An Islamic State
militant holds a gun while standing behind Ethiopian Christians in Wilayat
Fazzan, in this still image from an undated video made available on a social
media website on April 19, 2015.
A Syrian priest who was
held captive for months by the Islamic State terror group before being released
said he was kept in an underground dormitory with 250 other Christians who
refused to convert to Islam despite being pressured every day.
"The Christians
were often questioned about their faith and about the Christian doctrine, and
they did not convert to Islam despite much pressure. They were faithful to the
recitation of the rosary.
This experience of trial strengthened the faith of everyone, including my faith as a priest. It is as if I have been born again," Father Jacques Murad, prior of the Monastery of Mar Elian, shared of his experience, according to Agenzia Fides.
This experience of trial strengthened the faith of everyone, including my faith as a priest. It is as if I have been born again," Father Jacques Murad, prior of the Monastery of Mar Elian, shared of his experience, according to Agenzia Fides.
The Christians the
priest refers to are believed to be a group of 250 people kidnapped from the captured city of Qaryatayn.
ISIS, which has captured
several cities across Iraq and Syria, has taken large groups of Christian
hostages, and imposed contracts on those who remain, forcing them to live under
harsh conditions or be killed.
Murad was abducted by
jihadists from the Monastery in the outskirts of Qaryatayn together with a
co-worker on May 21, but was finally released on Oct. 11.
Italian news agency ANSA
reported that sources close to the priest affirmed he had been freed earlier
this month, but they did not
provide any details surrounding his release.
The priest said that he
kept up hopes despite his kidnapping: "Even while being deported, with my
hands tied behind my back, I surprisingly found myself repeating again and
again: I am going toward freedom."
ISIS, which captured
Qaryatayn in August, has forced Christians still living in the city to pay the
Islamic jizya tax and agree to a long list of demands if they are to remain at
their homes.
The terror group has
captured other Christians as well, and is still holding at least 180 Assyrians that
it kidnapped in mass raids from villages in the Khabur river valley in
February.
Reports emerged in
October that the terrorists planning to execute the 180 Assyrians after
negotiators failed to meet the high asking price for their release.
The negotiations, led by
Bishop Ephrem Otnaial, head of the Church of the East in Syria, have been
suspended due to the unbearable demands of the terror group," revealed
Osama Edward, director of the Assyrian Human Rights Network, noting that IS has
asked for as much as $12 million.
"ISIS threatened to
execute the 180 hostages if we didn't pay the ransom," he continued.
It is not yet known what
has happened with the captured Assyrians, but ISIS has already executed scores of
Christians and other minorities throughout its captured territory by beheading
and other methods.
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