European Governments Defend His Beatitude Patriarch Cardinal Louis Raphaël Sako

His Beatitude Patriarch Cardinal Louis Raphaël Sako speaks to the media in 2021  (ANSA)

Representatives from eleven European countries affirm their support for His Beatitude Patriarch Cardinal Louis Raphaël Sako, Chaldean Patriarch in Iraq and the World, the Head of Iraq’s Chaldean Church, amid a social media campaign against him.

By Joseph Tulloch

Eleven different European countries, together with the European Union, released a statement on Sunday evening affirming their support for Iraq’s Patriarch Louis Raphaël Sako. 

The Patriarch – who heads the country's Chaldean Church, and was made a Cardinal by His Holiness Pope Francis in 2018 – is facing criticism over comments concerning political representation for Iraq’s ancient Christian minority.

Sunday’s statement expressed the European governments’ “solidarity” with His Beatitude Patriarch Sako, and stressed the importance of his “efforts to protect the rights of Christians on the soil that they have inhabited for two millennia.” 

The statement

On Sunday evening, His Beatitude Patriarch Sako received a delegation of Ambassadors and Deputy Ambassadors including those from France, Italy, Spain, the UK, and the European Union.

Together, they issued a statement in support of the Patriarch, with the approval of the Ambassadors of Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic, Romania, Sweden, and Hungary.

In the statement, the Ambassadors to Iraq note that they had visited the Cardinal “to express our solidarity regarding the recent public attacks against his person and our concern for the Christians and other religious communities of Iraq.”

They also praise the Patriarch’s “efforts to protect the rights of Christians on the soil that they have inhabited for two millennia.” 

The statement then goes on to appeal to the country’s Christians to work together, noting that “the existing contrasts do not help their role in the Iraqi society”, and expressing the wish that “problems be overcome and ever greater cooperation among the Churches be achieved.”

The Ambassadors conclude their note by reaffirming their support for “understanding and a peaceful dialogue among the different components of the Iraqi people” and “the preservation of the Country’s diversity, which is one of its main assets.”

This report was originally published on the Vatican News website. Please click here to read the full text.

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