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DETROIT (CNS) — A Chaldean Catholic bishop said
the United States must be held accountable for the death of Chaldean Archbishop
Paulos Faraj Rahho of Mosul, Iraq.
“We find it inconceivable that internal, regional and international efforts could not have prevented this tragic fate,” said Chaldean Bishop Michel Kassarji of Beirut, Lebanon. “We hope that this new sacrifice offered by the Iraqi Christians will be the last martyr, and we hope that the murder of this bishop strikes the alarm and wakens the consciences of leaders of Iraq and the region to do their utmost to stop the waves of extremism overwhelming the region. Our aim is the free and safe presence of the Christians in Iraq, Lebanon and the Middle East,” he said. Chaldean Archbishop Djibrail Kassab of the Eparchy of St. Thomas the Apostle of Sydney, Australia, said lawlessness in Iraq, “from kidnapping, extortion, murder, to forcing the Chaldeans to flee their country” is not new. The bishop said the Chaldean Catholic Church truly “can be called a martyr church.” “This is something we can be proud of,” added the bishop, who formerly served as archbishop of Basra, Iraq. “In these days when faith needs to be stronger, we are in need of strong men and saintly martyrs to refresh our faith in our hearts and renew the life of the Church.” The president of the Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference, Archbishop Philip Wilson of Adelaide, said March 14: “Such senseless killing is always shocking and inflicts a deep wound on our shared humanity. Our prayers are with the people of Iraq who continue to suffer so much.” In a letter to Cardinal Emmanuel-Karim Delly of Baghdad, patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic Church, Cardinal Francis E. George of Chicago, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, called the killing “callous” and said it “demonstrates the particularly harsh realities faced by Christians in Iraq and the lack of security faced by all Iraqis.” Cardinal Adam J. Maida of Detroit also expressed “profound shock and sorrow” following the archbishop’s death. The news that the archbishop was killed could force Iraqi Christians underground, said Iraqi Christians in Need, a British-based charity aiding Christian Iraqis. Suha Rassam, spokeswoman for the charity, said, “The only way for the Church in the Mosul area to survive might be if it goes underground, like it did in the first and second centuries. This way, Mass and other services would be held in secret, and priests go about their duties clandestinely.” In a March 13 statement, Rassam said an underground church is not a “situation anyone would want, but the Christian population is living each day in terror of being kidnapped or murdered.” “When the Church is facing persecution of this magnitude, then desperate measures might have to be taken,” she said. “Over the last eight months, attacks on Christians have been escalating,” she said. “In June Father Ragheed Aziz Ganni and three deacons were murdered, two priests were kidnapped in October, and in January four churches and a convent were bombed.” John Pontifex, London-based media officer of the Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need, which helps persecuted Christians, said that “firsthand reports given by bishops, priests and laypeople” show that “Christians are now terrified, and this sad news will simply speed up the rate of emigration, which in turn could cause Christianity to be extinguished from the country.” “The martyrdom of Archbishop Rahho will send out the clearest possible signal yet that no Christian is safe in Iraq,” he said. (Contributing to this story was Simon Caldwell in London, Doreen Abi Raad in Beirut, Lebanon, and Dan McAloon in Sydney, Australia.) |
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