A cry for help from Carmelite nuns in Aleppo, Syria
Friday, August 5, 2016
"We have no water, no electricity, and the fighting is continuing incessantly. Who could possibly come back in these conditions?"
By Marta Petrosillo
NEW YORK—“The situation is a
complicated and we are hearing many contradictory stories. The only truth we do
know is that the people here are suffering and dying.”
The words are those of Sister Anne-Françoise, a French
religious of the Enclosed and Apostolic Discalced Carmelite Sisters of Aleppo,
Syria. She spoke by telephone with international Catholic pastoral charity Aid
to the Church in Need about the agony of Aleppo, Syria’s
second-largest city, where fighting between the Syrian government and rebel
forces has greatly intensified in recent weeks.
The convent of these nuns is on the outskirts of
Aleppo, an area seriously affected by the fighting. The nun reported: “When the
Syrian army attempts to prevent the opposition and other groups from entering the
city, the bombing and shelling come really close to us. Thanks be to God, they
haven’t hit us yet, but we are constantly hearing the shells pass over our
heads.”
The Carmelite nuns, four of whom are Syrian and two
French, have taken in a number of refugee families in a building adjoining
their convent, while also supporting other families with the few resources at
their disposal.
“By now it is only the poorest of the people who are still left
here in Aleppo. So many Christians have left the city during these years of
war. We have no water, no electricity, and the fighting is continuing
incessantly. Who could possibly come back in these conditions?” the sister
asked.
Needless to say, the six nuns are afraid as well, but
they are determined to stay close to the people. Sister Anne-Françoise said: “How
can we abandon these people in their suffering? The witness of our presence is
important for them. We draw strength and courage from prayer; this is our
protection. The diplomatic solutions have not worked. We simply pray to the
Lord that this war may stop.”
After years of fighting, and of an unceasing Christian
exodus, Sister Anne-Françoise is fearful that more and more families will abandon
Aleppo, a city that has been a symbol of Christianity in Syria. Since 2011—when
the Syrian civil war began—a population of 160,000 Christians in the city had
dwindled to barely 40,000.
“The Middle East, the land of Christ, now risks losing
its Christians. That is unthinkable, and the situation is truly terrible. And
even for those who leave, the crisis does not end. They find themselves
uprooted from their own soil and sometimes even lose their spiritual roots,”
the sister said.
The sisters’ appeal to the international community and
to all Christians throughout the world is this: “Please take pity on these
thousands of lives, torn apart by war. Please don’t forget us. We need your
prayers and your practical help!”
Destruction in Aleppo; ACN photo
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