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Nigel Baker

Ambassador to the Holy See (2011-2016)

Part of UK in Holy See

22nd September 2014

Christian unity and good causes: small steps, big results

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Inaugural cricket match between St Peter’s Cricket Club and The Archbishop of Canterbury’s XI. 19 September 2014

As ambassador to the Holy See, it is quite rare that I get out of Rome for professional purposes. Most of the key contacts and institutions with which the embassy works are, naturally, based in Rome. Although I plug into the global Holy See network, I do that through the hub. So I have had a few quite unusual days, albeit at the service of some key embassy objectives.

Last week I was in Viterbo, at the invitation of the city authorities, to attend a conference on the beatified Passionist priest the Blessed Dominic Barberi. The Archbishop of Birmingham, Msgr Bernard Longley, was also there with a large group from his archdiocese. Why? Because Barberi has two particular claims to fame as far as England is concerned. As a young man, he felt urged to travel to England to help the revival of Catholicism. He finally realised this dream in the late 1830s, and was instrumental in re-establishing the Catholic presence in the Midlands and North-West – he is buried today in St Helens near Liverpool. Overcoming initial local hostility, he is now seen as an apostle of ecumenical dialogue between Catholicism and Anglicanism. Secondly, he was the priest who received John Henry Newman – later a Cardinal, and beatified by Pope Benedict at Cofton Park in Birmingham in 2010 – into the Catholic Church. The conference was a great success, and the hospitality of Viterbo munificent.

I was also in England last week, in Canterbury, to attend the inaugural cricket match between the brand new St. Peter’s Cricket Club made up of Sri Lankan and Indian seminarians and captained by Father Tony Currer from Durham and the Vatican, and The Archbishop of Canterbury’s XI. It was a quintessential late summer’s evening. Cricket on the lovely St Lawrence ground. Lengthening shadows. An appreciative crowd. But with a twist. The match and subsequent dinner were in aid of the Global Freedom Network which is doing so much to bring faith leaders together to tackle human trafficking around the world. And it was a magnificent ecumenical occasion, with the Archbishop of Canterbury joined by Archbishop David Moxon from the Anglican centre in Rome, as well as the Bishop of Dover, in friendly rivalry with the Apostolic Nuncio to London, and Archbishop Peter Smith and Bishop Pat Lynch from the Catholic Archdiocese of Southwark. I did say friendly. Of course! Though I was mightily relieved that the local team won, in the final over….

The point is that unity, dialogue, integration, engagement, do not just take place on a higher plane. In fact, top level talks or speeches are nothing without the hard work of walking together, doing together and playing together. Work against human trafficking was given a huge boost by the cricket day at Canterbury, in terms both of money raised and publicity achieved. Understanding between the UK and Italy, and of the history of Anglican-Catholic relations, was certainly advanced a few incremental steps by the Dominic Barberi conference. World peace has not broken out. But the world is, very slightly, a better and more united place thanks to events taking place in Viterbo and Canterbury last week.

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About Nigel Baker

Nigel was British Ambassador to the Holy See from 2011-2016. He presented his Credentials to Pope Benedict XVI on 9 September 2011, after serving 8 years in Latin America, as…

Nigel was British Ambassador to the Holy See from 2011-2016. He presented his Credentials to Pope Benedict XVI on 9 September 2011, after serving 8 years in Latin America, as Deputy Head of Mission in the British Embassy in Havana, Cuba (2003-6) and then as British Ambassador in La Paz, Bolivia (2007-11). In July 2016, Nigel finished his posting, and is currently back in London.

As the first British Ambassador to the Holy See ever to have a blog, Nigel provided a regular window on what the Embassy and the Ambassador does. The blogs covered a wide range of issues, from Royal and Ministerial visits to Diplomacy and Faith, freedom of religion, human trafficking and climate change.

More on Nigel’s career

Nigel was based in London between 1998 and 2003. He spent two years on European Union issues (for the UK 1998 EU Presidency and on European Security and Defence questions), before crossing St James’s Park to work for three years as The Assistant Private Secretary to His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales. At St James’s Palace, Nigel worked on international issues, including the management of The Prince of Wales’s overseas visits and tours, on the Commonwealth, interfaith issues, the arts and international development.

Nigel spent much of the early part of his FCO career in Central Europe, after an initial stint as Desk Officer for the Maghreb countries in the Near East and North Africa department (1990-91). Between 1992 and 1996, Nigel served in the British embassies in Prague and Bratislava, the latter being created in 1993 after the peaceful division of Czechoslovakia into the separate Czech and Slovak Republics.

Nigel joined the FCO (Foreign and Commonwealth Office) in September 1989. Between 1996 and 1998 he took a two year academic sabbatical to research and write about themes in 18th century European history, being based in Verona but also researching in Cambridge, Paris and Naples. The research followed from Nigel’s time as a student at Cambridge (1985-88) where he read history and was awarded a First Class Honours degree, followed by his MA in 1992.

Before joining the Foreign Office, Nigel worked briefly for the Conservative Research Department in London at the time of the 1989 European election campaign.

Nigel married Alexandra (Sasha) in 1997. They have one son, Benjamin, born in Bolivia in September 2008.

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