The last remaining Christian church in Deir Azzor was destroyed
in an explosion by armed groups as they intensify their efforts to take
the city and nearby airport. In recent days increasing amounts of
footage have been uploaded documenting intense fighting between armed
groups and the Syrian army. The Capuchin Franciscans have been present
in Deir Ezzor in the northeast and Al-Suwayda in the southwest – in a
place called “Mountain of the Druze (Jabal al-Druze)”. Two friars
remained in Deir Ezzor up until the recent explosion at the church, with
the help of the Lebanese and Syrian International Red Cross.
In a statement posted on the website of The Order of Friars Minor, a report of the explosion said:
““There was an explosion near our church in Deir Ezzor that destroyed it,” writes Br. Antoine Haddad, Viceprovincial Minister of Lebanon, in a message to us. The news was picked up by the media because the two Capuchin friars who lived there, with the help of the Lebanese and Syrian International Red Cross, and the nuncios of Lebanon and Syria, left with the Sisters of Mother Teresa and about ten seniors who lived in our place. They were the last remaining Christians in the area to leave. The church was completely destroyed, but until now it was not possible to know if the friary was hit or not, because there are no longer any Christians in Deir Ezzor, apart from one who returned because he lived in the ‘quieter’ area of the city. His attempts to get to the scene did not succeed because of intense gunfire. Until recently, our church of Deir Ezzor was the only one left almost intact. But then a few months ago there was a video on YouTube in which you could see the church with the door and side wall gutted and soldiers entering.
In a statement posted on the website of The Order of Friars Minor, a report of the explosion said:
““There was an explosion near our church in Deir Ezzor that destroyed it,” writes Br. Antoine Haddad, Viceprovincial Minister of Lebanon, in a message to us. The news was picked up by the media because the two Capuchin friars who lived there, with the help of the Lebanese and Syrian International Red Cross, and the nuncios of Lebanon and Syria, left with the Sisters of Mother Teresa and about ten seniors who lived in our place. They were the last remaining Christians in the area to leave. The church was completely destroyed, but until now it was not possible to know if the friary was hit or not, because there are no longer any Christians in Deir Ezzor, apart from one who returned because he lived in the ‘quieter’ area of the city. His attempts to get to the scene did not succeed because of intense gunfire. Until recently, our church of Deir Ezzor was the only one left almost intact. But then a few months ago there was a video on YouTube in which you could see the church with the door and side wall gutted and soldiers entering.
“Deir Ezzor is a city in the east of Syria, on the Euphrates,
between Palmyra and the Iraqi border.—Br. Antoine explains—Our presence
there goes back to the thirties of the last century, but our presence in
the area goes back a lot farther. We also have another house to the
south of Syria, in As-Suwayda, an area that is still quiet for the
moment, where there are two brothers. Our Viceprovince, in almost four
centuries of history, has always suffered destruction, persecution,
martyrdom…But always, like the legend of the Phoenix—the mythological
bird known for being reborn from its own ashes—our Viceprovince rose
again with the Risen Christ. Recently, we have recovered, after thirty
years, another property (Abey), destroyed by the war in Lebanon: it too
has begun to rise again…this church of stone will also be rebuilt one
day when there is a springtime of peace in our Mediterranean world.””
On the Irish website of the Capuchin Franciscans, details of their presence in Syria is documented:
“Four Capuchin friars are working at present in violence-torn
Syria, two in Deir Ezzor in the northwest and two in As Suwayda in the
southeast, in a place called the Mountain of the Druze”. The presence of
these friars is a great source of reassurance for the Christian
communities there. The friars report that the situation is worsening and
there is a growing fear among the Christians about the future.”]
Thanks to Eretz Zen for the following video, translated with English subtitles:
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