Bishop Antoine Audo,
S. J., Chaldean bishop of Alep and president of Caritas Syria,
spoke to the news agency Fides on April 10, of the precarious
situation of the inhabitants of Alep, who can be seen in the
streets with plastic bags, searching everywhere for a bit of
food. Hundreds of Catholic families have had to leave the Cheikh
Maksoud quarter after the arrival of the rebel militias in early
April. Many streets are closed, unusable, making visits to the
sick and the dying difficult. Most of the doctors were forced
with threats to flee, and the fate of two priests, an Armenian
Catholic and a Greek Orthodox, kidnapped by armed men two months
ago on the road between Alep and Damascus, is still unknown,
explained Bishop Audo.
The Cheikh Maksoud quarter, situated
on a hill dominating Alep, added Fr. David Fernandez,
a missionary of the Institute of the Incarnate Word, is a
strategic sector for those who wish to take over the city center
where the government buildings are located. Some of the
city-center streets are already closed and "no one can travel
on them anymore because snipers fire on any moving thing."
In Cheikh Maksoud, Christians used to make up the majority of
the population. In the last few years, the Kurdish population
became the majority, but there remained many Christian families,
grouped around the Armenian-Catholic and Greek Orthodox
churches.
Archbishop Samir Nassar,
Maronite archbishop of Damascus, reported on April 13 the
crucifying dilemma of the Syrian Christians, "forced to
choose between two bitter chalices: death or exile", which
is "another, [slower] way to die." In the
neighboring countries, where the number of refugees is
constantly increasing, the situation is more and more critical.
The High Police Precinct for the refugees of the United Nations
(HCR) has "sounded the alarm". The operations to help
Syrian refugees are coming to an end for lack of sufficient
funds. In the city, there are bombings, trapped cars,
starvation, and a lack of medication and care. "233 hospitals
have been closed and the doctors are fleeing," explained the
Archbishop of Damascus. The parishes have "become a wailing
wall to which the Christians turn every day to find protection
and help in their attempts to obtain a visa to leave." "The
indifference and silence of the international community before
their long, sad Calvary" is oppressing for the Syrian
Christians, who, "abandoned," find themselves "condemned
to death and unable to flee," continued the prelate. "The
consulates have been closed for a year and a half." The more
wealthy have been able to leave, but the poorer Christians do
not understand why they must die in a senseless war. "Today,
the Church is the only resource for these shipwrecked souls.
(…) But the pastors, too, are confronted with a dilemma: to
tell their faithful to stay is to condemn them to death; but
helping them leave means emptying the Biblical Land of its last
faithful Christians," concluded Archbishop Nassar.
The Syrian Christians proclaimed
Saturday, May 11, a day of prayer to "beg God to grant mercy
to Syria and to put an end to the violence," asking all to "limit
themselves to local reunions throughout the country, in homes,
meeting places, and churches," because of the high risks of
traveling in the combat zones. Fr. David Fernandez, present in
Alep, explained to the agency Fides that
the population was waiting with
anguish for the month of May, to ask Mary for the grace of
peace. We celebrate Mass every afternoon with the refugees and
those who are able to come and we recite the Holy Rosary for
this intention. Everyone sings the litany and the final hymn
to the Virgin with great emotion. They ask Mary for the gift
of peace, turning to her as the only one who can still help
them to keep hope alive in the terrible situation that we are
living through.
(sources: apic/fides/afp – DICI#275
May 17, 2013)