AFTER weeks with no word from Jesuit Father Paolo Dall’Oglio, an Italian priest who worked for decades in Syria, Italian Foreign Minister Emma Bonino said, “it seems he has been kidnapped by an Islamist group” that is a “local version of al-Qaida,” the terrorist group.
Ms Bonino made her comments on August 6 on an Italian television news program.
The foreign ministry has been trying to figure out what happened to the Jesuit since he last spoke to friends in late July, saying he was returning to Syria.
Reuters reported militants with links to al-Qaida kidnapped the priest on July 29 while he was walking in the northern Syrian city of al-Raqqah.
Fr Victor Assouad, provincial superior of the Jesuits in the Middle East, issued a statement on August 5 saying Jesuits in the region were “deeply worried” about both Fr Dall’Oglio and Dutch Jesuit Father Frans van der Lugt, a long-time resident of Syria who is in the besieged city of Homs and has been offering shelter to those fleeing the fighting.
Fr Assouad thanked those trying to find Fr Dall’Oglio and prayed “this ordeal will come to an end soon.”
He also asked the international community to do everything possible to protect Fr Van der Lugt and his guests.
The Jesuits are committed to pursuing their humanitarian action and renew their intention to “work for peace and reconciliation in Syria,” the provincial said.
In a statement released by the Vatican August 3, Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, prefect of the Congregation for Eastern Churches, pledged his prayers to the Jesuits and all those who were worried about “the continuing uncertainty about the situation” of Father Dall’Oglio.
At the same time, Cardinal Sandri expressed concern over the “absolute silence” that hangs over the fate of the two Orthodox bishops kidnapped in Syria on April 22 and the Armenian Catholic and Greek Orthodox priests kidnapped in February.
Pope Francis also offered prayers for Fr Dall’Oglio during a Mass in Rome with his Jesuit confreres July 31, the feast of St Ignatius.
Fr Dall’Oglio was well-known and well-respected in Syria, even though he may have held “positions that not everyone shared,” Archbishop Mario Zenari, the Holy See nuncio to Syria, had told Vatican Radio July 30.
The Jesuit reportedly supported the rebel insurrection against President Bashar Assad.
Fr Dall’Oglio was expelled by Syrian authorities in June 2012 for reportedly helping people injured by government crackdowns.
The Jesuit had been based in Syria for 30 years, and since 1982 had been restoring an ancient monastery in the desert and forming a religious community dedicated to Christian-Muslim dialogue and harmony.
Archbishop Zenari described Fr Dall’Oglio as “a man of virtue, a Jesuit of great talent and a person who loves Syria.”
CNS