By: Charles Collins
Published in: *Crux*
Date: January 9, 2026
Source:
https://cruxnow.com/vatican/2026/01/persecution-against-christians-needs-to-be-addressed-pope-leo-tells-vatican-diplomats

Speaking to diplomats in the Vatican on Friday, Pope Leo XIV said the
persecution of Christians remains “one of the most widespread human rights
crises today.”

During the annual address to those accredited to the Holy See, the pontiff
said Christian persecution is affecting 380 million believers around the
world.

The 2025 World Watch List published by Open Doors said although
Christianity is the world’s largest religion, with 2.3 billion adherents
and continued growth, the same report reveals that one in seven Christians
face persecution. The report said this figure rises to one in five in
Africa and two in five in Asia.

In his address to the diplomats on Jan. 9, Pope Leo said persecuted
Christians suffer high or extreme levels of discrimination, violence and
oppression because of their faith.

He said the persecution worsened in 2025 due to ongoing conflicts,
authoritarian regimes and religious extremism.

“Sadly, all of this demonstrates that religious freedom is considered in
many contexts more as a ‘privilege’ or concession than a fundamental human
right,” he said.

“Here, I would especially call to mind the many victims of violence,
including religiously motivated violence in Bangladesh, in the Sahel region
and in Nigeria, as well as those of the serious terrorist attack last June
on the parish of Saint Elias in Damascus.  Nor do I forget the victims of
jihadist violence in Cabo Delgado, Mozambique,” Leo added.

Aid to the Church in Need (ACN), the leading Vatican-sponsored charity
dedicated to persecuted Christians, says over 17,500 churches have been
attacked in Nigeria’s Middle Belt – which is the area between the country’s
Muslim dominated North and Christian dominated South – while 2,000
Christian schools have been destroyed in the region. The charity also says
at least 3 million internally displaced people have been across the Middle
Belt in the past 12 years.

Both Bangladesh and Syria have had recent political revolutions that has
put in more Islamist governments, leading to attacks on Christian
communities, which were often seen as supporting the more sectarian
previous regimes.

However, Leo did not just speak about the attacks on Christians in the
developing world, but also turned his eyes to what is happening to
Christians in the secular West.

“At the same time, we must not forget a subtle form of religious
discrimination against Christians, which is spreading even in countries
where they are in the majority, such as in Europe or the Americas,” the
pope said.

The charity Barnabas Aid says persecution in secular, Western nations takes
place in particular cultural, political, ideological and religious contexts.

The charity says governments and activists can target Christians on issues
such as abortion and homosexuality using things such as “safe areas” and
laws affecting free speech.

Pope Leo says this affects the lives the faithful in nations that were once
considered Christian, but where more and more people have rejected their
faith.

“There, they are sometimes restricted in their ability to proclaim the
truths of the Gospel for political or ideological reasons, especially when
they defend the dignity of the weakest, the unborn, refugees and migrants,
or promote the family,” Leo told the diplomats.

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