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COPTS: SOLIDARITY FOR EGYPT’S BELEAGUERED CHRISTIANS DURING FIRST COPTIC PAPAL VISIT TO UK

Pope Tawadros II

World Watch Monitor reports on the first visit by Coptic Orthodox Pope Tawadros II to the UK…

World Watch Monitor

British Christian and political leaders praised Egypt’s embattled Coptic Christians during Pope Tawadros II’s pastoral visit to the UK, the first by a Coptic pope.

Pope Tawadros’ visit follows Pope Francis’ visit to Egypt during which he told the head of the Coptic Church: “The innocent blood of defenceless Christians was cruelly shed,” adding: “Your sufferings are also our sufferings.”

Pope Tawadros II 

FIRST VISIT: Pope Tawadros II during the papal visit to the UK. PICTURE: © Mazur/catholicnews.org.uk/Flickr/CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

 

“We are being persecuted by some who do not want us to remain in the Middle East, but it is by no means the majority of Egypt. We have seen police officers, soldiers and simple men and women, not only Christians but Muslims, also dying. This targeting is of a cohesive way of life.”

– Bishop Angaelos, General Bishop of the Coptic Church in the UK

Sporadic attacks against Egypt’s Christians have become more frequent and more deadly since February, when Islamic State released a video vowing to increase attacks against the Coptic community. Some 47 worshippers were killed in two suicide bomb attacks on churches, one of which appeared to target Pope Tawadros.

A Vespers service at St George’s Coptic Cathedral in Stevenage, about 50 kilometres north of London, on Saturday was attended by senior clergy from the Anglican, Catholic and various Orthodox Churches, as well as by peers and charity heads.

Pope Tawadros in his address linked the rise of violence and terrorism globally to increasingly sophisticated weaponry which enabled people to value machinery above their fellow human beings, but said Christians “must present love in action”.

The British Prime Minister, Theresa May, sent a message in which she said the government valued its “strong, positive relationship” with the Coptic Church in the UK, and noted Egypt’s “unique and special role in defending tolerance and understanding at the heart of the Arab world”.

A message delivered on behalf of the Archbishop of Canterbury, who was travelling in the Holy Land, said: “The suffering of Christians in Egypt has been acute in recent weeks. I am grateful for the witness of steadfast bravery and hope that you have shown. Your fellow Christians are strengthened by your faithfulness to the proclamation of the Good News of Jesus Christ.”

Another senior cleric to address the congregation was Archbishop Toma Dawod of the Syriac Orthodox Church, a sister Church of the Coptic Church, many of whose members in Britain have fled hardship, violence or direct persecution in Iraq and Syria in recent decades. He told World Watch Monitor that in his brief address he said: “The Church of Egypt is suffering as we have suffered in the Church of Iraq and the Church of Syria. But you have brought with you the happiness of the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ.” He added: “We don’t want any churches or mosques to be bombed, any Muslim or Christian to be killed; we want all to live in peace.”

Representing the Catholic Church, Archbishop Kevin McDonald, who is a co-founder of the Catholic Oriental Orthodox Forum, said the Vespers service marked “a time of praise, worship and of supplication for our suffering fellow Christians in Egypt and the Middle East”.

But he added: “We do not come together in a defensive spirit but in a spirit which combines solidarity with openness to dialogue with people of all religions since, ultimately, that is the only route to reconciliation.”

Before the papal address, Bishop Angaelos, General Bishop of the Coptic Church in the UK and the forum’s other co-founder, said the drive to rid Egypt of its ancient Coptic population came not from the majority of Egyptians but from extremists trying to destroy interfaith coexistence.

“We are being persecuted by some who do not want us to remain in the Middle East, but it is by no means the majority of Egypt. We have seen police officers, soldiers and simple men and women, not only Christians but Muslims, also dying. This targeting is of a cohesive way of life.”

Earlier he said the visit would enable Copts in Britain to hear “directly” from Pope Tawadros about ways to “provide greater support” for their fellow-believers in Egypt. Many of the UK and Ireland’s 20,000 Copts have relatives in Egypt.

Addresses were also given by the Archbishop of York, John Sentamu, the Egyptian Ambassador to the UK, Nasser Kamel, and Archbishop Elisey of Sourozh, Primate of the Russian Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom.

Pope Tawadros will also meet representatives of other faiths during his stay.

 

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