Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences
The Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences (FABC) is an association of episcopal conferences of Catholic Church in South, Southeast, East and Central Asia. The federation fosters solidarity and joint responsibility for the welfare of the Church and of society in the region.[1]
Abbreviation | FABC |
---|---|
Legal status | Civil nonprofit |
Region served | Asia |
Membership | Episcopal conferences of Asia |
Main organ | Conference |
Website | www |
The conference includes sixteen (or nineteen) Bishops' Conferences from Bangladesh, East Timor, India (both the CBCI and the individual conferences of the Syro-Malabar, Syro-Malankara and Roman Rites), Indonesia, Japan, Kazakhstan, Korea, Laos-Cambodia, Malaysia-Singapore-Brunei, Myanmar, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan (RoC), Thailand and Vietnam. Associate members are from Hong Kong, Macau, Mongolia, Nepal, Novosibirsk (Russia), Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan.[2]
Member Bishops' Conferences
Full members
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of Bangladesh
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of India
- Conference of Catholic Bishops of India – Latin Rite
- Syro-Malabar Bishops' Synod
- Holy Episcopal Synod of the Syro-Malankara Catholic Church
- Bishops' Conference of Indonesia
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of Japan
- Bishops' Conference of Kazakhstan
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of Korea
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of Laos-Cambodia
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of Myanmar
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of Pakistan
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of Sri Lanka
- Chinese Regional Bishops' Conference (Taiwan)
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of Thailand
- Episcopal Conference of Timor-Leste
- Catholic Bishops' Conference of Vietnam
Associate members
Presidents
- Cardinal Stephen Kim Sou-hwan, Archbishop of Seoul, South Korea (1973 – 1977)
- Mariano Gaviola y Garcés, Archbishop of Lipa, Philippines (1977–1984)
- Henry Sebastian D'Souza, Archbishop of Calcutta, India (1984–1993)
- Oscar Cruz, Archbishop of Lingayen-Dagupan, Philippines(1993–2000)
- Oswald Gomis, Archbishop of Colombo, Sri Lanka (2000–2005)
- Cardinal Orlando Quevedo, Archbishop of Cotabato, Philippines (2005 – 2011)
- Cardinal Oswald Gracias, Archbishop of Bombay, India (2011 – 2018)[3]
- Cardinal Charles Maung Bo, Archbishop of Yangon, Myanmar (2019[3] - present)
Asian Youth Day
Asian Youth Day was started in 1999 under the auspices of the federation.[4]
AYD 1 - 1999, Hua Hin, Thailand, “Asian Youth Journeying with Jesus Towards the Third Millenium”
AYD 2 - 2001, Taipei, Taiwan, “We are Called to Sanctity and Solidarity”
AYD 3 - 2003, Bangalore, India, “Asian Youth for Peace”
AYD 4 - 2006, Hong Kong, “Youth, Hope of Asian Families”
AYD 5 - 2009, Imus, Philippines, “YAsia Fiesta! Young Asians: Come Together, Share the Word, Live the Eucharist”
AYD 6 - 2014, Daejeon, Korea, “Asian Youth, Wake Up! The Glory of the Martyrs Shines on You”
AYD 7 - 2017, Yogyakarta, Indonesia, “Joyful Asian Youth! Living the Gospel in Multicultural Asia”
See also
- Catholic Church in Asia
References
- "Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences'". Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences'. Retrieved 2012-03-08.
- "members". Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences'. Retrieved 2012-11-08.
- Sainsbury, Michael (12 January 2019). "Myanmar cardinal to focus on peacebuilding as he takes over helm of FABC". Crux. Catholic News Service. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
- "AYD Background & History".
Further reading
- Rosale, Gaudencio; Arevalo, C. G., eds. (1997). For All the Peoples of Asia, FABC Documents from 1970-1991. 1. Claretian Publications.
- Eilers, Franz-Josef, ed. (1997). For All the Peoples of Asia, FABC Documents from 1992-1996. 2. Claretian Publications.
- Eilers, Franz-Josef, ed. (2002). For All the Peoples of Asia, FABC Documents from 1997 to 2001. 3. Claretian Publications.
- Eilers, Franz-Josef, ed. (2007). For All the Peoples of Asia, FABC Documents from 2002 to 2006. 4. Claretian Publications.
- Vimal, Tirimanna, ed. (2014). For All the Peoples of Asia, FABC Documents from 2007 to 2012. 5. Claretian Publications.