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Islamist Rebels Abduct 12 Nuns from Orthodox Monastery

Shiranui117

Pronounced Shee-ra-noo-ee
Premium Member
Syria: Islamist Rebels Abduct 12 Nuns from Orthodox Monastery in Maaloula

Damascus (AsiaNews) – Islamist rebels have kidnapped a group of nuns from the Greek Orthodox monastery of St Thecla (Mar Taqla) in Maaloula (north of Damascus). Mgr Mario Zenari, the Vatican nuncio in Damascus, confirmed the information after speaking with the Greek-Orthodox Patriarchate. Through the Vatican diplomat, the latter “calls on all Catholics to pray for the women religious.”

“Armed men burst in the monastery of St Thecla in Maaloula this afternoon. From there, they forcibly took 12 women religious,” Mgr Zenari said, citing a statement from Patriarchate. The group of Islamist rebels has apparently taken them to Yabrud, some 80 km north of the capital. Neither the nuncio nor the church Greek Orthodox Church know reason behind the kidnapping.

Islamist Rebels from the Free Syrian Army (FSA) had invaded the small town on 5 September after driving out regime troops with the support of al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Brigades. After taking control of the city, they went on a rampage against Christian buildings, killing three young Catholic men.

More than 3,000 people, the town’s entire Christian population, fled their homes seeking refuge in Bab Touma, the Christian quarter of Damascus. Some found shelter with relatives in Lebanon or in local Greek-Catholic convents.
Only Muslims were left in town, plus 40 nuns at the St Thecla Monastery who stayed to help care for dozens of orphaned children.

As of yesterday, Maaloula became again the scene of heavy fighting between the army and Syrian rebels, including many members of the extremist Jabat-al-Nusra militia.
Clashes are concentrated mostly in the upper, oldest part of the town, where the St Thecla Greek-Orthodox and the Sts Sergius and Bacchus Greek-Catholic monasteries are located.
From there, the rebels have launched repeated attacks against army positions in the lower part of town.

Fighting is intensifying, sources told AsiaNews. ”The army is trying to regain control over the villages north of Damascus. For this purpose, it has launched a major offensive against the rebels, who are trying to hold government forces back through a scorched earth policy in the areas under their control.”
Lord have mercy. Unfortunately, such actions against Christians are common among the Muslim Brotherhood and Syrian rebels. May order be restored to the Middle East, and may these Islamofascists repent of their actions and stop this senselessness.
 

Poeticus

| abhyAvartin |
Syria: Islamist Rebels Abduct 12 Nuns from Orthodox Monastery in Maaloula

Lord have mercy. Unfortunately, such actions against Christians are common among the Muslim Brotherhood and Syrian rebels. May order be restored to the Middle East, and may these Islamofascists repent of their actions and stop this senselessness.

It's 2013 AD. And, what some people still do in the name of religion.......absolutely disgusting.

Condolences to the lives lost. I hope the nuns are safe (but, I doubt it).
 

Shia Islam

Quran and Ahlul-Bayt a.s.
Premium Member
What is certain is that such atrocities will be extremely under-reported...
and the support for the criminal extremist groups will continue...

As it is important to satisfy the KING:
041009_obowma.jpg
 

Knight of Albion

Well-Known Member
Dear God, is there nothing these maniacs won't stoop to?

I'm just wondering how these people believe such actions, along with rape, beheading prisoners of war, massacring civilians, suicide bombing, truck bombing etc. furthers 'the glory of Islam'?

'God is love and love is of God'. 'Love is the fulfilling if the Law'.
This is the bottom line of any faith worthy of the name.
No faith is served by cruelty and violence. On the contrary, it is only defiled.
 
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Shia Islam

Quran and Ahlul-Bayt a.s.
Premium Member
Dear God, is there nothing these maniacs won't stoop to?

I'm just wondering how these people believe such actions, along with rape, beheading prisoners of war, massacring civilians, suicide bombing, truck bombing etc. furthers 'the glory of Islam'?

'God is love and love is of God'. 'Love is the fulfilling if the Law'.
This is the bottom line of any faith worthy of the name.
No faith is served by cruelty and violence. On the contrary, it is only defiled.


As with every religion there is a true version of it, and there is the distorted version that is followed by the evil ones.
 

