Home/Stay Informed/All Diocesan Articles

All Diocesan Articles

Welcoming the Stranger: Archbishop Kevin S. Randall Embraces Diversity, Service in Bangladesh as Church's new Apostolic Nuncio

Posted on November 21, 2023 in: News, Vocations

Welcoming the Stranger: Archbishop Kevin S. Randall Embraces Diversity, Service in Bangladesh as Church's new Apostolic Nuncio

Archbishop Kevin S. Randall had the opportunity recently to celebrate Mass with members of Connecticut’s Bangladeshi community, a tight-knit group of about 600 worshipers based in Manchester. 

A well-traveled man who has served in Roman Catholic diplomatic posts on four continents, Archbishop Randall, the Church’s newly-named Apostolic Nuncio to Bangladesh,c

“We’re a country of immigrants and it takes different forms at different times. It’s interesting to see what attracts them,” the New London native said several weeks before his ordination to bishop Nov. 4, 2023 at the Cathedral of St. Patrick in Norwich. “The Bible says to ‘Welcome the stranger,’ and we know that is certainly a big theme of Pope Francis, to welcome with open arms those who are in need.”

Connecticut’s Bangladeshi Catholics were present at the ordination, where members of the choir sang. Soon, their countrymen will welcome the Archbishop with the Titular See of Glenndálocha, as he is now known, to his new home. Archbishop Randall will move abroad on Nov. 23 and be based in Bangladesh’s capital of Dhaka, in the nunciature there. 

It’s a country of about 170 million people, 91% Muslim and 8% Hindu. Catholics comprise about 400,000 of the population. 

A soft-spoken man never at a loss for words, he felt a mix of excitement and nervousness when he learned in August of his appointment as Apostolic Nuncio to Bangladesh by Pope Francis. 

“I’m excited to become a bishop and to be given this Apostolic mission,” he said. “The nervousness would be more about what does it mean to become an Apostle,” he said. 

From North and South America to Europe and Africa, Archbishop Randall, 57, has traveled much of the globe during his 20-plus years as part of the diplomatic service of the Holy See.

It’s given him a unique window on the world that, he said, will help him in his role as a Papal ambassador in Bangladesh. It’s his first assignment in an Asian country. 

“I appreciate the confidence that the Holy Father and superiors in Rome have placed in me,” he added. 

The Nuncio is “the person that represents the Pope to the local church,” he said. “And is an accredited diplomat to the local government.”
In his long diplomatic career, he has had the opportunity to be on the ground in Rwanda, Serbia and Montenegro, in Slovenia and Macedonia, Peru and in the Republic of South Africa, where the Nunciature is also accredited in Namibia, Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland. 

Later, he served in Mexico, and was most recently assigned to the Pontifical representation in Austria.  As a young priest, he spent time locally at Our Lady of Lourdes in Gales Ferry and St. Joseph parish in New London. His diplomatic service began in Rwanda, a country ravaged by genocide just a few short years before his arrival. “It was a difficult period, but a lovely time for me. The people were wonderful, the culture very interesting,” he said. 

He recalled visiting a missionary parish up in the mountains on the Ugandan border. After a difficult trek up the mountain, his group encountered a community that had been neglected since the 1994 genocide.
“It was very touching to meet the many, many people who had walked for hours just to come to this Catholic Mass with the nuncio,” he said. While in Rwanda, he was able to help his first nuncio in the administration of constructing  an entirely new nunciature and nurture an ecclesiastical balance during a delicate social period for the Rwandans.

In 2017, he retired from a highly-decorated military career of some 28 years, serving as a U.S. Air Force Reserve Chaplain attached to the 31st  Fighter Wing, Aviano Air Base, Italy, among other assignments at home and abroad. 
“It was a joy of my life to give my service, give my summer vacations to serve in the Armed Forces,” he said. “It was fantastic work. You’re just a priest in a different uniform.”

Archbishop Randall tries to heed the words of Pope Francis, to “get out from behind your desk,” he said. “He wants a Nuncio with his feet on the ground and visiting pastorally with his people,” the archbishop said. 

