From “Cath Info: a Traditional Catholic Forum”:
An email I received from a close friend:
[quote]The city of Mosul in Iraq has fallen to Al Qaeda sunni muslims who are now attacking anyone even remotely different to them.
There were about 75,000 Christians living in this city in 2003. Yesterday that number was down to about 25,000.
[….] see an email received from Father Nageeb Michael, who is an Iraqi Dominican priest in Mosul – he may have been killed (martyred) since the email was sent.
Please pray for all Christians in Mosul who are now threatened by Al Qaeda fighters with a long and bloody record of murderous hostility to Iraqi Christians.[/quote]
URGENT PRAYER REQUEST for Fr. Najeeb and Christians of Iraq
The message below was posted nine hours ago on the Facebook page of Province of St. Joseph, Dominican Friars. Please pray. It appears that Fr. Najeeb may have been martyred.
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Fr. Legge wrote this morning: Here’s my quick translation of the email message sent early this morning by Fr. Najeeb.
Bad news. I write you in a situation of violence in Mosul that is very critical and even apocalyptic. Most of the inhabitants of the city have already abandoned their houses and fled into the villages and are sleeping in the open without anything to eat or drink. Many thousands of armed men from the Islamic Groups of Da’ash have attacked the city of Mosul for the last two days. They have assassinated adults and children. The bodies have been left in the streets and in the houses by the hundreds, without pity. The regular forces and the army have also fled the city, along with the governor. In the mosques, they cry “Allah Akbar, long live the Islamic State.” Qaraqosh is overflowing with refugees of all kinds, without food or lodging. The check points and the Kurdish forces are blocking innumerable refugees from entering Kurdistan. What we are living and what we have seen over the last two days is horrible and catastrophic. The priory of Mar Behnam and other churches fell into the hands of the rebels this morning. . . . and now they have come here and entered Qaraqosh five minutes ago, and we are now surrounded and threatened with death . . . . pray for us. I’m sorry that I can’t continue . . . They are not far from our convent …