BY John Pontifex | June 2 | comments icon 0 COMMENTS     print icon print

Good Friday procession with Archbishop Jean-Clement Jeanbart in Aleppo, 18.04.2014More than 18 bombs since 2012 have struck and damaged the city’s Catholic churches; five of the 12 churches in the diocese have suffered significant damage. The cathedral, the seat of Jean-Clement Jeanbart’s Archbishopric, located less than 300 meters from the demarcation line in the old city, has been hit more than 20 times by mortar shells.  The Archbishop writes: “Six of these shells caused serious damage. One of the priests was seriously wounded. Miraculously he was saved undergoing five operations, although sadly in the end he lost an eye. He has just returned to Aleppo to continue his mission with the youth”.

ISIS is terrifying the Faithful, Syrian Archbishop reveals

Desperate appeal for intervention from by West as archbishopric in Aleppo once again come under terrorist fire, AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED reports

FULL-SCALE intervention by the West is urgently needed ‘to halt’ the ‘monstrosities’ being perpetrated in Syria and Iraq, according to the bishop whose diocese is at the epicentre of the current conflict.

In an impassioned plea sent to Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need, Melkite Greek Catholic Archbishop Jean-Clement Jeanbart (above) described how his archbishopric in Aleppo—already hit more than 20 times by mortar shells—had once again come under fire.

Writing the day after the attack, Archbishop Jeanbart said nobody was hurt in the latest bombardment, which comes on top of blasts which over the past two years have damaged five of the Melkites’ 12 churches in the city.

“ISIS, which has already killed thousands in the region, is terrifying the Faithful in Aleppo,” the archbishop said. “After [attacks on] Maloula, Mosul, Idleb and Palmyra, what is the West waiting for before it intervenes?

“What are the great nations waiting for before they put a halt to these monstrosities?

“May all of those who believe in… God and all those with compassion for the innocent raise their voice with us and call on civilised countries to take action to bring about peace.”

Aleppo has seen some of the worst fighting in the conflict that erupted in the wake of the 2011 Arab Spring, with forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad and rebel groups battling it out for supremacy and large sections of the city reduced to rubble.

The violence has intensified in the last few weeks with claims that the government has stepped up its bombardment of Aleppo in response to rebel offensives.

Vast numbers of people of all faiths are fleeing the region, with reports from Chaldean Bishop Antoine Audo last month that Aleppo’s 250,000 Christians have dwindled to below 100,000.

Archbishop Jeanbart’s comments come after a trip to the US a month ago in which he warned that his Church is in a dire situation and appealed for Christians and others in the West to provide urgent assistance.

Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need, which hosted Archbishop Jeanbart in the US, is providing ongoing emergency aid to Christians and others in Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and elsewhere in the Middle East as well as maintaining its pastoral priorities in support of the Church itself.

ACN has provided more than £8.5 million helping the Church in Syria and Iraq since the end of 2011 but needs continued financial support.

 

—www.acnuk.org

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