Catholic Theological Seminary in Karaganda, Kazakhstan
By Deborah Castellano Lubov
Sep 12 2022
In Kazakhstan, despite some still hard-to-shatter stereotypes about the religious affiliation of the country’s individual ethnic groups, this mentality is slowly changing, explains Fr. Ruslan Rakhimberlinov, first Kazakh rector of Central Asia’s only seminary, whose father is Muslim and mother is Orthodox. Fr. Ruslan now heads the seminary in Karaganda, where he entered two years after being baptised, and thanks God for the grace of Pope Francis’ 38th Apostolic Visit abroad to the nation.
“I am a priest who comes from this nation, from this nationality, because my father’s name is Kazakh and my mother comes from the Ukraine – but we Kazakhs always count nationality by father, so I feel and consider myself a Kazakh,” says Fr. Ruslan Rakhimberlinov from Karaganda, Kazakhstan, as he anticipates Pope Francis’ arrival in Nur-Sultan on Tuesday.
Fr. Ruslan, 39 years old, was recently appointed as the new rector of Kazakhstan’s Catholic Theological Seminary, the only Catholic seminary in Central Asia, and the first-ever ethnically Kazakh rector to run it.
Pope Francis’ visit, an opportunity
He had been baptized in the Catholic Church just two years prior to Pope St. John Paul II’s visit to Kazakhstan in 2001.
For Pope Francis’ visit to be the second time a Pope has visited “our Church” in these years since Kazakhstan’s independence, of Kazakhstan, he says “is a double joy for our seminary community.”
First Kazakh priest in the country
Also noteworthy is that Fr. Ruslan is the first Kazakh priest in the country.
“I was introduced to the Catholic Church when I was about 15 years old,” he says.
“When I was 15-16 years old,” he recalls, “I met the Catholic Church for the first time. I was baptized on Easter Sunday in 1999.
Two years later, feeling called to a vocation, and encouraged by his friend, relatives, and the priest serving as rector, Ruslan decided to enter the seminary in Karaganda.
Challenging long-standing stereotypes
In 2008, after years of formation, he was ordained a priest at the celebration of the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul on June 29.
All these years, he served as a priest in various parishes of Kazakhstan, especially in the Karaganda Diocese.
With his baptism and ordination to the priesthood, he suggests he challenged long-standing prejudices that have been rather common widespread in Kazakhstan, and that have often fueled mistrust between different religious communities.
More respect toward choosing religion freely
Fr. Ruslan, however, is grateful to see this mentality slowly changing.
Need to recognize the Gospel in Kazakhstan
Pope Francis, he goes on to explain, will find in Kazakhstan, “a Church that is familiar with the idea of synodality and puts it into practice,” because “we all realise here that the community of Catholics in Kazakhstan is a small flock.”
Catholics make up a mere 1 percent of Kazakhstan’s 19 million Kazakhs.
The country is approximately 70 percent Muslim, and 26 percent Christian, primarily Russian Orthodox.
“We are few in number, so we priests, and also men and women religious know that our future, as a Church, does not depend only on priests and deacons. It is very important for us that the laity, that is, our faithful, understand very well what their responsibility is for the Church in Kazakhstan, the Church of the future.”
Impetus for richer dialogue
The rector shared how the seminary community is preparing for the Pope’s visit and what impresses future priests in Kazakhstan most about Pope Francis’ teaching.
To prepare for the Pope’s visit, the seminary is preparing itself spiritually, with some prayer groups and meetings in parishes, especially considering Pope Francis’ teaching.
Fr. Ruslan expresses particular appreciation for Pope Francis’ latest encyclical, Fratelli tutti, saying “we are very close to dialogue among all our brothers, because in Kazakhstan so many different religions are represented.