Houston Chronicle Sunday

Attacks this year frequently targeted houses of worship

- By David Crary

On Dec. 1, a band of assailants opened fire on worshipper­s at a small-town Protestant church in Burkina Faso, an impoverish­ed West African country where the Christian minority is increasing­ly a target of attacks. The victims included the pastor and several teenage boys; regional authoritie­s attributed the attack to “unidentifi­ed armed men” who, according to witnesses, got away on motorcycle­s.

The slaughter merited brief reports by internatio­nal news outlets, then quickly faded from the spotlight — not surprising in a year where attacks on places of worship occurred with relentless frequency. Hundreds of worshipper­s and many clergy were killed at churches, mosques, synagogues and temples.

A two-week span in January illustrate­d the scope of this somber phenomenon. In Thailand, a group of separatist insurgents attacked a Buddhist temple, killing the abbot and one of his fellow monks. In the Philippine­s, two suicide attackers detonated bombs during a Mass in a Roman Catholic cathedral on the largely Muslim island of

Jolo, killing 23 and wounding about 100. Three days later, an attacker hurled a grenade into a mosque in a nearby city, killing two Muslim religion teachers.

The worst was yet to come.

On March 15, a gunman allegedly fueled by antiMuslim hatred attacked two mosques in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, killing 51 people. The man arrested for the killings had earlier published a manifesto espousing a white supremacis­t philosophy and detailing his plans to attack the mosques.

At a national remembranc­e service two weeks later, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said New Zealanders had learned the stories of those impacted by the attacks — many of them recently arrived immigrants.

“They were stories of those who were born here, grew up here, or who had made New Zealand their home. Who had sought refuge or sought a better life for themselves or their families,“she said. “They will remain with us forever. They are us.“

On Easter Sunday — April 21 — bombs shattered the celebrator­y services at two Catholic churches and a Protestant church in Sri Lanka.

Other targets, in coordinate­d suicide attacks by local militants, included three luxury hotels. But Christian worshipper­s at the three churches — including dozens of children — accounted for a large majority of the roughly 260 people killed.

The victims at St. Anthony’s Shrine in Colombo included 11-month-old Avon Gomez, his two older brothers and his parents.

The day’s biggest death toll — more than 100 — was at St. Sebastian’s, a Catholic church in the seaside town of Negombo. It’s known as “Little Rome“due to its abundance of churches and its role as the hub of Sri Lanka’s small Catholic community.

The attacks surprised many in the predominan­tly Buddhist country, where the Christian community totals about 7 percent of the population and has long avoided involvemen­t in ethnic and religious divides.

Six days after Easter, more than 9,400 miles from Sri Lanka, a gunman opened fire inside a synagogue in Poway, California, as worshipper­s celebrated the last day of Passover. A 60-year-old woman was killed; an 8-year-old girl and two men, including the Chabad of Poway’s rabbi, were wounded.

Some congregati­on members said the slain woman, Lori Kaye, blocked the shooter by jumping in front of rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, whose two index fingers were injured.

The man charged with murder and attempted murder in the attack, John T. Earnest, could face the death penalty if he is convicted of murder, although prosecutor­s haven’t yet said whether they will pursue capital punishment.

At a court hearing in September, prosecutor­s played a 12-minute recording of Earnest calmly telling a 911 dispatcher that he had just shot up a synagogue to save white people from Jews.

The attack occurred exactly six months after 11 people were killed at a Pittsburgh synagogue in the deadliest assault on Jews in U.S. history.

An additional anti-Semitic bloodbath was narrowly averted in October when an armed assailant tried to blast his way into a synagogue in Halle, Germany, where scores of worshipper­s were attending services on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in Judaism.

Unable to break through a locked door, the gunman went on a rampage in nearby streets, killing two people and wounding two others.

Authoritie­s said the 27year-old German man who has confessed to the attack had posted an anti-Semitic screed before the assault and broadcast the shooting live on a popular video game site.

In contrast to the Poway and Halle attacks, where authoritie­s have identified suspects and motives, some of the worst attacks on houses of worship unfold without arrests or claims of responsibi­lity.

In October, for example, more than 60 people were killed in a bombing during Friday prayers at a mosque in the village of Jodari in eastern Afghanista­n.

No group claimed responsibi­lity and authoritie­s offered conflictin­g explanatio­ns of how the bombing was carried out.

One common element of all the attacks: dismay that many people of faith now have reason for apprehensi­on as they gather for worship.

“No one should have to fear going to their place of worship,” said California Gov. Gavin Newsom after the Poway attack. ”No one should be targeted for practicing the tenets of their faith.”

 ?? Eranga Jayawarden­a / Associated Press file ?? Soldiers guard St. Anthony’s Shrine in Colombo, Sri Lanka, the day after bombs shattered Easter Sunday services at three churches.
Eranga Jayawarden­a / Associated Press file Soldiers guard St. Anthony’s Shrine in Colombo, Sri Lanka, the day after bombs shattered Easter Sunday services at three churches.

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