The Province

Guam prays for peace as missile threat looms

- NICOLA SMITH

HAGATNA, Guam — Priests in Guam led prayers for peace Sunday amid ongoing fears that their tiny Pacific island could come under fire from North Korean ballistic missiles over the next few days.

The call to prayer came ahead of what promises to be another tense week in the U.S. territory, where 162,000 inhabitant­s have been on tenterhook­s since Kim Jong Un, the North Korean dictator, said he was considerin­g plans to fire four Hwasong-12 missiles within 40 kilometres of their coastline by mid-August.

Michael Byrnes, a Guam Archbishop, urged leaders of the island’s 26 churches to “offer prayers for peace between our nations, just resolution of difference­s, and prudence in both speech and action.”

About 85 per cent of Guam’s population claim an affiliatio­n to Roman Catholicis­m, making it the main religion of the former Spanish colony, which was conquered by the U.S. in 1898.

During several days of being in the internatio­nal spotlight, many Guamanians, U.S. citizens by birth, have invoked their Christian faith as an answer to dealing with the anxiety of being in the crosshairs of a potential nuclear conflict.

“The newspaper says it only takes 14 minutes for their bombs to get here but, you know, the Lord is going to take care of us,” grandmothe­r Elena Sanicolas said while doing her weekly shopping at the K-Mart.

In the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral Basilica Sunday morning, churchgoer­s hugged loved ones and shook hands with their neighbours.

“It’s important, especially today, to pray for peace, and for two people being able to come together, two leaders of the world, and think that there is a bigger picture that encompasse­s everybody, rather than to have such huge conflict,” congregant Ronnie Connelly told Pacific Daily News.

Devout Catholics didn’t confine themselves to expressing their faith within the church walls. A “prayers for peace” lunchtime rally in the capital Hagatna drew around 100 people.

Father Mike Cristostom­o said their response to the threat was to have faith and pray.

 ?? — AP ?? Across Guam, priests, including Pastor Jose Antonio Abad, are praying for peace in the face of a missile threat from North Korea.
— AP Across Guam, priests, including Pastor Jose Antonio Abad, are praying for peace in the face of a missile threat from North Korea.

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