France’s religious leaders call for unity and solidarity after church attack

France’s religious leaders call for unity and solidarity after church attack
Leaders of the religious groups in France, including a Jewish rabbi, Protestant and Roman Catholic ministers, a leader of the French Buddhist Union, Greek Orthodox Church, and the French Council of The Muslim Faith, address the media on Wednesday after a meeting with French President Francois Hollande, following yesterday’s attack at a church in Normandy. (AP Photo/Thomas Pad)
Updated 28 July 2016
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France’s religious leaders call for unity and solidarity after church attack

France’s religious leaders call for unity and solidarity after church attack

PARIS: France’s main religious leaders have sent a message of unity and solidarity following a meeting with French President Francois Hollande a day after two extremists attacked a Catholic church and slit the throat of an elderly priest.
Hollande was presiding over a defense council and cabinet meeting Wednesday after speaking with Roman Catholic, Orthodox, Muslim and Jewish leaders.
On Tuesday, the attackers took hostages at the church in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray, in the northwest region of Normandy, during morning Mass. A nun at the Mass slipped out to raise the alarm and both attackers, one of them a local man, were then killed by police outside the church.
Emotions in France that were raw after a July 14 truck attack in Nice that killed 84 people became more frazzled after the church in Normandy was attacked.
Cardinal Andre Vingt-Trois, archbishop of Paris, called on Catholics to “overcome hatred that comes in their heart” and not to “enter the game” of the Daesh group that “wants to set children of the same family upon each other.”
The rector of the main Paris mosque, Dalil Boubakeur, said France’s Muslims must push for better training of Muslim clerics and urged that reforming French Muslim institutions be put on the agenda, but without elaborating.
Pope Francis, visiting Krakow, Poland, for World Youth Day celebrations, said of the slaying of the priest, “It’s war, we don’t have to be afraid to say this.”
He then clarified to say, “I am not speaking of a war of religions. Religions don’t want war. The others want war.”
With the attack threat for the country ranked extremely high, Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said France is working to protect 56 remaining summer events and may consider canceling some. Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said 4,000 members of the Sentinel military force will patrol Paris, while 6,000 will patrol in the provinces. They are being bolstered by tens of thousands of police and reservists.
Candles were placed in front of the town hall as residents called for unity.
“We are scared,” said Mulas Arbanu. “(But) be we Christians, Muslims, anything, we have to be together.”
Another resident, Said Aid Lahcen, had met the slain priest.
“From the moment when you touch a religion, you attack the nation, and you attack a people. We must not get into divergences, but stay united as we were before,” he said.

Attack wanted to fight in Syria
More horrifying details emerged Wednesday. One of the hostages at the church, an 86-year-old woman, said that the attackers had handed her husband Guy a cellphone and demanded that he take photos or video of the priest — 85-year-old Rev. Jacques Hamel — after he was slain. Her husband was then slashed in four places by the attackers and is now hospitalized with serious injuries.
The woman, identified only as Jeanine, told RMC radio that her husband played dead to stay alive. Two nuns were held hostage along with the couple and the priest.
“The terrorists held me with a revolver at my neck,” she said, adding it was not clear to her now whether the weapon was real or fake. “He (the priest) fell down looking upwards, toward us.”
The Paris prosecutor, Francois Molins, said the two attackers had knives and fake explosives — one a phony suicide belt covered in tin foil. He identified one of the attackers as Adel Kermiche, a 19-year-old who grew up in the town and tried to travel to Syria twice last year using family members’ identity documents.
Kermiche was detained outside France, sent home, handed preliminary terrorism charges and placed under house arrest with a tracking bracelet, allowing him free movement within the region for four hours a day, Molins said.
A police official told The Associated Press that the bracelet was deactivated during those four hours, allowing Kermiche to leave the family home without raising alarms. The official was not publicly authorized to speak about the case.
The prosecutor’s office said Wednesday the second attacker has not been formally identified. In addition, police detained a 16-year-old whom Molins said was the younger brother of a young man who traveled to the Syria-Iraq zone of the Daesh group carrying Kermiche’s ID. He was still being questioned Wednesday.
In the town of Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray, young and old were stunned by the attack.
An 18-year-old neighbor said he had seen Kermiche just three days earlier in nearby Rouen wearing a long Islamic robe.
When he heard about the church attack, “I knew it was him, I was sure,” the young man told the AP, identifying himself only as Redwan. He said Kermiche had told him and others about his efforts to get to Syria and “he was saying we should go there and fight for our brothers.”
“We were saying that is not good. And he was replying that France is the land of unbelievers,” Redwan said.