Vatican
City, 27 November 2013 (VIS) – This morning, in the Holy See Press
Office, a press conference was held to present the “Healthcare
Mission for Syrian Child Refugees in Lebanon” promoted by the
Pontifical Council “Cor Unum”, the Bambino Gesu Paediatric
Hospital and Caritas Lebanon. The speakers in the conference were:
Cardinal Robert Sarah, president of the Pontifical Council “Cor
Unum”; Giuseppe Profiti, president of Bambino Gesu Paediatric
Hospital; Fr. Simon Faddoul, president of Caritas Lebanon; and May El
Hachem, director of the department of dermatology at Bambino Gesu
Paediatric Hospital.
“Helping
the Syrian population, regardless of ethnic origin or religious
belief, is the most direct way of contributing to peace-building and
the edification of a society open to all its different members”:
Cardinal Sarah explained that Pope Francis' words inspired this
project, in the hope that “these tragedies may never be repeated”.
“We
believe that the best gift we can give in order to help the children
who suffer as a result of the Syrian war is that of enabling them to
smile again and to be able to continue to live, accompanying them in
a growth that must be not only material, but also and above all
spiritual and human”. According to data from the United Nations
refugee agency, there are more than two million Syrian refugees in
the countries in the Middle Eastern and Mediterranean area, of whom
there are 700 thousand in Lebanon alone, 515 thousand in Jordan, and
460 thousand in Turkey. Of all of the above, around 52% are children
and minors below the age of seventeen.
To
supervise co-operative activity and aid distribution, an information
and communications office was established in Beirut last June, which
brings together all the Catholic charitable agencies in an area of
great historical and spiritual significance for Christianity. “This
structure, which will continue to be central also in the phase –
hopefully near – in which the conflict is brought to an end, is the
result of collaboration of charitable organisations, which in the
name of the mission of the universal Church have decided to share
their competences and their work of witness”, explained Cardinal
Sarah. He also commented that “This is the language that the
Church, all together, wishes to and must speak … to all those who
are in need in in poverty, not only material but also spiritual”.
The
“Mission” will begin in early December, and will have an initial
duration of three months. During this time, and with the funds
available, it will be able to give necessary medical assistance to
three to four million children.
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