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Pope, his caress to Christians after Isis horrors

2021-03-07T16:40:47.692Z


The wounds of the war are piles of stones, crumbling walls, still uneven roads. Francis arrives in Mosul, the city in northern Iraq that was a stronghold of Isis until 2017, to pray for the victims of the war. (HANDLE)


07 March, 17:26

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Pope, his caress to Christians after Isis horrors

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Pope Francis pays his first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis pays his first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis pays his first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis pays his first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis pays his first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis in Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis pays his first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis pays his first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis pays his first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis pays his first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis first visit to Iraq © ANSA

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Pope Francis first visit to Iraq © ANSA

(by the envoy Manuela Tulli) (ANSA) - QARAQOSH, 07 MAR - The wounds of the war are heaps of stones, crumbling walls, still uneven roads.

Francis arrives in Mosul, the city in northern Iraq that was a stronghold of Isis until 2017, to pray for the victims of the war.

Behind him the Syriac church came down under the bombs.

On the streets a military deployment to protect the Pope, with the concern that some sleeper cells could ruin this historic moment for Iraq.

Then the explosion of joy in Qaraqosh, the city of the Ninive Plain where there was the largest Christian community in the country.


   Francesco enters a polished cathedral, embellished with white flowers and also kissed by the sun.

Three years ago the Immaculate Conception was a shooting range and inside the jihadists they also hid their prisoners.

It is the day of 'caressing', of hope, of closeness to Christians who, together with other minorities, especially the Yazidis, have suffered under the threats of the Caliphate one of the most heinous persecutions of recent years.

The road that leads from Erbil to the Papaa Qaraqosh is a strip of asphalt, full of checkpoints, refugee camps, cemeteries.

Eighty kilometers that were crossed by about 120 thousand Christians, most of which in a single night, between 6 and 7 August 2014, when ISIS planted black flags in Christian villages and marked the doors with the 'N' of Nazarene, follower of Christ.

The Kurds of Erbil opened the doors in those days.

According to the data of the pontifical foundation Aid to the Church in Need, one of the most active realities in supporting the return of Christians to the area, just under half of the families have returned to date.

And Pope Francis spoke of the exodus as "an incalculable damage not only for the persons and communities concerned, but for the society itself that they leave behind".

He listens with emotion to the testimonies of those who survived, and who returned after years in a refugee camp malancia also a message of hope because "terrorism does not have the last word".

"With great sadness, we look around and see other signs, the signs of the destructive power of violence, hatred and war. How many things have been destroyed! And how much must be rebuilt! This meeting of ours - Pope Francis told Qaraqosh - shows that terrorism and death never have the last word. The last word belongs to God. "

He asks Christians with his heart in his hands to "forgive" because this is the only way indicated by God.

Then he applauds the experiences of coexistence, of help, of mutual respect.

"It is possible to hope for reconciliation and a new life".

He reiterates that religion is never against anyone.

"If God is the God of life - and he is -, it is not lawful for us to kill our brothers in his name. If God is the God of peace - and he is -, it is not lawful for us to wage war in his own name. he is the God of love - and he is -, it is not lawful for us to hate our brothers ".

Joy then explodes in Qaraqosh: there are thousands of people in the streets waiting for him, despite the pandemic, despite the fears that remain in the heart.

It is the first real 'crowd bath' in this visit to Iraq where the anti-covid and security measures put in place by the Iraqi government had armored the events, to a few hundred registered envoys.

Then the Pope goes to Erbil, in Iraqi Kurdistan, which welcomed the fleeing Christians.

Celebrate Mass, the final event of this journey that seemed impossible.


   Like that of Abraham who "hoped against all hope", to use the words of Francis himself.

"Iraq will always remain with me, in my heart," he says goodbye.

"I ask all of you" to "work together in unity for a future of peace and prosperity that leaves no one behind and discriminates against no one".

"I pray that the members of the various religious communities, together with all men and women of good will, will cooperate in making bonds of fraternity and solidarity in the service of the common good and peace. Salam, salam, salam! Shukrán! (Thank you), God bless everyone ! God bless Iraq! Allah ma'akum! (God be with you) ".

Tonight the return to Baghdad and tomorrow the Pope will leave Iraq concluding the journey that is already in history.

(HANDLE).


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