Pope recalls missionary sister
killed in Central African Republic
Pope Francis speaks at the weekly General Audience (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis calls to mind a murdered missionary sister,
whose body was found in the Central African Republic on the same day a
missionary priest was killed in Mozambique.
By Devin Watkins
In his greetings to French-speaking pilgrims at the
Wednesday General Audience, Pope Francis called the Spanish missionary “a woman
who has given her life for Jesus in the service of the poor.”
Murdered missionary sister
Sister Inés Nieves Sancho, aged 77, was found murdered near
her home in the Central African Republic on Monday morning.
Her body was found horribly mutilated at her workshop in the
village of Nola, which is part of the Diocese of Berberati, according to the Osservatore
Romano.
At some point during the night between Sunday and Monday,
unknown assailants entered Sister Inés’ home and forcibly took her to the
workshop where she regularly held sewing lessons for local girls to help
improve their lives. There her attackers decapitated her and mutilated her
body.
Link to organ trafficking
Though the assailants’ motives remain unknown, the Osservatore
Romano reports that investigators are pursuing links to trafficking in
organs. The Vatican newspaper relates the practice to neighboring Cameroon,
where organ trafficking is rife.
Sister Inés belonged to the small, local community of the
Daughters of Jesus. As Pope Francis pointed out, she spent several decades in
Nola teaching young women how to sew, dedicating her life to this mission at
all costs. Sister Inés recently told another nun: “I’m not alone. The young
women are with me!”
She was buried on Tuesday morning.
Congolese priest killed in Mozambique
Separately, a missionary priest from Congo was also killed
on Sunday in Mozambique’s coastal city of Beira.
Fr. Landry Ibil Ikwel, aged 34, was stabbed in his
community’s house and brought to hospital, where he died from his wounds,
according to the Fides news agency. An investigation is underway.
Fr. Landry was ordained a priest in 2016, and belonged to
the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.
He was the Director of an institute for the blind in Beira
(IDV-B), which offers help with education, rehabilitation, and social
integration for the visually-impaired.
In a statement sent to Fides, the Congregation lamented his
death and prayed that “wherever death seeks to reign, life may prevail.”
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