Christians in Mali Return Home to Celebrate Christmas After Displacement by Radicals
ICC Note
One congregation of Christians in Gao, Mali returned home to celebrate their first Christmas in their church which was burned by militants who took over large sections of northern Mali in 2012. The Catholic church hosted several dozen worshipers but that’s only a small part of the pre-invasion Christian population which was approximately 300 persons. While the returning Christian population still worries about persecution, they find joy in Christmas and the peace it represents.
12/26/16 Mali (Washington Post) – As the sun starts to fall, the call to prayer at the mosque echoes throughout Gao, a predominantly Muslim town in northern Mali. At that same moment, a small church bell nearby also rings.
It’s a reminder that even in a town where just four years ago strict Islamic law was in force, some Christians have returned to rebuild their congregation, which fled the jihadist occupation.
This is the first Christmas they’ve been able to hold a service at the Catholic church, which was torched in 2012 by the al-Qaida-linked militants who took over the major towns in northern Mali that year.
Yet even as they celebrate, the fear of persecution is still widespread. Police stood by to protect the church as worshippers met Saturday and they returned again Sunday for the morning service. In a sign of the dangers that lurk, a Swiss aid worker was abducted from her home by armed men on Christmas Eve.
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