Home » STORIES » Homs needs new hope

Homs needs new hope

MORE help is urgently needed to encourage Christians to stay in Syria, according to a leading archbishop who has said that security problems, job instability and poor living conditions have left people “feeling like strangers in their own country”.
In a Holy Week interview with Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need, Syriac Orthodox Archbishop Selwanos Petros Al-Nemeh of Homs and Hama said that about 50 percent of Christians had left Syria since the outbreak of the conflict in 2011.
He said: “Christians would love to stay and be bound to their country because this is their land… What is preventing them from staying is the instability in their work, the insecurity and vulnerability that they are facing, economic difficulties and dreadful living conditions.”
The archbishop stressed how people “were bewildered by the immensity of the damage in the city [of Homs]” and the struggle to get help.
Speaking out against groups “facilitating the Christian migration”, he added: “Some Christian families felt as if they were strangers in their own country… as they did not have even a place to stay.”
But he went on to thank organisations such as Aid to the Church in Need for providing emergency help, including support to rebuild homes, adding that 2,000 houses in Homs had now been repaired.
He said: “We need a lot of support to rebuild and allow people to return.
“We hope in the assistance of organisations such as Aid to the Church in Need, to reinforce the re-construction effort, reaching out to more Christian families in need.”
Last year, ACN carried out more than 140 projects in Syria – of which at least 80 percent were emergency aid – a total of £5 million.
The archbishop described “two types of migration” in Syria: “The first one are people internally displaced to the more secure areas of Syria – those are waiting to come back to their places as soon as possible.
“The second type is the external migration of those, who went either to Lebanon or to Europe.
“Those who went to Lebanon await for some more stability to come back to Syria and they are willing to return whereas, I think, for those who left for Europe, it will be difficult to return.”
Describing the Christian community remaining in Homs, Archbishop Selwanos said: “We celebrate the Holy Masses in our churches again and our bishops are back to the city as well.”
Stressing the conflict’s impact on Homs, he said: “Christianity is rich with numerous martyrs who died because of their faith… [A]round 700 – 800 Christian martyrs sacrificed their life in the old town of Homs.”
With Easter approaching, Archbishop Selwanos thanked ACN benefactors for their support, adding: “We will live the resurrection. We hope for peace and happiness, because God gives us the triumph over death.
“We pray our God to give peace to the whole world, that we can live peacefully and happily together.
“May the peace of the Lord be with all people and may he bless organisations, especially Aid to the Church in Need and all people of goodwill who help us. Thank you.”

Don't miss the latest updates!

Gaza: First step towards peace after 733 days of war

While indirect talks are taking place in Egypt between Israeli…

Rome to host official launch of Religious Freedom Report 2025

Religious and public leaders will be gathering on October 21…

Papal envoy carries solidarity to the Christians of war-torn Sudan

Archbishop Séamus Patrick Horgan, Apostolic Nuncio to South Sudan, has…

In the east of Burkina Faso, still many problems as term starts

While the security situation in Burkina Faso has improved slightly,…

From Angola to Vietnam, enthusiasm with “One million children praying the Rosary” campaign

ACN’s yearly campaign, added to the Holy Father’s appeal to…

Church clings to life amid chaos in Gaza

Aid to the Church in Need echoes Pope Leo XIV’s…

List of News

Gaza: First step towards peace after 733 days of war

While indirect talks are taking place in Egypt between Israeli envoys and Hamas, the hope for a beginning of peace is cautiously laying roots in the diocese of the Holy...

Fr Hugo Alaniz recounts a night of explosions and fear in Aleppo: “People are very afraid, we don’t know what is going to happen”

In the midst of a new wave of fighting, the Argentine priest describes hours of anguish in Aleppo. His parish has once again become a refuge for dozens of families....

Rome to host official launch of Religious Freedom Report 2025

Religious and public leaders will be gathering on October 21 at the Pontifical Patristic Institute Augustinianum in Rome for the worldwide presentation of the latest edition of the Report on...