Freedomelf

Active Member
As with every religion there is a true version of it, and there is the distorted version that is followed by the evil ones.

Very good point. But unfortunately, most people blame Muslims for the actions of a few. And yet, ironically, they do not blame Christians for the actions of the Westboro Baptists. That isn't right. :(

Let's just pray, to whatever God we choose, that these women will come out of this alive.
 

illykitty

RF's pet cat
It's really horrible, hopefully nothing bad happens to these nuns... :(

I really don't understand rebels actions. What do they hope to accomplish with this? Don't they see they're causing so much pain and grief. Did they read the Quran and ignore all the good in it?
 

Thana

Lady
Very good point. But unfortunately, most people blame Muslims for the actions of a few. And yet, ironically, they do not blame Christians for the actions of the Westboro Baptists. That isn't right. :(

Let's just pray, to whatever God we choose, that these women will come out of this alive.


Atleast they're not going around kidnapping people or murdering those who disagree with them. They may be extreme, But they certaintly are not the worst.
Atleast they're not hurting people, The same cannot be said for islamic extremists.
 

Shiranui117

Pronounced Shee-ra-noo-ee
Premium Member
Patriarch John X of Antioch made a statement on the situation, which has been published on the Antiochian Orthodox Church's website:

Amidst the calamities besetting Syria and the bloodshed afflicting our people and amidst the uncertainty that still surrounds the fate of our metropolitans Boulos and Youhanna in Aleppo, it is with deep pain that the Patriarchate of Antioch and All the East has received news of the abduction of her daughters, nuns and orphans of the Monastery of Saint Thekla in Maaloula on December 2, 2013 and their being transported to Yabroud. Because our initial attempts to obtain the release our abducted daughters did not achieve the desired outcome, the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch and All the East calls upon the international community and all governments to intervene and make efforts to release them safely. She likewise calls upon the conscience of all humanity and upon the spark of living conscience that the Creator, may He be exalted, sowed in the souls of all those who worship God, including the kidnappers, to release our sisters the nuns and the girls of the orphanage.

Our appeal to the international community: Although we are grateful for all the feelings of solidarity, we no longer need denunciation, condemnations, or "feelings of concern" about the assault on human dignity that is occurring, because all this is engraved in the conscience of every one of us. Today, however, we need concrete actions, not words. We do not want voices of condemnation from decision-makers, whether regional or international, but rather efforts, pressure and action leading to the release of those whose only fault was their clinging to their monastery and refusing to leave it.

We reiterate our call to stop the logic of conflict in Syria and replace it with the logic of peaceful dialogue and not to use stalling the start of dialogue to make gains on the ground because Syria is bleeding and with her too our hearts. Let all know that one drop of innocent blood shed on this earth is holier and more precious than all the slogans in the world. Let all understand the the bells of our churches, we the Christians of the Middle East, which were hung and rang in time immemorial, shall continue to ring out and be heard as the sound of our love and our peace for others, with their various religions, throughout the world.

The cruelty of the present days shall not uproot us from our land, because it is our being, our essence and a piece of our heart. Given the new circumstances exemplified by the abduction of the nuns and orphans of Maaloula, with regret we announce the suspension of our official patriarchal pastoral visit to our children and parishes in the countries of the Arabian Gulf, which had been scheduled between the sixth and seventeenth of December 2013, and our return to Damascus to follow closely all efforts and communications related to this latest incident. I greet all of our children in those countries and all those who labored to prepare the schedule for the aforementioned visit. I hope that my visit to them will be at the nearest opportunity. You, our children in the Gulf, you whose sweet and honored faces, dear to my heart I was eagerly looking forward to meeting tomorrow, I apologize to you all for suspending this visit after you had made all arrangements for its success. I pray for your health, blessing and success. May God protect Syria, Lebanon and the Middle East and the people of the Middle East.

Thank you to the media who have made it possible for Antioch's pain and Antioch's hope to be heard in all the world.
 

Shiranui117

Pronounced Shee-ra-noo-ee
Premium Member
Update: The nuns have been released unharmed! Glory to God!

Syrian militants release Greek Orthodox nuns

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Syrian militants released a group of Greek Orthodox nuns Monday in exchange for dozens of women held in government prisons — a rare deal between Damascus and al-Qaeda-linked rebels that was mediated by Qatari and Lebanese officials.

