Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
A still image taken from a video shows people gathering outside St. Philip Catholic Church following a deadly shooting by unknown gunmen Aug. 6 in Ozubulu, Nigeria. (CNS photo/Reuters TV)

VATICAN CITY (CNS)—Pope Francis called for an end to violence against Christians following deadly attacks in two African countries.

The pope led pilgrims in praying a Hail Mary for the victims of a deadly shooting Aug. 6 at St. Philip's Catholic Church in Ozubulu, located in Nigeria's southern state of Anambra. He also prayed for Christians killed following an attack at a mission in Gambo, Central African Republic.

"I hope that all forms of hatred and violence cease and that such shameful crimes are no longer committed in places of worship where the faithful gather to pray," the pope told pilgrims Aug. 9 before concluding his weekly general audience.

The BBC and other news outlets reported Aug. 7 that at least 11 people were killed and as many as 18 others wounded as they attempted to flee the carnage in Ozubulu. While no suspects have been caught, authorities believe the target was a young businessman involved in a drug deal gone wrong.

The situation in the Central African Republic is more widespread, with violent clashes between the mostly Muslim Seleka rebels and the mostly Christian anti-Balaka militia.

In a series of email messages sent to his brother and shown to Catholic News Service Aug. 8, Spanish-born Bishop Juan-Jose Aguirre Munoz of Bangassou, Central African Republic, detailed the horrors that occurred at the Gambo mission, located about 45 miles away.

"Several men and children have been beheaded. Everything is restless here," the bishop wrote.

Bishop Aguirre said that several days earlier, the anti-Balaka militia arrived at the mission and expelled the Seleka rebels. However, he continued, U.N. peacekeepers came to the mission Aug. 7 and "expelled the anti-Balaka. The Seleka returned and cut about a dozen throats."

"What has happened here in Gambo is very serious and will impact Bangassou," he added.

Several minutes later, Bishop Aguirre sent a chilling message to his brother: "There are 50 dead in Gambo. The mission has been ransacked."

The Spanish bishop, who has welcomed 2,000 Muslims at the cathedral in Bangassou to defend them from attacks by anti-Balaka militants, asked his brother to pray for the country.

"We need your prayers; it is the strength that maintains our hope in that this will be resolved," Bishop Aguirre wrote.

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

Why can't Catholics and Protestants share the experience of partaking in the Eucharist each according to their tradition?
Meg GiordanoNovember 07, 2024
On this week’s episode, host Colleen Dulle interviews Catholic author and academic Michael W. Higgins to discuss his new book, “The Jesuit Disruptor: A Personal Portrait of Pope Francis.”
Inside the VaticanNovember 07, 2024
On this week’s episode of “Jesuitical,” Ashley and Zac are joined by America magazine’s editor in chief, Sam Sawyer, S.J., to discuss the results of the 2024 presidential election.
JesuiticalNovember 07, 2024
History was made on Nov. 5, when Francis, the first Jesuit pope, visited the Gregorian University, the oldest and largest pontifical university in Rome, founded by St. Ignatius Loyola in 1551.
Gerard O’ConnellNovember 07, 2024