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Catholic church
damaged as bombs explode at Baghdad Orthodox churches
By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
ROME (CNS) -- St. John's
Chaldean Catholic Church was damaged Nov. 8 when car bombs went
off at two Orthodox churches in Baghdad, Iraq, said Chaldean
Patriarch Emmanuel Karim Delly of Baghdad.
"This is the third
time our churches -- Catholic or Orthodox -- have been attacked,"
the patriarch told Catholic News Service in a Nov. 9 telephone
interview from Baghdad. Car bombers targeted churches in August
and again in October.
Three people died and more
than 30 were injured when the car bombs went off minutes apart
Nov. 8 at St. George Syrian Orthodox Church and at the Church
of St. Matthew, the parish of the Assyrian Church of the East,
the patriarch said.
"The pressure of the
bombs" broke the windows and damaged a wall of the nearby
Catholic church, he said.
Patriarch Delly said Iraq's
Christian minority, like the bombers, "make no distinction"
between Catholic and Orthodox churches; an attack on one is felt
as an attack on all.
"We don't know why
they attacked the churches," he said.
The attacks could be seen
as a reaction to the Nov. 8 assault by U.S. and Iraqi troops
on Fallujah, "but they bombed churches before the attack
on Fallujah," Patriarch Delly said.
The patriarch said he does
not think the church bombings will lead to a greater exodus of
Christians from Iraq.
"Christians do not
want people to make distinctions between Christians and Muslims;
we are all children of God. Many people, both Christians and
Muslims, want to leave because it is not safe here," he
said.
"It's not because of religion, but because there is no security."We
Christians have been here for 2,000 years and we do not want
to leave," he said.
"Please, pray for
us," the patriarch said. "Pray that God will give us
peace, tranquility and security."
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