Christian and Muslim leaders from Syria, along with two of the
war-torn country’s leading surgeons, are to attend a silent vigil for
all victims of terrorism and violence in Dublin on 1 December.
The interfaith delegation will also speak to politicians in the Dáil and address meetings in Trinity College Dublin.
The main leaders of the Syrian delegation are:
His Beatitude, Gregory III Laham, Patriarch of Antioch and All the
East, and Alexandria and Jerusalem, who is the spiritual leader of the
Melkite Greek Catholic Church;
His Holiness, Ignatius Aphrem II of Antioch, Patriarch of Antioch and the spiritual leader of the Syriac Orthodox Church;
His Grace, Dr Ahmad Badreddin Hassoun, Grand Mufti of Syria;
Dr Ahmad al Khaddour is a cardiothoracic surgeon, a Professor of
Medicine at Damascus University and a native of Homs, which was witness
to countless atrocities before the Syrian Army stabilised the situation
there;
Dr Bashir Mohammad is a cardiologist and a native of Hama, which is
still subject to very heavy fighting and countless rebel outrages.
Drs Khaddour and Mohammad will explain how Irish and EU sanctions
have caused Syria’s hospitals to degenerate from being on a par with
Irish hospitals to a pitiable state where scores of women and children
die every day because commonplace medicines, including those
used to treat blood clotting, are not available.
The goal of the Syrian delegation’s visit is to send a fact-finding
medical, religious, political and humanitarian mission to the Syrian
Arab Republic from Ireland, as well as from other independent-minded
countries.
They also want to encourage Irish NGOs to send aid to Damascus via Trócaire/Caritas and other transparent and credible conduits.
The situation in Syria, as East Aleppo’s human shields show, remains
very grave for all Syrians, from the youngest to the oldest.
Organisers of the visit stress that the EU’s sanctions are killing
more Syrian children than ISIS and they claim that the USA has yet to
deliver food or medical aid to Aleppo, whereas the Russian air force,
despite the ongoing bombardment, continues to fly in tonnes of much
needed food, clothing and medicines.
They also believe Ireland can act as “a lodestar for peace and
reconciliation” by giving an example on Syria that other countries can
emulate.
The Melkite Greek Catholic Church view themselves as the first Christian community, dating back to the time of the Apostles.
Patriarch Laham is a native of Darayya, which was recently liberated,
at great cost, by the Syrian Arab Army. Although now 83 years old,
Patriarch Laham travels the world, tirelessly working for peace and
reconciliation in Syria.
The Syriac Orthodox Church belongs to the Oriental Orthodoxy, which
has been a distinct Church body since the schism following the Council
of Chalcedon in AD 451, although it claims its roots to the first
Christian communities in Antioch in AD 37, described in the Acts of the
Apostles (New Testament, Acts 11:26) and established by St Peter.
Patriarch Aphrem, who recently survived a rebel assassination
attempt, is a native of Qamishli, in north-eastern Syria, an area that
has seen ISIS commit unspeakable atrocities against his fellow Arameans
and Syriacs, clerics like Bishop Gregorios Yohanna Ibrahim included.
Syro-Aramean men, women and children, along with Shia, Druze, Alawi
and Ismaili will remain prime targets of the Western-backed rebels until
Ireland and other countries put enough pressure on their sponsors to
end their cynical proxy terror campaign.
Mufti Hassoun is a frequent speaker at interreligious and
intercultural events due to his pluralistic views on interfaith
dialogue.
A native of Aleppo, his son, Sariya, was brutally murdered by rebels
on 2 October 2011 for no other crime than for being his son.
As Grand Mufti, he is the highest Sunni authority in the Syrian Arab
Republic.
Syria’s moderate Sunnis, as well as the confederated Sunni
tribes of Deir Ezzor and Palmyra, remain primary targets of ISIS and the
other terrorist groups.
The 1 December vigil will commemorate the many moderate Sunni imams,
including the world-renowned Islamic scholar Dr Mohamed Said Ramadan
Al-Bouti and Cheikh Mohammad Izzat Al Matroud, who have been brutally
murdered by rebels.