The Asian Age

Christians, Muslims attend first service in post- ISIS Deir Ezzor

-

Deir Ezzor, Feb. A solemn group of Christians held their first prayer service in years on Saturday in the ravaged church of St. Mary in Syria’s eastern Deir Ezzor city.

Stones, strips of wire, papers and remnants of rockets were strewn across the church floor, and bright sunlight streamed in from the blown- out windows.

Holding thin white candles under pockmarked archways, the congregati­on of less than two dozen worshipper­s relished their first service in nearly six years.

Fighting has gripped Deir Ezzor since rebels captured part of the city in 2012, and grew worse when the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria ( ISIS) jihadist 4:

Fighting has gripped Deir Ezzor since rebels captured part of the city in 2012, and grew worse when the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria ( ISIS) jihadist group shot to prominence there in 2014

group shot to prominence there in 2014.

Syrian troops recaptured the entire city in November and residents have slowly begun to trickle back. Saturday’s service — which was also attended by Muslim clerics — was led by the silver- haired Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch, Ignatius Aphrem II.

He presided over the service from behind a small table draped in a white cloth, as the church’s altar had been badly damaged.

“It’s an indescriba­ble feeling for us to pray in a nearly- destroyed church, which serves as a consolatio­n for our hearts and a message of hope to the people of the city to come back and take part in building it anew,” the patriarch said.

And Maurice Amseeh, a local bishop, called on Christians to return to their city. “The important thing now is for life to come back — for Deir Ezzor’s residents and Christians to come back to it,” he told worshipper­s.

An estimated 3,000 Christians lived in Deir Ezzor before Syria’s uprising started in 2011.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India