Palm Sunday
violence
Grenade attack hits procession
Two people were killed, and at least a dozen wounded, when a grenade exploded
during a Palm Sunday procession in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
“I was slightly hurt in the leg,
but seeing those more seriously wounded and even killed, I asked the Lord, ‘What
shall I do?’” Bishop Faustin Ngabu of Goma told the Fides news service. The
bishop continued: “I found the strength to tell the people that I would
celebrate Mass all the same. I asked them to pray for the victims and only at
the end of Mass I realized that I too had been injured.”
Speaking to Fides just a few
hours after the assault, Bishop Ngabu said: “Our people truly experienced—as we
read in the proclamation of the Passion of the Lord—the struggle between light
and darkness.”
Two people in the procession
were killed: a priest and a 9-year-old girl. Among those wounded, one was the
bishop himself, and four were priests.
The Palm Sunday procession was
headed toward a school where the Mass was to be celebrated. (The Catholic
cathedral in Goma is still closed for repairs, after suffering serious damage
during the January eruption of a nearby volcano.) As the procession entered the
school’s courtyard, two grenades were tossed among the participants.
A local Church source told Fides
that “as yet no one knows who the attackers were. The situation here is tense.”
The attack could be related to a recent strike by schoolteachers, who had
encouraged the Catholic-school students to join them. But Church officials also
pointed to the conflicts surrounding the Rassemblement Congolais pour la
Democratie, a rebel group that controls much of the region.