Serving also as a diplomat to the local government is an important role. “You work and collaborate and write reports on the health of that state in which you serve,” he said. The nuncio typically serves for about five years in a particular diplomatic post.

With decades of diplomatic service, Archbishop Randall says the joy in his vocation boils down to this: “I think that every country and culture has something beautiful to offer in its people,” he said. “A priest is at the service of his people. The beauty of the service to be there is in meeting them, in knowing their life stories and their hopes, their dreams.”

By Ryan Blessing


Most Viewed Articles of the Last 30 Days

Calendar of Events

Posted on May 30, 2025 in: Events, Around the Diocese

30683

The Diocese of Norwich Emerges from Chapter 11 Bankruptcy with Confirmation of Reorganization Plan
Hartford, CT—On Wednesday, the United States Bankruptcy Court in Hartford confirmed the Diocese of Norwich’s Joint Plan of Reorganization, marking the official emergence of The Norwich Roman Catholic Diocesan Corporation from chapter 11 bankruptcy. The Honorable Judge James J. Tancredi presided over the confirmation hearing, held on Wednesday, May 21, 2025, at 10:00 a.m., and approved the plan on the record at the hearing, subject to entry of an order confirming the plan to be submitted by the parties. The confirmed Joint Plan was proposed by the Norwich Roma...

Read More

Bishop Reidy Thanks the Faithful and Invites All to Pray a Pentecost Novena
My dear friends in Christ, Thank you all very much for your very warm welcome of me as your new Bishop.  As I meet with priests, deacons, and parishioners and make my way around the Diocese to parish Masses, Confirmations, school visits, Holy Hours, and dinner events, I am reminded how fortunate I am to be with you in our diocese.  Thank you for all you do. I am also acutely aware that all the good I hope to do together with you for God and His people depends utterly on God's grace. To that end, I am endeavoring to keep in mind the necessity of prayer...

Read More

Bishop Reidy Shares Thoughts on the Image of God, Religious Art
This week on Hope and Faith series, Bishop Richard Reidy of the Diocese of Norwich shares his thoughts on the image of God and discusses his favorite pieces of religious art.   View previous videos or more articles on Faith by visiting NorwichDiocese.org/FaithSparks            

Read More

St. Rita of Cascia: Patroness of the Impossible- Feast Day May 22
St. Rita of Cascia: Patroness of the Impossible Feast Day: May 22 In the quiet hills of 14th-century Italy, a woman named Rita lived a life marked by hardship, heartbreak, and, ultimately, holiness. Born in the town of Roccaporena, Rita longed from an early age to enter religious life. But in obedience to her parents, she married a man known for his temper and violent tendencies. Her life as a wife and mother was not easy, but through prayer and patience, Rita brought peace to her home, even softening her husband’s heart before his tragic death. After losing bo...

Read More

The Promise of the Ascension

Posted on May 21, 2025 in: Reflections

1093

The Promise of the Ascension
    Forty days after Easter Sunday, we celebrate the Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord. While often seen as a quiet moment between the joy of the Resurrection and the fire of Pentecost, Ascension Thursday is much more than a transition. It is a cornerstone of our Christian hope. As recorded in the Acts of the Apostles, Jesus, after appearing to His disciples and speaking to them about the Kingdom of God, is “lifted up, and a cloud took Him from their sight” (Acts 1:9). His Ascension does not mark the end of His presence but the beginn...

Read More

Annual Catholic Appeal

ACA DONATE

English

Español

 

Latest Articles
Recently Added Galleries
Click to view album: Episcopal Ordination of Bishop Richard F. Reidy
Click to view album: Students Called to Feed the Hungry
Click to view album: 40 Days for Life 2024
Click to view album: Blessing of the Fleet 2024
Signup for Weekly Newsletter

     

    Roman Catholic Diocese of Norwich
    201 Broadway
    Norwich, CT 06360-4328
    Phone: 860-887-9294