Antilles Episcopal Conference

The Antilles Episcopal Conference is a Roman Catholic episcopal conference. Its members are bishops and archbishops from current and former British, Dutch, and French colonies and dependencies in the Caribbean (excluding Haiti), Central America, and northern South America. The conference's membership includes five archdioceses, fourteen dioceses, and two missions sui iuris. These particular Churches minister to Catholics in thirteen independent nations, six British colonies, three departments of France, three countries of the Kingdom of the Netherlands and 3 municipalities of the Netherlands proper.[1]

The bishop from an American insular area has been granted observer status. The episcopal conference is led by a president, who must be a diocesan ordinary and is elected by the membership of the conference for a three year term. The conference also elects a vice president, who has the same qualifications as the president, and a treasurer, who can be a diocesan ordinary, a coadjutor bishop, or an auxiliary bishop. Additionally, a permanent board, consisting of the president, vice president, treasurer, the metropolitan archbishops, and two other elected members, handles administrative issues between plenary meetings of the conference. The president of the conference is currently Patrick Pinder S.T.D., C.M.G, Archbishop of Nassau.[2]

The Holy See appoints an Apostolic delegate to the Antilles Episcopal Conference, who also serves as the Apostolic nuncio to the independent nations of the conference, except Belize. The nunciature is located in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago. The current Apostolic delegate is Archbishop Nicolas Girasoli, who replaced Archbishop Thomas Edward Gullickson after he was appointed the apostolic nuncio to Ukraine.

Members

Diocese Bishop(s) Territory(ies)
Province of Castries
Archdiocese of Castries Robert Rivas, O.P. Saint Lucia
Diocese of Roseau Gabriel Malzaire Dominica
Diocese of Saint George's in Grenada sede vacante; Vincent Darius, O.P.; Sydney Charles (emeritus) Grenada
Diocese of Saint John's Basseterre sede vacante; Kenneth Richards (emeritus); Donald Reece (emeritus) Joseph Bowers, S.V.D (emeritus) Antigua and Barbuda, St. Kitts and Nevis, Montserrat, Anguilla, and the British Virgin Islands
Province of Kingston
Archdiocese of Kingston in Jamaica Kenneth Richards, Charles Dufour (emeritus); Donald Reece (emeritus); Lawrence Burke (emeritus); Edgerton Clarke (emeritus) Jamaica
Diocese of Belize City Belmopan Dorick McGowan Wright; Osmond Martin (emeritus) Belize
Diocese of Mandeville sede vacante; Neil Tiedemann, C.P.; Gordon Bennett (emeritus); Paul Boyle (emeritus) Jamaica
Diocese of Montego Bay Burchell McPherson Jamaica
Mission Sui Iuris of Cayman Islands Allen Vigneron Cayman Islands
Province of Nassau
Archdiocese of Nassau Patrick Pinder Bahamas
Diocese of Hamilton in Bermuda Wiesław Śpiewak C.R.; Robert Kurtz, C.R. (emeritus) Bermuda
Mission Sui Iuris of Turks and Caicos John J. Myers Turks and Caicos
Province of Port of Spain
Archdiocese of Port of Spain Joseph Harris C.S.Sp .; Edward Joseph Gilbert, C.Ss. R. (emeritus) Trinidad and Tobago
Diocese of Bridgetown Charles Jason Gordon; Anthony Dickson (emeritus); Malcolm Gault (emeritus) Barbados
Diocese of Georgetown Francis Alleyne, O.S.B.; Benedict Singh (emeritus) Guyana
Diocese of Kingstown Gerard County Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Diocese of Paramaribo Wilhelmus de Bekker; Aloysius Zichem, C.Ss. R (emeritus) Suriname
Diocese of Willemstad Luigi Secco Aruba, Curaçao, Sint Maarten, Caribbean Netherlands
Province of Fort-de-France
Archdiocese of Fort-de-France Gilbert Méranville; Maurice Marie-Sainte (emeritus) Martinique
Diocese of Basse–Terre Jean-Yves Riocreux Guadeloupe
Diocese of Cayenne Emmanuel Lafont French Guyana
Observer
Diocese of St. Thomas Herbert A. Bevard; Elliot Griffin Thomas (emeritus) United States Virgin Islands

See also

References

  1. "About Us Who We Are". Antilles Episcopal Conference. Archived from the original on 2007-08-02. Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  2. "Ad Limina Visit 2008". Antilles Episcopal Conference. 2008-06-12. Archived from the original on 8 February 2009. Retrieved 2009-01-03.

External links

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