Aleppo is burning--three days in the life of a city under siege
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
Everybody is trying to provide psychological support. It is easy to do and very profitable.
The
following report is written by an Aleppo-based Jesuit priest, who preferred to
remain anonymous.
Dec. 8, 2016
In the last few days the news has come in thick and
fast. The government forces have been retaking the zones that it has lost control
of ever since 2012. The people here are hoping this military action will
finally eject the rebels and that we will no longer have their shells falling
on us.
The Jesuit Centre at the Church of St. Vartan
has also been hit, as the photo below shows. Its caption:
“The walls are charred and blackened, our crucified Lord riddled with bullet
holes, mutilated… But for five years He has remained like that on the cross, in
solidarity with our suffering and isolation. He is still there, disfigured,
like our city, revealing to us the suffering of God, faced with the savagery of
men.”

Civilians from the eastern zones are
beginning to flood in. Sadly, many associations, and indeed even humanitarian
organizations, are jumping at the opportunity to make money. Everybody is
trying to provide psychological support. It is easy to do and very profitable. You
put on a bit of music, you dance around the place; it doesn’t matter if the
children who take part are cold or not; it doesn’t matter if they take part in
your party or not; it doesn’t matter if this is their most overriding need, or
if they are in a psychological state that allows people to actually benefit
from this so-called “psychological support;” all that matters is to do the work
and get money.
But there are worse things – like the
organizations that turn up in great numbers when there is a television camera
filming, but then disappear again as soon as the filming stops. Other people
are going in with food and distributing it by throwing it to people as if they
were wild animals and not human beings.
In Jibrine (west of the airport),
where they are assembling and giving shelter to the refugees, we have got to
know the Palestinian Red Crescent. This organization is trying to really do
something, but doesn’t have the resources.
9 December 2016
Apparently a thousand refugees have arrived in
Jibrine. They are hungry and they urgently need immediate assistance.
11
December 2016
It was yesterday evening around 5.45PM. Every Saturday the people come to the
residence for half an hour of meditation, followed by Holy Mass at 6PM. Suddenly
there was a violent explosion, followed by a second. I threw myself on the
ground and a third explosion followed. After a few moments of calm, I emerged
from my office to see devastation everywhere. Then there was a fourth explosion
and I threw myself on the ground again on the debris of the broken glass. Four
grenades did their damage
Sometimes, in the face of disaster, people
think that God should not have allowed it to happen. But we, who live with
death—by choice, for we could avoid it by moving out of the city—can see that
God is always there; His providence alleviates the evil to the extent that
man’s free will “permits” it.
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