The dramatic scene of the nuns being freed from vehicles in the dead of night at the Lebanese-Syrian border, bidding their captors a surprisingly friendly farewell, ended their three-month ordeal. The nuns were captured as opposition fighters overran a Christian village and were held in a border town. They were released as government-backed forces battled their way into the strategic border town in which they were held.

It provided an unusual example of regional actors cooperating to reach across the Syrian civil war's sectarian and ideological fault lines, which have sharply split the Middle East.

The energy-rich Gulf nation of Qatar, a chief backer of the rebels fighting to topple Syrian President Bashar Assad, was involved in the mediation. Lebanon's General Security Chief Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim, a powerful figure trusted by the Lebanese militant Hezbollah group and its Syrian government allies, was on hand to receive the nuns early Monday.

The 13 women said they were treated well by their captors, members of the al-Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front. In a video released by the militant group, they appear healthy save for one elderly nun who is carried by a masked gunman to a waiting vehicle.

The video, posted by the Nusra Front on the internet Monday, shows the nuns and their captors chatting affectionately as they bid each other farewell.
An off-camera rebel voice tells the nuns that God will reward them for their suffering. "May God reward every person who sought to resolve this problem," one nun replies.

As the women reach the car, the unseen rebel says, "I was so happy to be in communication with you, and I hope that we can stay in communication, if God decides that. Please say hello to your families for me, and I hope you arrive safely."

The video appears to be consistent with Associated Press reporting.
The Damascus-based Greek Orthodox Patriarchate for Antioch and All The East hailed the nuns' release, saying their return to safety was "a message from heaven to all Christians to remain in this land (Syria) and coexist in complete harmony with Muslims."

The statement, carried by the Syrian official news service SANA, said the nuns will stay in the premises of the patriarchate and will return to Maaloula only after the town is "cleared of dirty terrorists."

Negotiations for the nuns' release had been on and off for weeks. Qatari Foreign Minister Khalid bin Mohammed al-Attiyah said in a statement carried by his country's official news agency that the energy-rich Gulf nation had been involved in the mediation that freed the nuns since December.

Opposition activists said the nuns had been held in a villa in Yabroud, a strategic Syrian town near the border with Lebanon that has been under opposition control for much of the conflict. In recent weeks, government forces have been on the offensive in the area. They've tightened the noose on the town in the past two days, increasing the pressure on the rebels to reach a deal to release the nuns.

Ibrahim, Lebanon's general security chief, and al-Attiyeh, Qatar's chief diplomat, said the Syrian government met a demand of the rebels to release more than 150 Syrian women held in prisons.

The Syrian government typically does not comment on releases in exchange for people held by rebels and did not confirm the women's release Monday.

The report of the release from government custody could not be independently confirmed, but Rami Abdurrahman, head of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said 150 women and three children were freed. The children were the sons and daughters of one of the female prisoners, he added.

Syrian authorities have detained children in the past, usually to pressure family members to surrender.

The Nusra video shows the three children at the scene where the exchange took place. One little girl weeps for her mother, and a masked rebel gunman holds another child as he shouts "God is great!"

Monday's exchange was reminiscent of a deal reached in October, when nine Lebanese pilgrims held in Syria for a year and a half were exchanged for two Turkish pilots held hostage in Lebanon. That deal, negotiated by Qatar and Palestinian officials, reportedly also included freeing dozens of women held in Syrian government jails to satisfy the rebels who abducted the pilgrims.
The nuns' ordeal began in early December, when they were seized by rebels from a convent in the ancient Christian town of Maaloula.

When the nuns arrived in Damascus on Monday, the capital's residents gave them a warm welcome at the Church of the Cross in the predominantly Christian neighborhood of Qassaa, where prayers marking their safe return were held Monday evening.

Although the nuns appear to have been treated well, their seizure confirmed the fears of many Syrian Christians that they were being targeted by extremists among the rebels in the increasingly sectarian three-year conflict.
The country's chaotic mix of rebel groups is overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim, while minorities include Christians, Shiite Muslims and Alawites — whose sect is a Shiite offshoot. Most have sided with Assad or remained neutral, fearing for their fate should rebels take power. Assad is an Alawite.
 
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