From: b sabha <bcsabha.kal...@gmail.com>

From: Fr. Cedric Prakash sj 
<cedricprak...@gmail.com<mailto:cedricprak...@gmail.com>>



<https://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.jesuit.org.sg/graphics/prayer/homilies/fr-frans-van-der-lugt-SJ.png&imgrefurl=http://www.jesuit.org.sg/html/prayer/homilies/2014.yeara.pentecost.php&h=344&w=501&tbnid=4bO_R20BhXa3gM:&docid=v4VbsVPbzVJ7vM&ei=dpYEV977JYaMUZTFkJgE&tbm=isch&ved=0ahUKEwjejo6HnPnLAhUGRhQKHZQiBEMQMwgvKBIwEg>


HIS MARTYRDOM WILL NOT GO IN VAIN!
-         Fr Cedric Prakash sj


The city of Homs in western Syria, is the third largest city of the country 
after Aleppo in the north and the capital Damascus about 170 kms. to its south. 
Its population consisting of Arabs, Sunni Muslims, Alawites and Christians- 
reflected the religious diversity of Syria. The city has a number of historic 
mosques and churches and is not far from the Krak des Chevaliers castle, a 
world heritage site.

Today Homs is a devastated city: bombed, battered and bruised by five years of 
a bloody civil war. Thousands have fled their homes to Damascus and even 
abroad. Many from here have died. For those who stay on in the midst of ruins, 
skeletal bombed-out buildings in a ghost-town, there is a feeling of 
hopelessness, of not knowing what to do and where to go. The children smile-but 
they seized with a fear which is palpable: those five years and below only know 
war. The youth talk aimlessly-searching for ways and means to escape from a 
world of hopelessness. The adults are still tongue-tied for any meaningful 
conversation. Many of them just want to wake up from what they hope –is just a 
bad dream. Sadly, enough, the tragedy which has gripped their lives is real!

However, there is a sudden   change in the moods of the adults and youth when 
they talk of one man: Fr. Frans van der Lugt. Their eyes light up, a sense of 
nostalgia envelops them, as they latch on to the person and message of this 
great human; because he still lives on in their hearts and minds, some of them 
do feel that there will be a new dawn!

Who was this ‘Abouna Frans’ as he was fondly referred to? Fr Frans van der 
Lugt, was a Dutch Jesuit priest who devoted his life to the people of Syria; 
when civil war erupted there in 2011 he chose to remain in the country, 
suffering the shortages and terrors of the conflict alongside both Muslims and 
Christians. He was born on April 10 1938 in The Hague, Netherlands- the son of 
a banker. He joined the Jesuits in 1959 and seven years later went to the 
Middle East. With the exception of a short break to complete his doctorate in 
Psychology, he spent the rest of his life from 1976 in Syria. In Homs he 
founded the Al-Ard institute, where handicapped children of all religions and 
ethnic groups found a home –of warmth and acceptance.

His twilight years however were shattered with the civil war. As the fighting 
intensified, Fr Frans moved to the Jesuit residence in Boustan –Diwan (the 
inner city). From there he shared the suffering of the inhabitants, refusing to 
leave, even as that part of the city continued to be bombed from all sides. His 
centre before long became a home for those who had nowhere to go: Muslims and 
Christians; women and men; old and young. It was a haven for them and Fr Frans 
was their refuge. His message to all was one of hope: of mercy and 
reconciliation, of justice and of peace! Listening to those who knew him, those 
who experienced his warmth, his love, his courage to give “all-of-himself” to 
those in need- would easily touch a heartless person.

Because there were several rebels in the old city- that part was under siege. 
There were no food supplies coming in nor were people being allowed in or out. 
Though a relatively ‘normal’ life continued just streets away, in the 
government-held zones, starvation was claiming lives in the rebel enclave. Fr 
Frans existed on olives and broth fortified with weeds picked off the streets. 
“The faces of people you see in the street are weak and yellow,” he told a 
journalist “Their bodies are weakened and have lost their strength.” With his 
training in psychology, he documented the spread of mental illness among those 
who found themselves besieged: “I try to help them not by analysing their 
problems, as the problems are obvious and there is no solution for them here. I 
listen to them and give as much food as I can.”

