Stjepan Mlakić
Stjepan Mlakić (1844-1950) was a Bosnian Croat born in Fojnica who was a missionary in Africa among the tribes of Shilluks and Nuers in Sudan, and, like his colleague Bernardo Kohnen, one of the most important representatives of Croatian Africanists.
Besides his native Croatian he spoke German, Italian, English and Arabic, to which he added the language of Nilot tribe of Nuers. His letters to his brother (also a priest) in Bosnia witness about his very close contacts with Africans. It is worth to note his discovery that in Egypt, near the town of Korsko, there is the village of Ibrim, where used to live Bosnian Muslims inhabited there by an Ottoman sultan. He donated a rich collection of artifacts of African culture to the Zagreb Ethnographic Museum.[1]
He served as prefect of the Apostolic Prefecture of Bahr el-Gebel in Sudan from October 21, 1938, until his death.
Sources
[edit]- 1844 births
- 1950 deaths
- People from Fojnica
- 19th-century Bosnia and Herzegovina Roman Catholic priests
- 20th-century Bosnia and Herzegovina Roman Catholic priests
- Roman Catholic missionaries in Sudan
- Bosnia and Herzegovina Roman Catholic missionaries
- Croatian Roman Catholic missionaries
- South Sudanese Roman Catholic clergy
- Sudanese clergy
- Africanists