‘TOO COMMITTED TO CHRISTIANITY’ – SISTER KILLED IN MOZAMBIQUE

September 15, 2022) Elizabeth Kendal reports concerning news regarding Mozambique…

Late on the night of Tuesday September 6, Islamic jihadists attacked the Catholic mission in Chipene city, Memba District, in northern Mozambique’s Nampula Province. They burned much of the mission, including the church, the hospital, the primary and secondary schools, the dormitory and the new computer room.

‘Too committed to Christianity’
Four Christians were killed in the attack, including Sister Maria De Coppi (84), a nun with the Comboni order who had been living a life of service in Mozambique since 1963.

Hoping to reach the dormitory to alert the students, Sister Maria (left) ran out into what must have seemed like a war zone! The terrorists saw her and killed her with a shot to her head. Two other nuns escaped to raise the alarm. Six people were beheaded and three were abducted.

Islamic State claimed responsibility and explained in a statement posted to Telegram, that they killed the nun because she was ‘too committed to spreading Christianity.’ As His Exc. Msgr. Inacio Saure, Archbishop of Nampula remarked, ‘If the statement is authentic, then Sister Maria is truly a martyr for the faith.’

Twelve months ago, after nearly four years of jihad, the situation in northern Mozambique seemed to have turned a corner. Two years ago, in August 2020, the jihadists seized control of Mocimboa da Praia, a port city in Cabo Delgado Province in Mozambique’s majority Muslim far north.

Rich gas fields discovered
Discovered in 2010, the gas fields off the coast of Cabo Delgado are the third largest proven gas reserves in Africa after Nigeria and Algeria.

The jihad – which erupted in October 2017 – could derail Mozambique’s economic development and destabilise the wider region. Consequently, in June 2021, the 16-member Southern African Development Community (SADC) approved the deployment of troops to Mozambique to help combat the increasingly sophisticated Islamic insurgency.

By August 8, 2021, Rwandan and Mozambican troops had liberated Mocimboa da Praia. Four days later the governor of Cabo Delgado declared the city safe, even as SADC continued its counter-terror operations across the country’s north.

Jihadists’ hit-and-run tactics on Christians
By August 2022, the jihadists had regrouped and relaunched their campaign. Their strategy has been to conduct hit-and-run raids on undefended villages across multiple districts to keep the military and police off-balance.

On  August 19, Islamic State released videos from both the Democratic Republic of Congo and Mozambique, in which jihadists in each country call for attacks on Christians and warn that jihad will continue until Islamic Sharia Law is applied and non-Muslims pay the jizya/tax (protection money for the right to life; Quran Sura 9:29).

In early September the jihadist pushed further south than ever before, attacking communities in Nampula Province, south of Cabo Delgado. On Friday night September 2, the jihadists attacked the village of Kutua in Erati District. On Sunday 4 September they attacked the village of Naminhanha in Memba District.

Homes torched, Christians killed, citizens displaced
The September 6 night when they attacked Chipene and Christians were killed, the expansive Catholic mission and dozens of homes were torched and thousands more citizens were displaced.

On Thursday September 8 the European Union – which is desperate to find alternative sources of gas – offered financial support of 15 million euros to the SADC Mission in Mozambique. While the crisis is complex and multi-layered, most Mozambicans insist that Islamic radicalisation – courtesy of fundamentalist Salafi/Wahhabi preachers – plays a major part.

A detailed background which unpacks the ethnic, religious, historical, political, and economic context of the jihad in northern Mozambique can be found on Religious Liberty Monitoring, Mozambique: A Crisis in the Making, May 13, 2020. Only by addressing the issues at the root of Muslim disaffection in Cabo Delgado can the government make a lie of the victimhood narrative used by Islamists to recruit youths into jihad.

Please pray that our merciful God will…

  • Protect vulnerable Christians, churches and Christian ministries and missions across northern Mozambique as the jihadists relaunch their terror with a vengeance; may the Lord comfort and sustain the believers in Chipene, especially those connected to the Catholic mission based there.
  • Grace Mozambique’s President Filipe Nyusi with wisdom, discernment and courage to tackle the issues at the root of Muslim disaffection in the remote north – everything from injustice and marginalisation to radicalisation; may peace return to northern Mozambique.
  • Intervene in Mozambique to guide and assist the African counter-terrorism forces for the sake of the church, the gospel, and every Mozambican who desires harmony and freedom.
  • Move powerfully in Mozambique’s church that she might rise to the occasion presented to her to be prayerful, generous and active – compelled by sacrificial love of neighbour; may believers reach out to assist not only their fellow believers, but all who are displaced and traumatised across the north – including hundreds of thousands of traumatised, peace-seeking Muslim families.
  • Use His church to redeem this crisis for His glory.

‘The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective’ (James 5:16b).

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Elizabeth Kendal is an international religious liberty analyst and advocate for the persecuted church. To support this ministry visit www.ElizabethKendal.com.

Elizabeth has authored two books: Turn Back the Battle: Isaiah Speaks to Christians Today (Deror Books, Melbourne, Australia, Dec 2012) which offers a biblical response to persecution and existential threat; and After Saturday Comes Sunday: Understanding the Christian Crisis in the Middle East (Wipf and Stock, Eugene, OR, USA, June 2016). She is also an Adjunct Research Fellow at the Arthur Jeffery Centre for the Study of Islam at Melbourne School of Theology.
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