The African Pilgrimage of the Usurper: A Journey Through the Abyss of Modernist Apostasy
EWTN News portal reports on the 11-day apostolic journey of the usurper Robert Prevost — who styles himself “Pope Leo XIV” — across four African nations (Algeria, Cameroon, Angola, and Equatorial Guinea), April 13–23, 2026. The trip, presented as a pastoral pilgrimage, encompassed interreligious dialogue with Muslim leaders, visits to prisons and psychiatric hospitals, the inauguration of a “Pope Francis Technology School,” meetings with authoritarian heads of state, and Masses celebrated before crowds numbering in the hundreds of thousands. The journey concluded with an in-flight press conference in which the antipope addressed war, migration, same-sex blessings, and relations with authoritarian regimes. What emerges from this meticulously documented spectacle is not a pastoral mission but a comprehensive demonstration of every theological error condemned by the pre-conciliar Magisterium: religious indifferentism, false ecumenism, the reduction of the Church’s mission to naturalistic humanism, the cult of man, and the systematic silence about the supernatural truths that alone constitute the deposit of faith.








