Issued by the Catholic Center for Studies and Media - Jordan. Editor-in-chief Fr. Rif'at Bader - موقع أبونا abouna.org

Published on Sunday, 21 July 2019
Three months on from Easter massacre Colombo Church takes stock of aid work

By Melani Manel Perera/ asianews.it :

On the eve of the three month anniversary of the Easter Sunday massacres, the Catholic Church of Sri Lanka continues its commitment in favor of relatives of the victims and survivors. The Archdiocese of Colombo and "Seth Sarana", the name of Caritas in the island's capital, have activated a series of programs to support the most vulnerable, in particular children, and are also helping the Zion Church in Batticaloa, the only Protestant of the three churches hit by the attackers.

On 21 April, the country was shook by a series of explosions in three churches and three hotels. In addition to the church of Zion [evangelical ed.], the sanctuary of Saint Anthony and the church of Saint Sebastian, both in the territory of the Archdiocese of Colombo, were devastated. The final toll was very heavy: 258 dead and over 600 wounded.

In the aftermath of the attacks, the local Catholic Church immediately acted in aid and in an attempt to recreate the broken harmony between the Christian community - deeply wounded - and the Muslim one, driven by the awareness that the blame for the gesture made by some extremists cannot fall on all those who profess the same faith.

In total, the Church has received 350.7 million rupees [1.77 million euros, ed]. They are the result of private, local, foreign and governmental donations. The archdiocese has decided to allocate most of these funds - 102.5 million rupees [almost 518 thousand euros] - to support the education of children affected in the attacks. Specifically, it wants to finance their education up to university admission, while for newborns it has set a monthly allowance for five years.

The Archdiocese and Caritas-Seth Sarana have decided that at least 16.8 million [85 thousand euros] will go to the families of the deceased as compensation and another 17.8 million [90 thousand euros] for the medical expenses of the wounded. All donations will be managed and distributed by the office, so as to directly provide for the individual needs of the person and families.

The leaders of the Catholic Church have also activated a center that offers a psychological assistance service to overcome the traumas due to the attacks. Thanks to the assistance of the "Rally to Care Initiative" of the Dialogue Foundation, a consultancy has been opened. This is the "Emmaus Life Healing Center", which offers the professional skills of 20 psychologists, 10 psychotherapists, 17 psychiatrists. In total, at least 770 people are being treated at the center; the professionals have made 200 home visits to affected families so far.

Caritas has decided to donate 10 million rupees [50,000 euros] for the reconstruction of the church of Zion, a Protestant denomination. Finally it wants to use 53 million [266,000 euros] for the purchase of land to be used for the construction of new homes for families who do not have a permanent residence and who are now struggling to survive because the only family member who earned a salary died in the attacks. THe government will collaborate in the construction of buildings.