Mogadishu bishop: evangelical mission only answer to al-Shabab violence
Sept 26, 2013: "From Somalia to Iraq, including Egypt and Syria, Christians are often
persecuted and flee. Many consider them as something alien from the Muslim majority.
Several extremist religious leaders try to hinder their presence and existence in
these countries, which are often the only opposition to the hatred and violence imposed
by the ideologies of Islamic extremists," said Mgr Giorgio Bertin, bishop of Djibouti
and apostolic administrator of Mogadishu. For years, the bishop has cared for the
small Catholic communities in the two countries, who live in an environment dominated
by Islamic extremism, anarchy and terrorist violence.
"In Somalia," he said,
"the population is victim of the chaos and cruelty caused by Islamic courts and the
al-shabab movement, which exports terrorists all over the world."
On Saturday,
the terrorist group fighting to establish an Islamic state in the Horn of Africa attacked
the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi ( Kenya), taking hundreds of hostages for three
days. The assault by at least 20 terrorists ended with over 60 people dead and hundreds
injured.
"From Somalia to Iraq, Christians are often considered something alien
from the Muslim majority and experience strong social pressure because of their presence,"
Mgr Bertin noted.
"We fear," he explained, "fanatical groups that pursue a
religious ideology that does not represent the thoughts and ideas of the majority
of the population. Somalia is an example of how some areas of the Middle East could
become in the event of a collapse of the government. If central authorities do not
exert their power, they [the al-shahab] are free to do whatever they want justify
their belligerence by pointing to the Christian presence."
For the prelate,
people usually wonder what is the sense of the mission in these countries, where Christians
risk their life, places like "Somalia where there are less than 100 Christians" or
"Djibouti, which has about 5,000."
"In the West, people are often amazed by
these places' numbers: no priests, less than 100 Christians, inability to convert
to Christianity. Such figures apparently discourage the Church's mission. However,
bearing witness to the Gospel in countries like Somalia means giving oneself to God's
initiative, participating with Christians in the hopes and the suffering of the whole
population."
"The mission is addressed primarily to Muslims who thanks to
the Christian presence often find a new way of life, one that responds with love to
the hatred and violence imposed by the ideologies of Islamic extremists," Mgr. Bertin
noted.
"Unfortunately," he said, "this approach cannot be measured. Only with
faith and hope can we measure the meaning of our presence." (Source: Asia News)