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Ragheed,
a “costly sacrifice”
so that Iraq may see the dawn of
reconciliation, says
Pope
Benedict XVI
expresses his
sorrow and “heartfelt” condolences for
the death of the Chaldean priest and
three subdeacons. AsiaNews remembers a
friend who died thinking until the end
that peace was possible in his country.
Fr Ragheed is a martyr for a free Iraq,
witness to an unshakable faith, which
bombs and threats could not weaken.
Vatican
City (AsiaNews) - “Deeply saddened”
by yesterday’s “senseless killing of
Father Ragheed Aziz Ganni and the
subdeacons” in Mosul, the Pope expressed
“his heartfelt condolences” in a
telegram to the city’s bishop, Mgr Rahho,
and the families of the deceased. In
the message that was released today,
Benedict XVI “joins the Christian
community in Mosul in commending their
souls to the infinite mercy of God our
loving Father and in giving thanks for
their selfless witness to the Gospel.”
The Pontiff said he would pray for the
“costly sacrifice [which] will inspire
in the hearts of all men and women of
good will a renewed resolve to reject
the ways of hatred and violence [. . .]
and to cooperate in hastening the dawn
of reconciliation, justice and peace in
Iraq.”
AsiaNews joins his Holiness in
expressing condolences and publishes an
article in memory of Father Ragheed.
“Without
Sunday, without the Eucharist the
Christians in Iraq cannot survive”: that
was how Fr Ragheed spoke of his
community’s hope, a community that was
used to facing death on a daily basis,
that same death that yesterday afternoon
faced him, on his way home from saying
mass. After having fed his faithful with
the Body and Blood of Christ, he gave
his own blood, his own life for Iraq,
for the future of his Church. This young
priest had willingly, knowingly chosen
to remain by the side of his
parishioners from Holy Spirit parish in
Mosul, judged the most dangerous, after
Baghdad. His reasoning was simple:
without him, without its pastor, his
flock would have been lost. In the
barbarity of suicide attacks and
bombings, one thing at least was clear,
and gave him the strength to resist:
“Christ – Ragheed would say – challenger
evil with his infinite love, he keeps us
united and through the Eucharist he
gifts us life, which the terrorists are
trying to take away”.
He died
yesterday, massacred by blind violence.
Killed on his way home from Church,
where his people, despite their
decreasing numbers, bowed by fear and
desperation, continued to come: “the
young people – Ragheed told us just days
ago – organized surveillance after the
recent attacks against the parish, the
kidnappings, the threats to religious;
priests celebrate mass amidst the bombed
out ruins; mothers worry as they see
their children challenge danger to
attend catechism with enthusiasm; the
elderly come to entrust their fleeing
families to God’s protection, they alone
remain in their country where they have
their roots and built their homes,
refusing to flee. Exile for them is
unimaginable”. Ragheed was one of them,
a strong father figure who wanted to
protect his children: “It is our duty
not to give in to despair: God will
listen to our prayers for peace in
Iraq”:
In 2003 on
finishing his studies in Rome, he
decided to return to his country “that
is where I belong, that is my place”. He
also returned to help in the rebuilding
of his nation, the rebuilding of a “free
society”. He spoke of an Iraq full of
hope with a captivating smile: “Saddam
has fallen, we have elected a
government, we have voted for a
Constitution!” He organized theology
courses for the lay faithful of Mosul;
he worked with the young; he consoled
disadvantaged families; this month he
was in the grips of helping a small
child with serious eye problems undergo
surgery in Rome.
His
testimony is of an enthusiastic faith.
The target of a series of threats
stretching back to 2004, he witnessed
the pain of relatives and the loss of
friends, and yet he carried on to the
very end remembering that there was a
sense to be found in that suffering,
that carnage, that anarchy of violence:
it was to be offered up. After an attack
on his parish, on Palm Sunday last April
1st he said: “We empathise with Christ
who entered Jerusalem in full knowledge
that the consequence of His love for
mankind was the cross. Thus while
bullets smashed our Church windows, we
offered up our sufferance as a sign of
love for Christ”. “Each day we wait for
the decisive attack – he said just weeks
ago – but we will not stop celebrating
mass; we will do it underground, where
we are safer. I am encouraged in this
decision by the strength of my
parishioners. This is war, real war, but
we hope to carry our cross to the very
end with the help of Divine Grace”. And
in the midst of the daily difficulties
he himself marvelled at a growing
awareness of “the great value of Sunday,
the day we met the Risen Lord, the day
of unity and of love between his
community, of support and help”.
Then the
bombings multiplied; the kidnappings of
priests in Baghdad and Mosul became more
frequent; Sunnis began to demand taxes
from Christians to remain in their
homes, or face their requisition by
militants. Water and electricity grow
scarce, telephones and communicating
becomes difficult. Ragheed begins to
grow tired, his enthusiasm weakens, to
the point where in his last e-mail to
AsiaNews, May 28 last, he admits: “We
are on the verge of collapse”- And he
tells of a bomb exploding in the Holy
Spirit Church, on the feast of Pentecost
May 27; of the “war” which broke out a
week before, 7 car bombings, 10
explosions in swift succession, the
three day curfew, “prisoners in our own
home”, of not being able to celebrate
the feast of the Ascension (May 20).
He pondered
the path his country had taken: “In a
sectarian and confessional Iraq, will
there be any space for Christians? We
have no support, no group who fights for
our cause; we are abandoned in the midst
of this disaster. Iraq has already been
divided; it will never be the same. What
is the future of our Church? Today it
can barely be traced”.
But then
the strength of his faith endures, a
tired but solid faith: “I may be wrong,
but I am certain about one thing, one
single fact that is always true: that
the Holy Spirit will enlighten people so
that they may work for the good of
humanity, in this world so full of
evil”.
Dearest
Ragheed, with a heart which cries in
pain, you leave us your hope and your
certainty. By taking you they aimed to
wipe out the hope of Iraq’s Christians.
Instead your martyrdom nourishes and
gives new life to your community, to the
Iraqi Church and the Church throughout
the world. Thank you, grazie
Ragheed.
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