Issued by the Catholic Center for Studies and Media - Jordan. Editor-in-chief Fr. Rif'at Bader - موقع أبونا abouna.org
Father Fadi Felefli, left, Maronite Catholic parish priest at St. George Church in the village of Debel, southern Lebanon, and Archbishop Paulo Borgia, center, papal nuncio to Lebanon, accompany representatives of aid associations distributing humanitarian help to Christian villages in Debel in this photo posted April 25, 2026
Lebanese Catholic priests serving in the south of the country near the border with Israel said they were overjoyed to discover that a call with Lebanon’s papal nuncio included another special guest on the online visit, Pope Leo XIV.
“First, it was a surprise, then it was a great joy,” Lebanese Maronite Catholic parish priest in Rmeich, Father Toni Elias, told OSV News by phone of the encounter with Pope Leo on May 6.
‘Due to the grace’ of the nuncio
“This opportunity took place due to the grace of the papal nuncio (Archbishop) Paolo Borgia, who initiated the online contact with us,” said Father Elias, who was one of 13 Catholic priests engaged in the call with Pope Leo, who spoke in French with them.
Archbishop Borgia met with Pope Leo during a private audience May 6 at the Vatican and called a group of priests from the Apostolic Palace.
The 13 priests who received a video call serve in Lebanon’s southern villages and towns, including Rmeich, Ain Ebel, Debel and Marjayoun.
“The Pope greatly encouraged us,” the priest said. “It was very wonderful because we felt the spirit of hope and joy descend upon us,” said Father Elias.
“This encounter with the pope was a reminder to us that we serve a Church that is unique in all of the world,” he said.
Pope ‘wished to give us good courage’
“The Holy Father wished to give us good courage in the face of difficulties that our Christian community has faced in these past days. He prayed over us and spoke the benediction,” said Father Elias.
Earlier, Father Elias told OSV News that he and the faithful in Rmeich “100 per cent sense Jesus’ presence and support” as they daily pray together.
“Otherwise, how could we manage to remain here,” he said of Rmeich, the last village in Lebanon’s south on the border with Israel. Rmeich has been caught in the crossfire between Israel and Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah militia, a deadly side conflict of the Iran war.
“This opportunity to talk with the pope came quite unexpectedly,” Father Fadi Felefli, Maronite Catholic parish priest at St. George Church in the village of Debel, told OSV News by phone.
‘Greeted us, blessed us, prayed with us’
“The Holy Father greeted us, blessed us and prayed with us. He told us that we and our people are always in his prayers. He told us that it was a big ministry that we are undertaking at this moment,” said Father Felefli, another priest who participated in the call.
“We were so happy to receive this blessing and sense of peace the Holy Father brought to us through his words and care,” said Father Felefli.
“It was incredible to experience this great communication. And to know that he is concerned for our Church, the Christians and believers in this land. We are so grateful,” he added.
Lebanese Christians in Debel celebrated the gift of a new statue of Jesus after an act of desecration by two Israeli soldiers drew global outrage.