Two days after the conflict began, Romanelli told ACI Prensa from Bethlehem, where he is stranded until he will be able to get through to return to the parish: “We have never seen things like this time.”
“All of our men and women religious in this part of the Holy Land of Palestine and Israel are okay,” he said, although he acknowledged that the mission in Gaza “is the one that is going through very difficult times.”
“In the parish we have taken in more than 80 Christians and other Muslim neighbors of our school have requested accommodation there,” the priest said. “There are hundreds of dead and thousands of injured among the population,” he added.
Recalling a saying of Pius XII, which St. John Paul II also repeated, the priest asked for prayers for peace, because “nothing is lost with peace, everything can be lost with war.”
Finally, he expressed his gratitude for the closeness, concern, and prayers, along with the “hundreds of messages” he receives every day. “From here I continue to pray and work hard for our Catholic mission in Gaza, for the good of all,” he concluded.
In a statement to the Argentine newspaper La Nación, the priest, who has lived in the Middle East for 28 years, said that he was in Bethlehem when the attack was launched after participating in Rome in the consistory in which Pope Francis created the patriarch of Jerusalem a cardinal, and he is unable — for the moment — to return to his parish.
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