A tireless pastor leaves the killing fields of Syria
Thursday, July 2, 2015
"God is the Giver of all good things. We just pass it on. In my opinion this is the spirituality of all Christian aid work. And so I entrust our refugee work entirely to the grace of God."
By Oliver Maksan
HOMS, Syria—It would be hard to find a more dangerous posting in the Jesuit
order today than ministering to the faithful of this city in the heart Syria’s “Valley
of the Christians.” And Syrian Jesuit Father Ziad Hilal has been based here for
half a dozen years, witnessing some of the worst horrors of the country’s civil
war that began in 2011 and killed more than 200,000 people—including some
10,000 children—to-date.
Back under the fragile
control of the Syrian regime, Homs—much of the city destroyed—was the site of fierce
fighting between the government and rebels for several years. Early last year,
a fellow Jesuit, Dutch Father Frans van der Lugt was brutally executed. Yet, Father Hilal stayed on. “As a priest, it is my duty to help
people,” he said.

“We already
began providing aid to war refugees in 2011,” Father Ziad told international
Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need; “unfortunately, we haven’t run out
of work since.” A major part of his job recently has been organizing the
provision of humanitarian aid to displaced people through the Jesuit Refugee
Service. The latest wave of refugees is coming from the major city of Aleppo,
which is fiercely fought over by the regime and the opposition and also sits in
the crosshairs of ISIS.
“At the moment
we are taking care of about 300 Christian families from Aleppo,” said the
priest, stressing that the greatest difficulty is finding housing for the
newcomers: “most of the people have nothing. They also don’t have jobs. And so
we pay the rent for them. But unfortunately, there are those who exploit the
emergency situation—even including Christians,” said Father Hilal, adding: “War
also brings out the worst in people.”
Father Ziad emphasized
that all Syrians, Muslim and Christian alike, are suffering from the war. Yes,
Christians, as a minority, are “particularly vulnerable,” as they are targeted
jihadist bent on religious cleansing. The recent kidnapping of Syrian-Catholic Father
Jacques Mourad has “hit the Christian community hard,” the Jesuit said, noting
that Father Mourad is “a symbol for the people. From the very start he helped
the refugees and worked towards reconciliation. Of course, not everyone likes
this.”
Father Hilal will
soon be enjoying the safety of Dublin, Ireland, where he will continue his
Jesuit formation. He said: “I know that our team will continue the work. It is
not dependent on me.
“God is the
Giver of all good things. We just pass it on. In my opinion this is the
spirituality of all Christian aid work. And so I entrust our refugee work entirely
to the grace of God. He loves us. He will not forsake us. Syria needs its
Christians. We are the ones who can bring about reconciliation. We are the
agents of peace. We serve Syria.”
ACN photo: Father Hilal
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