In a video message delivered to the displaced Iraqi Christians on
Saturday, Pope Francis decried the suffering experienced by those
persecuted for their faith, while expressing his gratitude for their
witness.
“I thank you for the witness you give,” he said Dec. 6. “There is great suffering in your witness. Thank you!”
Cardinal
Philippe Barbarin of Lyon brought the video message to Erbil, where
tens of thousands of Christians displaced from Mosul and the Nineveh
plains have taken refuge after having been driven from their homes by
the Islamic State. Nearly 2 million people have been internally
displaced since the militant Sunni Islamist group began its offensive
throughout northern Iraq this summer.
The archbishop, along with 100 faithful from Lyon, arrived in Erbil Dec. 5 for a two-day visit.
“I
think of the tears, the sorrows of the mothers with their children, of
the elderly and the displaced, of the the wounded,” who are victims “of
every kind of violence,” the Pope said.
Pope Francis repeated his
concern expressed during his recent visit to Turkey for those who
“still suffer, inhuman violence due to their ethnic religious identity”
at the hands of extremist and fundamentalist groups.
Christians
and Yazidis, among others, “are forcibly expelled from their houses,
have had to abandon everything to save their own lives and not renounce
the faith.”
As religious leaders, Pope Francis stressed, “we have
the obligation to condemn all violations against dignity and human
rights!”
St. Therese of Lisieux, the Pope reflected, compared
both herself and the Church to a reed which bends in the wind and the
storm, but does not break.
“You are, in this moment, this reed,”
the Pope said. “You bend with pain, but you have the strength to carry
your faith forward,” thereby giving witness.
“You are God's reeds today! The reeds which bend over in this ferocious wind, but then rise up!”
Pope
Francis expressed his gratitude, praying to the Holy Spirit “who makes
everything new, giving each and every one of you strength and
resistance.”
Pope Francis called for “a major international
convergence” to resolve “the conflicts which stain your countries of
origin with blood, to oppose other causes which force people to leave
their homeland, and to promote conditions whereby they can remain or
return.”
“Dear brothers and sisters, you are in my heart, in my
prayers,” as well as that of “the whole Christian community,” said the
Pope to the people from Mosul. He has asked the faithful to pray to Our
Lady for the suffering Christians in Iraq on Dec. 8, the Feast of the
Immaculate Conception. “She is mother, who protects you.”
“Your resistance is martyrdom,” he said, “dew which bares fruit.”
Pope Francis concluded his message by asking for prayers.
--EWTN News
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