Cindy Wooden writes:
A 49-year-old Syrian priest and hermit was killed
earlier this week, apparently when a group of rebels attacked the Franciscan
Convent of St Anthony in Ghassanieh, a village in the north of the country near
the Turkish border.
Franciscan Father Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the
head of the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land, told Vatican Radio on Monday
that Father Francois Murad was not a Franciscan, but had taken refuge in the
convent when it became clear he was not safe at the Syriac Catholic hermitage
he was building nearby.
Syriac Catholic Archbishop Jacques Behnan Hindo
of Hassake-Nisibi told Fides, the news agency of the Congregation for the
Evangelisation of Peoples, that Father Murad “sent me several messages which
showed he was aware of living in a dangerous situation and was willing to offer
his life for peace in Syria and the world.”
Father Pizzaballa said that Ghassanieh, “like
other Christian villages, has been almost completely destroyed and is almost
totally abandoned.” He said he believes the only people left in Ghassanieh “are
the rebels with their families, rebels who are not from Syria and who are
extremists.”
“The only thing we can do, other than pray for
Father Francois and all the victims, is pray that this folly ends soon and that
no more weapons are sent to Syria because that would only prolong this absurd civil
war,” he added.
The Franciscan leader said Syria is a
“battleground, and not just between Syrian forces, but also for other Arab
countries and the international community. The ones paying the price are the
poor, the small and the least, including the Christians. The international
community must put the brakes on this.”
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