After his parish in southern Nigeria was desecrated on Nov. 4,
Monsignor Obiora F. Ike called on his parishioners to observe a week of
prayer and penance.
“Msgr. Ike has called for seven days of prayer, fasting, penance and
reparation for the Christian faithfuls and for the conversion of these
perpetrators,” according to a statement on his website.
Around 2:00 a.m. on Nov. 4, attackers entered St. Leo the Great parish
in Enugu, vandalizing the building and destroying infrastructure and
sacred items.
Everything in the church was destroyed: the altar, sacred vessels,
musical equipment, seats, the pulpit, statues, religious images, and the
entire microphone system.
The destruction included “the Blessed Sacrament that was desecrated,” according to Msgr. Ike's statement.
By 4:00 a.m. security agents arrived at the parish and assessed the
damage. According to Msgr. Ike, the damage done totals around $63,500.
Sunday Mass at the parish was held outside “under the heavy sunshine.”
Msgr. Ike's sermon that day encouraged the congregation to “remain
steadfast in their faith despite all the persecution, religious
intolerance and fanaticism.”
He also urged them to remain dedicated in
prayer and forgive the perpetrators.
A cached version of the parish website features prayers for peace, for
Nigeria in distress, and against bribery and corruption in Nigeria.
Fr. Paulinus I. Ogara, a priest of the Diocese of Enugu, told The Sun
of Lagos that the attackers tagged the wall of the church with graffiti
“warning against the worship of idols.”
The reference to idolatry led to speculation on the Nigerian forum
“Nairaland” that the attack was perpetrated either by Protestant or
Pentecostal Christians, or “it's the Boko Haram in disguise? Maybe they
want to set the Christians against themselves by making it look like it
was done by other Christian faithfuls.”
According to an Associated Press count, the Islamist group has been responsible for more than 690 killings this year alone.
The attack on St. Leo's follows an assault two weeks ago on Seat of Wisdom, another parish in Enugu, according to The Sun.
Bishop Callistus V. Onaga of Enugu has called on Christians “to be
alert and defend their faith and continue the struggle against all
odds,” Msgr. Ike said.
Enugu is located in the Christian-dominated south of Nigeria.
Violence
against Christians in the country is usually committed in the north,
where the population is primarily Muslim.
In 2006, the population of the
Enugu diocese was 60 percent Catholic.