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

Published on Wednesday, 23 November 2022
Priest kidnapped in Mali: ‘We are an easy target’

Maria Lozano/ churchinneed.org :

Aid to the Church in Need has expressed its pain and concern over the disppearnace and likely kidnapping of missionary Father Hans-Joachim Lohre  in Bamako, the capital of Mali, where he has worked for more than 30 years.

 

The German priest went missing on Sunday, November 20, after celebrating Mass in a convent of nuns in the same city, according to sources from the Missionaries of Africa congregation is known.

 

The same sources told ACN that there is no more information regarding the disappearance, but everything points to a kidnapping, since the missionary’s car was found abandoned and the cross, he always carried with him was on the ground. However, nothing is known about who took him, or why.

 

“We ask all our benefactors and friends to pray for the immediate release of father Ha-Jo. He was a builder of peace in a context of violence and terrorism. Our foundation supported his mission over the past few years, and now he needs our prayers and solidarity. We extend our support to his spiritual family, to the congregation of the Missionaries of Africa, and to Hans-Joachim Lohre’s family in Germany. You can count on our prayers, “ said Thomas Heine-Geldern, executive president of ACN.

 

“Besides prayers, ACN also calls on the international community to do everything it can to improve the situation caused by jihadists among the populations of the Sahel, not only in Mali, but also in neighboring countries. What is happening is a tragedy, an open wound for the world,” said Heine-Geldern.

 

Father Lohre is an ACN project partner and had taken part in several events hosted by Aid to the Church in Need. During a visit to Switzerland, less than six months ago, he told local benefactors about the situation in Mali. “The jihadists come in groups, on motorcycles, and the local communities have to make deals with them. They are forbidden from ringing church bells and drinking alcohol, and women are forced to wear the veil”.

 

ACN has called attention several times to the situation endured by Christians in the country, namely in central Mali, where the Katiba Macina extremist group, linked to Al Qaeda in the Maghreb (AQIM), operates. 

 

The missionary was aware of the danger he faced in his work every day. “You don’t know when, or where it might happen. As white Europeans, we are easy targets, and we have been told that the jihadists are watching us,” he said. But in several interviews with ACN he also explained why the imminent danger did not keep him from remaining in the country. “The question is given to us in the Gospel, ‘who do you say I am?’, that is the meaning of our lives, and we see that what is important is not how long we live, or how little or how much we achieve, but whether what we do has meaning and can make the world a better place.” 

 

Father Lohre was also very conscious of the importance of his own mission, to promote dialogue between Christians and Muslims, through education in Islamic studies by laypeople and religious. “At the moment there are very strong fundamentalist currents in Mali, but most people just want to live in peace. Therefore, it is crucial that we foster good relations with the Muslims around us. We provide Christians with deep knowledge about Islam, so that when they return to their communities, they can help to build bridges and make contact with the surrounding mosques,” he explained during a visit to the international headquarters of ACN in Germany.

 

ACN has supported  more than 70 projects over the past three years in Mali, among them a four-year training and awareness program for evangelization agents, which covers the meetings organized by the Islamic-Christian Training Institute, in cooperation with Father Hans-Joachim Lohre. 

—Maria Lozano