The relentless carnage and horror that has engulfed Syria over
the past two and a half years has taken a particularly heavy toll on the
country’s Christian minority. An unknown number of civilians, including
religious figures, have been kidnapped or killed or remain missing, in a
conflagration that seems to have no end.
Last April two Christian bishops were abducted near the town of
Aleppo in northern Syria near the Turkish border and haven’t been heard
from since. A deacon named Fathallah Kabud drove through a checkpoint
near Aleppo last year with two bishops, John Ibrahim and Boulos Yazigi,
in an attempt to help secure the release of two priests who had earlier
been kidnapped. Ibrahim had been successful in similar prior
negotiations, having freed about two dozen hostages, both Christian and
Muslim.
The National Review reported that in the summer of 2012, when control
for Aleppo began in earnest, many foreign jihadists from places as far
away as the Caucasus had come to Syria to join the war against the
brutal military of President Bashar Assad, allegedly on the side of the
Free Syrian Army, Assad’s opponents. However, these Islamist warriors
differed greatly from the FSA and have allied themselves with such
fundamentalist extremists as al Qaeda. When Kabud, Ibrahim and Yazigi
(all unarmed) went through the checkpoint near Aleppo, a group of men,
reportedly wearing Central Asian garb and probably Chechens, descended
upon the vehicle, took Kabud away at gunpoint and executed him. The
whereabouts of the two bishops remains a mystery, but the Catholic News
Agency reported last month that there are rumors that only one of the
abducted bishops is still alive and the other is being kept somewhere in
Syria or possibly Turkey.
Other Christian clergy have also been abducted in the war-torn
country. Last month, the Catholic News Agency reported that an Orthodox
bishop in Syria called for Islamist rebels to release a dozen nuns who'd
been kidnapped. “We’ve now reached the point where even nuns are being
abducted. What have they done wrong? It’s a crime. The abductors want to
demonstrate that they show no mercy,” Bishop Selwanos Boutros Alnemeh,
the Syriac Orthodox Metropolitan of Homs and Hama, told Aid to the
Church in Need, an international Catholic pastoral charity.
http://www.ibtimes.com/syrias-war-christians-where-are-missing-bishops-priests-nuns-1541590
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Η ιστοσελίδα μας δημιουργήθηκε το 2008.Δείτε τους συντελεστές και την ταυτότητα της προσπάθειας. Επικοινωνήστε μαζί μας εδώ .
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