Catholic family in Dhaka attacked with gunfire

A Catholic family of the Dhaka diocese, under the St. Lawrence

Catholic Church, was attacked by local Muslims on Oct. 22, 2009, at

around 7:30 p.m. Some people fired guns aimed at the house of the

Catholic family. The St. Lawrence Catholic Church is a Catholic church

with 1,000 Catholic families.
Rita Gomes, the elder daughter of the family, said, "Our Muslim

neighbor, Kazi Babul's wife, and her allies have been trying to evict

us from the house for more than a year."
"On Oct. 8, 2009, a group of 150 Muslims came to our house and

forcefully put up a wall and took possession of our land, in the

presence of the local police," said Gomes.
Rita Gomes said, "There was an injunction from the court about the

land that they are claiming for their own, so they cannot put up a

wall or do anything without violating the court order. When they came

with a group of 150 Muslims on Oct. 8, 2009, to put up the wall, I

went to request them not to do that. In the presence of the police,

they hit me, yet the police remain silent. I felt very helpless at

that time; I realized that even the law enforcement agency people

wouldn't come to help me."
She went on to say, "My father is very sick, my mother is very

helpless and prays to Mother Mary for our protection, and my younger

sister, Jhumur, who will soon become a nun, prays and prays for our

safety."
Jhumur Gomes, the younger daughter of the family, said, "I am just

praying and preparing to sacrifice myself for the sacred life. Our

family is in full danger; we don't know what will happen next or if

they will come and kill us."
The Bishop of Khulna, Rev. Bejoy N. Cruze, who was visiting Dhaka,

came to the house of the persecuted Christians and offered a prayer

for them, especially for Jhumur, the younger daughter, who will join

the sacred life.
Rita Gomes said, "I am really very afraid that they may kill us or

rape me and my younger sister; they are really very ferocious. Our

other neighbors, another Catholic family, were forced to sell their

land, and they finally went to India. The Muslim neighbors also

proposed for us to sell our land to them, but where will we go? As we

are Christians, no one is coming to help us; all the Muslims are on

their side, because they have money and are powerful politically. They

have strong ties with the leading political party, the Bangladesh

Awami League party that is ruling Bangladesh."
She went on to say, "There was a nameplate for our house with a cross

on the main door of the house that they had removed. In its place,

they put 'Allahu Akbar,' or Allah is great. We were confined to our

house for days, because they blocked the road, so that we cannot leave

the house.
"My father, Sunil Gomes, and my mother, Usha Gomes, are both aged; if

something happened to us, they might get heart attacks, especially my

father who has heart disease and who got sick after such an attack."

Sunil Gomes said, "I want to leave in peace. If something bad happened

to my daughters, if they get raped or killed, I couldn't take it. I

have heart disease and am already sick and in bed."

His wife, Usha Gomes, said, "I helplessly watched the crowd beat my

older daughter, Rita, when she protested against them putting a wall

on our land. Christ is our only hope now, the only one who can save us

from this danger."
She also said, "We voted for the Bangladesh Awami League in the last

parliamentary elections with very high hopes that we will have peace

and will be given security by their government, but now the political

activists of the party are using their political identity to persecute

us and steal our lands. The perpetrators are rich Muslims who are

large in number; they want to evict us from our own land, as they did

to our Christian neighbors, forcing them to sell their land and to

leave for India. We are now fully cornered here in Bangladesh, and we

do not have security of life."
Catholic human rights activist Annie Halder said, "The persecution of

minorities is growing nowadays. Recently, there was a Christian

evangelist, Swopon Mondol, who was killed, and now there are attacks

against Christian families, and there are many attacks on Hindus. The

government should take immediate action to secure the rights of

minorities."
Development / Ghana / Africa / Modernghana.com

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