In Bangladesh, missionary is recovering from terror attack
Saturday, November 28, 2015
"With these attacks, these groups want to gain international attention. It seems they want to stir up instability in Bangladesh."
By Esther
Gaitan-Fuertes
NEW YORK—Ten days ago, Father Piero Parolari—a medical doctor and a missionary with the Pontifical Institute for Foreign
Missions (PIME) serving in Bangladesh—was attacked by three men when he was riding his bicycle to St Vincent
Hospital, which is mostly serving the poor from remote
villages. He was shot and fell down, unconscious.
The missionary is among a growing number of victims—most of them clergy
and lay Christian leaders—wounded and killed by radical Islamists in Bangladesh
Bishop Sebastian Tudu of
Dinajpur told international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need that Father Parolari is
still recovering from the Nov. 18, 2015 attack; he is currently at the Combine Military hospital in Dhaka. The
64-year-old medical doctor missionary is out of danger but his injuries are severe. “The attackers targeted his head but missed it, the
bullet hit his neck instead and it passed it through. It was a miracle, he was saved
by God,” the bishop said.

The military do not
let other visitors than Father Parolari’s fellow missionaries into his room, and they can only stay for five
minutes. As soon as the doctors will clear him him to fly, Father
Parolari will be sent to Italy, his home country, for further recovery.
Bishop Tudu said that after the
attack on Father Parolari the Bangladeshi government asked foreigners to avoid going out without informing the local police; the same warning has been issued to the local priests
and religious. Bishop Tudu reported that a number of such attacks have taken place
during the last three years.
The bishop stressed that concrete reasons behind this attack remain unknown. On the day
after the attack, however, it was claimed by an
Islamic State’s Bangladeshi affiliate. The bishop believes that these attacks might be politically motivated. The
priests and religious support minority
groups and the most recent victims have been mostly foreigners, as well as a
protestant pastor.
“With these attacks,
these groups want to gain international attention. It seems they want to stir
up instability in Bangladesh,” the bishop said. Several priests and missionaries
have received death threats. Due to the increasing threats to Church personnel,
the archbishop of Dhaka and other religious leaders have met with the country’s
Home Minister to discuss this problem.
Bishop Tudu asked for
prayers: “God’s providence can help us bring peace and stability to our
country. Please pray for us!”
Street scene in Dhaka; ACN photo
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