March 13, 2008
Archbishop Faraj Rahho of Mosul is a Martyr

Bishop of Arbil: "A heavy Cross for our
Church, ahead of Easter". The cause of death is still unknown.
The pope's expression of sorrow.
Mosul (AsiaNews) - The Chaldean archbishop of Mosul is dead.
Archbishop Faraj Rahho was kidnapped last February 29 after the
Stations of the Cross. His kidnappers gave word of his death,
indicating to the mediators where they could recover the body of
the 67-year-old prelate. "It is a heavy Cross for our Church,
ahead of Easter", Bishop Rabban of Arbil tells AsiaNews in
response to the news. Leaders of the Chaldean Church, including
Bishop Shlemon Warduni, brought the body to the hospital in
Mosul to ascertain the causes, still unknown, of the
archbishop's death. The funeral will be held tomorrow in the
nearby city of Karamles. Archbishop Rahho will be buried near Fr
Ragheed, his priest and secretary killed by a terrorist brigade
on June 3, 2007, while leaving the church after celebrating
Mass.
The archbishop had been very sick. He had suffered a heart
attack a few years ago, and since then he had needed to take
medication every day. The difficult negotiations for his release
carried forward over the past 14 days of his kidnapping had
immediately raised concern because of the total absence of
direct contact with the hostage. The conditions posed by the
kidnappers - sources in Mosul tell AsiaNews - in addition to an
outrageous ransom on the order of millions of dollars, had also
included the provision of weapons and the liberation of Arab
prisoners held in Kurdish prisons.
The news of Archbishop Rahho's death "profoundly wounds and
saddens" the pope, says the director of the Vatican press
office, Fr Federico Lombardi. Benedict XVI hopes that "this
tragic event may renew once again and with greater force the
efforts of all, and in particular of the international
community, for the pacification of this greatly tormented
country". Three times in recent days, the pope had launched an
appeal for the liberation of the bishop. Numerous Muslim leaders
had also spoken out for the prelate's release, both Sunnis and
Shiites, in Iraq, Lebanon, and Jordan, and also condemned the
action as "contrary to Islam".
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