Intervention of H. Exc. Barnaba EL SORYANY, Bishop of the Coptic-Orthodox Diocese
of Saint George Roma (ITALY), Fraternal Delegate
His Holiness Pope Shenouda III, Pope of Alexandria and Patriarch of Saint Mark Episcopate,
entrusted me with the mission to attend the Synod as his representative, and to express
his warm gratitude to His Holiness for extending an invitation to partake in the Synodal
works. He entrusted me with delivering a tribute of fraternal love to Your Holiness
and to all the members of the Synod, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, praying
and hoping that God will let the Synod bear its desired fruits for the good and consideration
of the Christians of the Middle East. Allow me to say that this Synod comes at
a very late stage, as the conflicts and persecutions that our region suffers from
have multiplied and turned into lamentation and suffering, resulting in the migration
of a large number of the finest young Christians, leaving their homelands behind.
I also mean leaving their hearts behind, with their history, authentic culture and
tradition, in order to live and take refuge in another country, whose traditions and
way of life are strange to them, not in line with their nature, but, compared to what
they went through, still more secure and safer, providing them and their children
with the hope of a better future. The title of this Synod on communion and witness
takes on a new meaning and significance with regard to the suffering and challenges
faced by the Christians of the Middle East, due to precarious and complex political
conflicts, particularly the Arab-Israeli conflict, as well as the wars this region
has witnessed and still is enduring; wars that have caused an upsurge in Middle Eastern
problems, where, as a reaction, anti-Jewish and anti-Christian Salafist movements
alike were launched, while the spirit of hatred, rejection of the other and isolationism
were felt on the other side in response to the psychological pressure and persecution.
That, to the point of martyrdom, marginalization and the feeling of being “non-native”
citizens enduring discrimination at work and in political institutions and parliamentary
and local councils. In this sense, it fell to the Church as a reality that it had
to live and live with, particularly in how to minister to those communities that departed
and scattered all over the world – in addition to ministering the remaining communities
inside the country, encouraging them not to leave their homelands, and seeking to
resolve their issues, as much as possible, through the intercession of officials.
From my personal experience, I can confirm that we were forced to undergo the
reality of emigration. Nevertheless, the Coptic church realized the perils of emigration
and migration, of leaving the country whatever the reason for the exile. Accordingly,
with his keen intellect and spiritual sensitivity, Pope Shenouda III recognized the
need of our Coptic migrant communities (around two million Christian Copts) residing
overseas to live in the same ecclesiastic oriental spiritual environment they grew
up and were raised in according to its traditions. That is why Pope Shenouda III sent
the Church after its faithful communities, to look for them in fear of losing them
and their Copt identity, as well as their disappearing in foreign communities. Thus,
he founded churches and monasteries and established Copt schools in immigration countries,
such as: In the United States: around 160 Egyptian Coptic churches, two monasteries
and five bishops; In Canada: 20 Coptic churches; In Bolivia: several churches
and a bishop; In Brazil: several churches and a bishop as well; In Australia:
20 Coptic churches, a monastery and three bishops; In Europe: churches in almost
every European country, three monasteries and three bishops; In Sudan: two parishes,
two monasteries and two bishops; In Southern Africa: churches in Kenya, Zimbabwe
and remaining countries – a monastery and two bishops. He also founded Coptic schools
in the United States, Canada and Australia.I would like to affirm that we look forward
to this Synod, thanks to the efforts of His Holiness and the Synod members. May it
be the glimpse of hope that carries within it better solutions for the Christians’
problems in the Middle East. My thanks go to the Synodal members who succeeded,
throughout their addresses, in covering all the aspects they have experienced and
witnessed, dimensions that have had direct or indirect influences on emigration movements
in the Middle East.