Home » Featured » Syria: “May the Lord forgive them, that is all I can say”

Syria: “May the Lord forgive them, that is all I can say”

Mary, mother of Reconciliation, is a model for Syrian Christians.

“’Forgive them, Lord’. How many times have we repeated these words, especially over the past years!”, says Sister Jihanne Attalah, from the Sisters of Charity of Sainte Jeanne Antide Thouret, in Damascus, days before the celebration of yet another Christmas in a Syria that has endured over 10 years of war.

“From one day to the next we were forced to abandon our large, recently built and beautiful school, on the road to the Damascus airport”, Sister Jihane recalls, sadly. The Al-Riaya school that the congregation ran in the outskirts of Damascus became a war zone. Besides the school itself, the nuns also lost loved ones to the fighting. “We lost a young teacher and a student, not to mention all those who were injured”, the nun tells Aid to the Church in Need (ACN).

christians syria war
Sister Jihanne

One of the school’s students, 15-year-old Christine, was returning home from school with a classmate when a bomb detonated near them. Christine lost a foot, but her friend was killed. Sister Jihane remembers that when Christine was in hospital and a television channel interviewed her, she said in a calm voice: “May the Lord forgive them, that is all I can say”.

Then, one day, the students and teachers were prevented from returning to the school to fetch their belongings. The management was forced to find alternative classrooms in which to teach their students in safety.

christians syria war
Sr.Jihanne with little students of the Al-Riaya School

Despite all these years of suffering, war and pain in this country, Sister Jihane says that the most important has been keeping the faith, in order to have some inner peace. In this respect, she explains, Mary, mother of reconciliation, is an example to all Syrian Christians. “Amidst all this darkness there has always been room for hope that guided us and helped us lift our eyes, overcome our desire for vengeance and transform ourselves. It was our faith in God and in the presence of the Virgin Mary, who remained close to the Cross. She held firm, and drew strength from her Son”, Sister Jihane replies.

After the war ended in the Damascus region, the nuns returned to rebuild and reopen their school. Aid to the Church in Need helped fund a desalination system for Al-Riaya school, run by the Sisters of Charity of Saint Jeanned Antide Thouret and the furniture for the school in 2021.

Don't miss the latest updates!

Venezuela: ACN allocates 100,000 euros to support Church response to earthquakes

Priests celebrate Mass in the street as churches become shelters following deadly earthquakes As rescue teams continue to search for survivors under the rubble following the devastating earthquakes that struck...

ACN funded 5,368 projects in 141 countries during 2025

The Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) received €145.8 million in donations and legacies and supported one in every ten priests and one in every eight seminarians...

Indian Church calls for National Day of Prayer to protect its charitable work serving the poor

The Church’s vast charitable work in India could be at risk if law makers tighten the already restrictive law on foreign funding of NGOs. Christians all over India are preparing...