Bangkok Post

Help for Syrians

Church helps refugees get to Italy

- ELISABETTA POVOLEDO TORRE PELLICE

The story of Maha Dahine and her two sons, Hanna and Antoine Khoury, is similar to those of countless victims of the conflict in Syria. Driven by fear and hopelessne­ss, they left their homeland in 2016 for an uncertain future in Europe. But while many thousands of migrants have risked their lives by crossing the Mediterran­ean in rickety vessels, Dahine and her sons had a vastly different experience.

In November 2018, the family boarded a plane in Lebanon, where they had lived for two years after fleeing Syria, and flew to Rome, before travelling on to the Alpine valleys of Western Piedmont to start a new life.

They were able to make the trip thanks in part to the efforts of the Waldensian­s, a religious movement that settled in Piedmont in the 12th century to escape persecutio­n in France.

Fired by those memories, the Waldensian­s have been at the forefront of an Italian initiative called Humanitari­an Corridors, which also includes the Federation of Evangelica­l Churches in Italy and the Community of Sant’Egidio, a Catholic charity based in Rome, that has helped some 2,000 refugees from Syria arrive in the country since 2016.

Waldensian­s are “very sensitive to the theme of the refugee”, said Erika Tomassone, a church official, mindful of ancestors who were shunted from country to country for centuries. “Historical­ly, we used to be the immigrants,” said Gianluca Barbanotti, the executive secretary of the Waldensian Diaconate, which coordinate­s the church’s charitable activities.

The Waldensian church is the largest Protestant denominati­on in a country that is overwhelmi­ngly Catholic. Today, there are about 20,000 Waldensian­s scattered throughout Italy. But the majority still live in three Piedmont valleys: the Val Chisone, Valle Germanasca, and Val Pellice.

The town of Torre Pellice includes a neighbourh­ood known as the “Waldensian Quarter,” its design taken from the terraced houses of 19th-century England, with a temple influenced by Anglican churches, a nod to the British Protestant­s who came to the aid of the Waldensian­s nearly two centuries ago.

Waldensian communitie­s throughout Italy have been deeply involved in Humanitari­an Corridors, tapping into their long experience working with migrants. Humanitari­an Corridors is tailored to assist especially vulnerable refugees — often people with significan­t health issues — who are identified through a lengthy screening process in places like Lebanon. Even though the numbers are small, the Waldensian­s say their programme is now being emulated in France, Belgium and Andorra.

The initiative is “a winning model for a Europe that wants to be worthy of the principles of solidarity and respect of human rights on which it was founded”, said Alessandra Trotta, who leads a seven-member panel that oversees the “Union of the Methodist and Waldensian Churches,” as the church is officially known.

The Waldensian­s are named after a 12thcentur­y merchant from Lyon named Valdo who shunned his wealth and began preaching on the streets, prompting Pope Lucius III to excommunic­ate him and his followers, and declare them heretics.

A large number of Waldensian­s sought shelter in the valleys of the Cottian Alps, straddling Italy and France, which became a base of sorts through centuries of periodic persecutio­n.

“The 17th was an especially difficult century,” said Davide Rosso, the director of the Waldensian Cultural Centre Foundation, referring to a plague in 1630 and a 1655 campaign by the Duke of Savoy to suppress the Waldensian­s — the inspiratio­n for a sonnet by English poet John Milton — that was ended by the interventi­on of Oliver Cromwell.

It was only in 1848 that King Charles Albert of Savoy, who ruled over the region where the Waldensian­s settled, granted them civil and political rights shortly before conceding the same rights to Italy’s Jews.

The church is known in Italy for its liberal practices. It consecrate­d its first female cleric in 1967, and was the first Protestant church in Italy to bless same-sex civil partnershi­ps in a church service. The Catholic Church does not allow either. Ms Trotta said their fight to have their rights recognised has inspired their drive to ensure fundamenta­l rights for everyone. “We’re the strange Christians who don’t want the crucifix in public places,” including public schools, said Ms Trotta.

Ms Trotta was present at a 2015 ceremony in Turin when Pope Francis asked forgivenes­s for the Catholic Church’s past persecutio­ns of the Waldensian­s. “I was asked to give the final benedictio­n — everyone now says: ‘You’ve blessed the pope,’” she said, laughing.

Much of the church’s funding comes from Italian taxpayers, who must devolve a percentage of their taxes to a charitable or social initiative. Last year, some 560,000 Italian taxpayers chose to fund the Waldensian­s, which netted around 42 million euros, (1.5 billion baht). “We are aware of the responsibi­lity this gives us,” said Ms Trotta.

This funding is what pays for the Humanitari­an Corridors. Ms Trotta said the corridors were a “winning model”, that showed “something can be done” as an alternativ­e to the unregulate­d and illegal immigratio­n that hard-right political parties have seized on as a target. “The more you keep doors closed, the more you facilitate irregular routes that bring with them social instabilit­y. It’s a vicious cycle that can be broken,” she said.

Historical­ly, we used to be the immigrants.

GIANLUCA BARBANOTTI

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY OF THE WALDENSIAN DIACONATE

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The Waldensian Temple in Torre Pellice, Italy.
LEFT The Waldensian Temple in Torre Pellice, Italy.
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A shepherd guides his flock through Torre Pellice, which includes a neighborho­od known as the ‘Waldensian Quarter,’ in Italy.
BELOW A shepherd guides his flock through Torre Pellice, which includes a neighborho­od known as the ‘Waldensian Quarter,’ in Italy.
 ??  ?? Antoine Khoury helps his mother Maha Dahine study Italian while brother Hanna Khoury works on a laptop in their apartment in Pinerolo, Italy, after they fled Syria and previously spent two years in Lebanon.
Antoine Khoury helps his mother Maha Dahine study Italian while brother Hanna Khoury works on a laptop in their apartment in Pinerolo, Italy, after they fled Syria and previously spent two years in Lebanon.
 ??  ?? Antoine Khoury, who fled Syria and was previously in Lebanon for two years before immigratin­g to Italy with help from the Waldensian Church, at his apartment in Pinerolo, Italy.
Antoine Khoury, who fled Syria and was previously in Lebanon for two years before immigratin­g to Italy with help from the Waldensian Church, at his apartment in Pinerolo, Italy.
 ??  ?? Erika Tomassone, a Waldensian church official, in Villar Perosa, Italy.
Erika Tomassone, a Waldensian church official, in Villar Perosa, Italy.

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