A young couple got married in the church where they were baptised, a garden
table for an altar, carpets and icons provided by various families in lieu of
the sacred ornaments destroyed by Islamists, the building itself turned into a
shell on 14 August.
Mina and Justina
are young Copts from Minya (Upper Egypt) who were supposed to celebrate their wedding
in the Prince Tadros Parish Church, one of the city's most important, but their
dream was crushed when members of the Muslim Brotherhood attacked the local Christian
community.
"The fire
set by Islamists has destroyed everything, even the huge iron chandelier hanging
from the centre of the ceiling," said Macarius, Bishop of Minya, in an
interview with el-Badil, an Arabic-language
newspaper. "Columns were hot for days," he added.
In the end, the authorities
had to declare the building unfit for use, the prelate said; yet, within a few
days, residents were already clamouring to return to their church to pray.
The marriage between
Mina and Justina was just an opportunity to bring the Christian pastoral ministry
back to the centre of community life.
The young
couple was told that they could marry in the churchyard, Bishop Macarius said, because
smoke and soot still hung in the air inside the church, which itself was in danger
of collapsing. Nonetheless, bride and groom refused, saying that their families
wanted a church wedding.
The couple's
parents and friends decked out the ruins. Guests brought chairs from home and
those who had not had their carpets, curtains and lamps stolen brought those as
well.
About 60
people attended the service held in early September. At the end, the bishop
invited the newlyweds and their families to offer their joy and their prayers to
the Christians of Minya and to their persecuted Church.
After Mass,
a crew from el-Badil interviewed the
couple, asking them why they had insisted on getting married in the building
and their feelings in front of the nave full of people.
"From
childhood, this was our church," they explained. "This is where we grew up. [This
is where] Priests taught us to pray . . . . Now we are happy."