By Dennis Sadowski
Catholic News Service
BALTIMORE (CNS) — Maronite Bishop Gregory J. Mansour called on the
bishops of the United States to bring wider attention to the persecution
of Christians in the Middle East to their parishes and political
leaders. Addressing the fall general assembly of the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops Nov. 15, the Maronite leader said he hoped that the new
four-year strategic plan adopted by the conference earlier in the day
would incorporate a robust advocacy for religious freedom in the rest of
the world.
“People do look to America and religious freedom is our greatest
freedom and we ought to be able to export it …The more we export it
throughout the world, the happier our world will be,” said Bishop
Mansour, who heads the Eparchy of St. Maron in Brooklyn, New York. While referring to the acts of kidnapping, torture and killings by
the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria, Bishop Mansour said that
attention must be given to attacks on the religious freedom of
Christians throughout the Middle East.
He encouraged the bishops to take several steps to “increase our
communion with our brothers and sisters there” including raising funds
for the humanitarian work of organizations such as Catholic Relief
Services, Aid to the Church in Need, the Catholic Near East Welfare
Association and the Knights of Columbus. He also said the U.S. church could play a major role in developing a
plan with Catholic bishops around the world to rebuild churches and
restore the livelihoods of Christians in the region.
A third suggestion revolved around the possibility of organizing a
program in which U.S. parishes match up with parishes to create bonds of
unity and solidarity. Such an effort, he said, could be extended to
Orthodox, Protestant and other Christian congregations. Bishop Mansour also called for advocacy with the U.S. Department of
State to boost aid for refugees and displaced people who do not find
their way to established camps but are taken in by individual families,
hospitals and churches.
In response, several bishops acknowledged the importance of raising
the profile of Christian persecution in the world. The leader of a
Syriac Catholic diocese in the U.S. urged bolder action in their
dioceses.
“Now you should continue your work not in the parish only, but the
media end and to lead your parishioners to pray, to pray,” said Bishop
Yousif B. Habash of Our Lady of Deliverance Syriac Catholic Diocese of
the U.S. and Canada, which is based in New Jersey.
“Today it’s a big privilege for the Catholic Church in America to
support the persecuted Christians, the African Church, the Latin
American Church … to be a strong church, not just to make America
great, but to make great peace for the world,” Bishop Habash said. “This
is our task. This the task of you, of the Catholic Church … to make a
peaceful world.”
Archbishop Alexander K. Sample of Portland, Oregon, said the
suffering of Middle East Christians is not often acknowledged as a
pressing issue for the church to consider.
“My hope is that we as a conference will keep the issue of religious
freedom in the Middle East and the suffering of our brothers and sisters
always before our eyes. I think it would be a great mistake to let this
fade into the background.”
He described a pin that he wears on his lapel. It depicts the Arabic
symbol for the letter ‘N’, a marking that often appears on the homes of
Christians to single them out for persecution, he said.
When asked about the pin, the archbishop said, he explains its
meaning and shares the story of the dwindling population of Middle East
Christians.
Bishop Francis Kalabat of St. Thomas the Apostle Chaldean Catholic
Eparchy of the United States based in Detroit described a September
visit to Iraq, including Baghdad and the Kurdish region in the north,
where he met some of the “most beautiful people on earth” despite the
violence.
He said he met with lay Christians running a home for the elderly and
a Missionaries of Charity home for orphaned and abandoned children,
most of whom are Muslim.
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Follow Sadowski on Twitter: @DennisSadowski.
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