17 August 2022, The Tablet

Prayers offered for victims of Coptic church fire

by CNS

The fire in the Martyr Abu Sefeinin Coptic Orthodox Church broke out on the morning of 14 August, killing 41 people.


Prayers offered for victims of Coptic church fire

A poster of 13-year-old twins, Bieshoy and Carles Saber, who were victims of the 14 August fire, displayed outside their home in Imbaba, Egypt.
CNS/Hanaa Habib, Reuters

Catholic leaders have joined the Coptic Orthodox Church in mourning the 41 people – including 18 children – who died in a fire in Cairo on 14 August.

According to news reports, at least 5,000 Coptic Christians were preparing for the morning liturgy at the Martyr Abu Sefein Church in Imbaba, a suburban area of the city, when the fire started. The deaths resulted from an ensuing stampede and smoke inhalation.

Eyewitnesses said that some screaming worshippers jumped out of windows, as the fire spread to higher floors of the church building. Church officials said the blaze was caused by a short circuit in the air conditioner, but Associated Press reported that witnesses also pointed to a faulty generator.

“We have received the news of the deaths in the Orthodox Church with much shock,” Bishop Noel Seyoum Fransua of Hossana, Ethiopia, told Catholic News Service.

“I wish to express my condolences to the Orthodox Church in Egypt. We really feel sorry about the sad occurrence.”

Cardinal Souraphiel Berhaneyesus, president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Ethiopia, offered “my sincerest sympathies on the behalf of the Ethiopian Catholic Church and myself”.

“I assure you of our prayers to your church, the deceased and wish a full and speedy recovery to those who were injured,” he said.

In Germany, Bishop Georg Bätzing, president of the German bishops’ conference, said his prayers and thoughts were with the victims, reported the German Catholic news agency KNA.

“A place where there should be blessing became a fiery hell,” he said. “Words fail us in view of the high number of fatalities. I grieve with the Coptic Church in Egypt and in our country.”

Although Egypt is 90% Muslim, at least 10 million people are Coptic Orthodox.

Coptic Orthodox priest Fr Joseph Mutie, general secretary of the Organization of African Instituted Churches, based in Nairobi, also expressed his condolences.

The Egyptian president, Abdel Fattah el-Sissi, has directed military engineers to take over the reconstruction and renovation of the church.


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