The Vatican nuncio to Syria has said that the war in Syria is like a
factory churning out nothing but death, destruction and suffering.
Archbishop Mario Zenari said that even though the Vatican was unable
to confirm recent reports that a Jesuit priest had been kidnapped in
Syria, the nuncio said hundreds of innocent people there find themselves
abducted for political leverage or economic extortion.
Kidnappings in Syria represent “a very, very painful wound that deeply harms the nation and the Syrian people,” he said.
Italian Jesuit Fr Paolo Dall’Oglio, 59, who had spent more than 30
years promoting Muslim-Christian dialogue in Syria, was reportedly
missing.
News reports said acquaintances had been unable to reach him by
phone, and Reuters reported that militants with links to al-Qaida
kidnapped the priest on Monday while he was walking in the northern
Syrian city of al-Raqqah.
Archbishop Zenari said in an interview with Vatican Radio on Tuesday
that sometimes the priest would inform him of his whereabouts, but that
this time he had heard nothing. He said: “First of all, I’d want to know
if he really was in Syria the last few days, and then I would wait to
have information that was more definitive.”
The Jesuit province in Italy told the Vatican press hall it was unable to confirm whether Father Dall’Oglio had been kidnapped.
“It’s too soon to say,” Passionist Father Ciro Benedettini, vice
director of the press hall, told journalists on Tuesday. He said that
the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs was looking into the matter.
Father Dall’Oglio was well-known and very well-respected in Syria,
even though he may have held “positions that not everyone shared,”
Archbishop Zenari said.
The priest reportedly supported the rebel insurrection against
President Bashar Assad. The priest was expelled by Syrian authorities
last year for reportedly helping people injured by government
crackdowns.
Twenty years ago, Father Dall’Oglio turned a dilapidated
sixth-century monastery in the desert of western Syria into a center for
Muslim-Christian interfaith dialogue; it was staffed by Catholic and
Orthodox nuns and priests.
“He is truly a man of virtue, a Jesuit of great talent and a person who loves Syria,” Archbishop Zenari said.
The archbishop said the latest U.N. figures estimate the two-year
civil war creates some 5,000 victims a month, and about 6,000 people
flee the country every day.
Those unable to leave face skyrocketing prices, unemployment and continued suffering, he said.
The conflict, “besides bringing death and destruction, has truly
become a manufacturing plant of countless miseries,” he said.
He urged
the world’s nations to help end “this infernal cycle” of violence,
kidnappings and casualties.