Roman Catholic Diocese of Maiduguri
The Diocese of Maiduguri is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church located in the city of Maiduguri in the ecclesiastical province of Jos in Nigeria.
History
- June 29, 1953: Established as Apostolic Prefecture of Maiduguri from Apostolic Prefecture of Jos
- June 7, 1966: Promoted as Diocese of Maiduguri
Special churches
The Cathedral is St Patrick's Cathedral in Maiduguri.Bishops
- Prefects Apostolic of Maiduguri
- * Father James Timothy Kieran Cotter, O.S.A.
- Bishops of Maiduguri
- * Bishop James Timothy Kieran Cotter, O.S.A.
- * Bishop Senan Louis O'Donnell, O.S.A.
- * Bishop Matthew Man-Oso Ndagoso, appointed Archbishop of Kaduna
- * Bishop Oliver Dashe Doeme
- * John Bogna Bakeni, appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Maiduguri 12 April 2022
Other priests of this diocese who became bishop
- Stephen Dami Mamza, appointed Bishop of Yola in 2011
Persecution and insecurity
Maiduguri was the diocese that suffered most from Boko Haram, having endured close to a decade of fierce persecution. Since 2020, however, the terrorist group has not carried out significant attacks in Maiduguri, a fact that Bishop Oliver Doeme attributes to divine intervention, in response to a Rosary prayer campaign he began after having a vision in which the Virgin Mary handed him a sword which turned into a Rosary. "The war was won on bended knee", he told journalists during a conference organised by Aid to the Church in Need, in July 2022.In the same conference he explained that his region of Nigeria is now relatively peaceful. "To a large extent we can say that the north-eastern part of the country is more peaceful than other parts, because Nigeria is now in crisis, and we are experiencing a lot of evil forces in our country. You have the Fulani herdsmen attacking Christian communities, you have the bandits attacking communities and taking people away. The church is not spared. In different parts of the north, priests have been killed. So, the crisis may be subsiding in the northeast, but not in other parts of the north and even in the south."
On 1 June 2025 Fr Alphonsuns Afina was kidnapped by members of Boko Haram–Islamic State West Africa Province, he spent almost two months in the hands of his kidnappers, before being released on 27 July.