Raymond-Marie Tchidimbo


Raymond-Marie Tchidimbo was a Guinean archbishop of the Roman Catholic Church, the son of a Gabonese father and a Guinean mother. He is notable for his eight-year imprisonment during the dictatorship of Sékou Touré.

Biography

Tchidimbo was born in Conakry, French West Africa and was ordained a priest on October 7, 1951 as a member of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit.


Tchidimbo was appointed Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Conakry on March 10, 1962 and ordained bishop on May 31, 1962. At the time, Guinea was ruled by a Marxist dictatorship led by Sékou Touré. In November 1970, in the wake of the attempted overthrow of Touré during Operation Green Sea, the regime embarked on a series of purges targeting political and civic leaders suspected of disloyalty. As part of the purges, Tchidimbo was arrested on December 24. He was tortured, tried in absentia, and sentenced to life imprisonment on January 23, 1971. He spent the next eight years at the Camp Boiro concentration camp.


As part of a deal between the Holy See and the Touré regime, he was freed on August 7, 1979 and flown to Rome. Subsequently, on August 13, he resigned from his position of Archbishop of Conakry; Robert Sarah was appointed as his successor. In 1987, he published a book about his captivity entitled Noviciat d'un évêque : huit ans de captivité sous Sékou Touré.