Frans was a healer – he touched the broken spirits of a battered people; he did 
not care for himself, if someone was physically sick, he did all he could (with 
the little he had) to make them well again. His forte   however, was to soothe 
the mental and the spiritual suffering they were going through. They sought his 
guidance and his direction- when they overwhelmed by the brutality around them.

Very ironically he was gunned down on World Health Day, April 7th 2014, by 
those who felt that this healer had no right to live to heal the brokenness of 
Homs and Syria. It was just three days before what would have been his 76th 
birthday. On hearing about his tragic death Muslims and Christians came 
together despite the hostilities around them – to bury him in the compound of 
the Jesuit Centre.

Fr Frans is revered as a Saint today by both Muslims and Christians. His tomb 
is visited today by people from all walks of life. They pray to him: so that he 
intercedes with his creator that justice and truth triumphs in Syria and in 
other parts of the Middle-East; for lasting peace and security in the region. 
They will never forget his words “the Syrian people have given me so much, so 
much kindness, inspiration and everything they have. If the Syrian people are 
suffering now, I want to share their pain and their difficulties”. This he did 
in full measure: he lived with them, he died for them.
On April 9th 2014 Pope Francis at the General Audience in Rome said “last 
Monday in Homs, Syria, Rev Fr Frans van der Lugt one of my Dutch Jesuit 
confreres was assassinated at the age 75. He arrived in Syria some 50 years ago 
and always did good to everyone generously and with love. He was therefore 
loved and highly esteemed by Christians and Muslims.
His brutal murder has deeply distressed me and has made me think again of the 
many people who are suffering and dying in that tormented country, my beloved 
Syria, which for too long has been the prey of a bloody conflict that continues 
to reap death and destruction. I also think of the many people who have been 
kidnapped, Christians and Muslims, Syrians and those from other countries, 
including bishops and priests. Let us ask the Lord that they may soon return to 
their loved ones and to their families and communities.
>From my heart I invite you all to join me in prayer for peace in Syria and the 
>region, and I launch a heartfelt appeal to the Syrian leaders and to the 
>international community: Please, silence the weapons, put an end to the 
>violence! No more war! No more destruction! May humanitarian laws be 
>respected, may the people who need humanitarian assistance be cared for and 
>may the desired peace be attained through dialogue and reconciliation.”
On February 10th 2014 The” Erasmus “blog in The Economist had a powerful 
article on Fr. Frans entitled ‘A Voice Crying in the Wilderness’- of the 
courage he demonstrated to tell the world of the pain, hunger and suffering of 
the people around him; a person who would never desert his people. Two months 
later the ‘Erasmus’ blog had these very moving words, “by staying in the heart 
of besieged Homs, during a takeover by rebels who included militant Islamists 
and then during a government siege, he was offering succour to all victims of 
the conflict—and a kind of reproach to all the belligerents.
He knowingly risked his life by remaining in a place where some Islamist rebels 
were active; but he also bore witness to the cruel consequences of the siege by 
refusing to leave when it would have been so easy to do so, and nobody would 
have blamed him. From the perspective he offered, all civilian victims were 
worthy of compassion, and fighters on both sides bore a share of blame. That 
sounds like a truth worth dying for—and it goes a bit further than religious 
dialogue.”
In a world torn asunder by violence and   hate; by discrimination and 
divisiveness; by powerful vested interests who do all they can to destroy the 
lives of ordinary mortals, Fr Frans is a beacon of hope; not only for the 
people of Syria-for whom he gave up his life- but for people everywhere –who 
yearn for a new dawn, a better tomorrow. He was relentless in his struggle to 
establish that better “tomorrow” for his people. He did NOT succeed in that 
endeavor. Despite the hopelessness and fear that have gripped their lives, many 
in Homs and in other parts of Syria are convinced that his martyrdom will not 
go in vain.
                                                                                
                          5th April. 2016
(Fr Cedric Prakash sj works with the Jesuit Refugee Service(JRS) in the Middle 
East. He recently spent some time in Homs, Syria where Fr. Frans lived and died)
Fr. Cedric Prakash sj
Regional Advocacy & Communications Officer
Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS),
Middle East & North Africa(MENA)Region,
Beirut,LEBANON
Mobile:+961- 70-843-995<tel:%2B961%2070-843-995>
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 to 58(ext-1703)
Skype:cprakashsj Twitter:@CedricPrakash
Blog:https://medium.com/@cedricprakash
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