Nigeria.

“He was first of all a man of God: His long hours before the Blessed Sacrament filled his heart with generous and courageous love. Those who knew him testify to his great love of God,” the Pope said. “He was then a man of the people: He always put others before himself and was especially attentive to the pastoral needs of families. He took great care to prepare couples well for holy matrimony and preached the importance of chastity.”

Why Nigeria Has No Saint — Yet

Cardinal Arinze believes Nigeria’s lack of canonized saints is a reflection of the pastoral priorities of the local Church in Nigeria rather than any decision-making on Rome’s part.

“I would say that the Church in Nigeria has to place beatification and canonization causes as a pastoral priority,” he said. “There is a tendency to think of building a church, build a school, build a seminary, build a convent, but there is not such a rush to start the cause of beatification.”

“Rome cannot go around the world to promote causes,” he added. “It is for the local Church … but it has not become a priority for the Church in Nigeria.”

Cardinal Arinze also cautioned against focusing only on the sainthood causes of clergy.

“If only clerics are beatified, the impression is given that to be a good Christian you have to be a cleric,” Cardinal Arinze said.

In 2023, a cause was opened for Vivian Ogu, a 14-year-old Nigerian-born Catholic teenager killed in 2009 after refusing sexual violence.

“Causes are not promoted by logic. We pray. And also a miracle is demanded,” Cardinal Arinze said. “If there is not a miracle, the beatification will not be finalized. So … we have to pray.”

ReadAlso

Nigeria is a dangerous place to be a child – we must fix the system that repeatedly fails them

Alison-Madueke, Former Nigerian Oil Minister Faces UK Court Over £100,000 Bribery Allegations

ADVERTISEMENT

Related

Source: EWTN News
Tags: Canonization CausesCardinal Francis ArinzeCatholic ChurchCyprian Michael Iwene TansiIwene TansiNigeria
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Nigeria’s President Tinubu ‘Marked for Assassination’ in Foiled Coup Plot

Next Post

Nigeria is a dangerous place to be a child – we must fix the system that repeatedly fails them

You MayAlso Like

Interviews

INTERVIEW: Inside the UN’s Fight to Stop the Rapid Spread of Anti-Muslim Hatred

December 2, 2025
Interviews

Q&A: What are the main issues at Cop30 and why do they matter?

November 10, 2025
Interviews

Interview: Chinedu Nwonu’s Vision to Rebrand Onitsha’s Business Powerhouse

November 6, 2025
Interviews

“Do not boycott the election, change is still possible” Jean Louis Billon urges Ivorians

October 15, 2025
Interviews

Exclusive Interview with Somaliland President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi 

July 27, 2025
Interviews

Exclusive Interview with UNAIDS Executive Director: ‘The HIV Response Is in Crisis’

July 7, 2025
Next Post

Nigeria is a dangerous place to be a child – we must fix the system that repeatedly fails them

Integrity Group of Nigeria Applauds Tinubu for Advancing Nigeria–Türkiye Bilateral Relations

Discussion about this post

Nigeria’s President Tinubu ‘Marked for Assassination’ in Foiled Coup Plot

Nigeria: How suspected coup plotters planned to truncate Buhari’s handover to Tinubu

‘The Mission Must Go On’: Anthony Joshua Breaks Silence On Nigeria Tragedy

Why China hastily executed 11 members of notorious mafia family

Delta North APC Foundation Members Demand Inclusion, Call for Equitable Party Harmonisation

Nigeria is a dangerous place to be a child – we must fix the system that repeatedly fails them

  • Nigeria’s President Tinubu ‘Marked for Assassination’ in Foiled Coup Plot

    550 shares
    Share 220 Tweet 138
  • Nigeria: How suspected coup plotters planned to truncate Buhari’s handover to Tinubu

    545 shares
    Share 218 Tweet 136
  • ‘The Mission Must Go On’: Anthony Joshua Breaks Silence On Nigeria Tragedy

    545 shares
    Share 218 Tweet 136
  • Why China hastily executed 11 members of notorious mafia family

    544 shares
    Share 218 Tweet 136
  • Delta North APC Foundation Members Demand Inclusion, Call for Equitable Party Harmonisation

    555 shares
    Share 222 Tweet 139
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Nigeria’s President Tinubu ‘Marked for Assassination’ in Foiled Coup Plot

January 30, 2026

Nigeria: How suspected coup plotters planned to truncate Buhari’s handover to Tinubu

January 30, 2026

‘The Mission Must Go On’: Anthony Joshua Breaks Silence On Nigeria Tragedy

January 30, 2026

Why China hastily executed 11 members of notorious mafia family

January 30, 2026

Integrity Group of Nigeria Applauds Tinubu for Advancing Nigeria–Türkiye Bilateral Relations

January 31, 2026

Nigeria is a dangerous place to be a child – we must fix the system that repeatedly fails them

January 31, 2026

Cardinal Arinze Shares Memories of Iwene Tansi Who Could Become Nigeria’s First Saint

January 31, 2026

Nigeria’s President Tinubu ‘Marked for Assassination’ in Foiled Coup Plot

January 30, 2026

ABOUT US

Time Africa Magazine

TIMEAFRICA MAGAZINE is an African Magazine with a culture of excellence; a magazine without peer. Nearly a third of its readers hold advanced degrees and include novelists, … READ MORE >>

SECTIONS

  • Aviation
  • Column
  • Crime
  • Europe
  • Featured
  • Gallery
  • Health
  • Interviews
  • Israel-Hamas
  • Lifestyle
  • Magazine
  • Middle-East
  • News
  • Politics
  • Press Release
  • Russia-Ukraine
  • Science
  • Special Report
  • Sports
  • TV/Radio
  • UAE
  • UK
  • US
  • World News

Useful Links

  • AllAfrica
  • Channel Africa
  • El Khabar
  • The Guardian
  • Cairo Live
  • Le Republicain
  • Magazine: 9771144975608
  • Subscribe to TIMEAFRICA MAGAZINE biweekly news magazine

    Enjoy handpicked stories from around African continent,
    delivered anywhere in the world

    Subscribe

    • About TimeAfrica Magazine
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • WHO’SWHO AWARDS

    © Copyright TimeAfrica Magazine Limited 2026 - All rights reserved.

    No Result
    View All Result
    • WHO’SWHO AWARDS
    • Politics
    • Column
    • Interviews
    • Gallery
    • Lifestyle
    • Special Report
    • Sports
    • TV/Radio
    • Aviation
    • Health
    • Science
    • World News

    © Copyright TimeAfrica Magazine Limited 2026 - All rights reserved.

    This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.