Report records Boko Haram's heavy toll in single Nigerian diocese
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
"The good Lord has always been on our side. He has seen us through thick and thin. Our faith has been purified through persecution."
By John
Pontifex
NEW
YORK—More than 5,000 Catholics in a single diocese in
northeastern Nigeria have been killed; at least 100,000 have been displaced;
and 350 churches have been destroyed. Such is the tally of terror inflicted by
Boko Haram in the Diocese of Maiduguri.
The
figures were published in the “Situation Report on the activities of Boko Haram
in the Catholic Diocese of Maiduguri,” a copy of which was obtained by international
Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need. The report notes that of the more
than 350 churches that were destroyed, “a good number of them [were] destroyed
more than once.”

With
more than three-quarters of the diocese still under Boko Haram control, the
report states that 22 of the diocese’s 40 parish centres and chaplaincies have
been deserted, with a number of them now occupied by Boko Haram militants. In
addition, 32 of the 40 primary schools have been deserted. What’s more, 26 of
the region’s 46 priests are currently displaced as well as 200 catechists and 30
women religious. Four of the diocese’s five convents were closed. The report says
the diocese now counts 7,000 widows and 10,000 orphans.
Father
Gideon Obasogie, the Diocese of Maiduguri’s director of social communications,
said that “people are very scared and those who are able to return home find
there is nothing left.” The territory of the diocese covers the whole of Borno,
Yobe and part of Adamawa state
Nonetheless,
Father Obasogie told Aid to the Church in Need: “The good Lord has always been
on our side. He has seen us through thick and thin. Our faith has been purified
through persecution.”
Bishop Oliver Doeme of the Diocese of Maiduguri, Nigeria surveys the remains of a church. Photo courtesy of Diocese of Maiduguri
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