“piecemeal World War III,”
describing the attacks as “inhuman.”
.-
The
acts of terrorism which took place in Paris Friday night are the latest
part in what Pope Francis has called a
“There is no justification for these things,” the pontiff said in a phone interview Saturday with TV 2000, the official broadcasting station for the Italian Bishops Conference.
Speaking in response to the Nov. 13 attacks, which are the deadliest
acts of violence the city has seen since the World War II, the Pope said
he is “moved and pained” by what happened, and expressed his closeness
to those affected by the tragedy.
“I am close to the people of France, to the families of the victims, and I am praying for all of them,” he said.
“These things are hard to understand,” he said, adding that he “loves France very much.”
At least 128 people are confirmed dead and more than 180 wounded in
terrorist attacks which targeted bars, restaurants, a concert hall, and a
football stadium in the heart of Paris on Nov. 13. Around 80 people are
listed in critical condition, according to the BBC.
The deadliest attack came when militants overtook the Bataclan concert
hall, in which at least 82 people were killed, after the terrorists had
seized dozens of hostages.
Eyewitnesses reported hearing the terrorists cry out “Allahu Akbar!” –
Arabic for “God is Great!” The terrorists carried out the siege with
suicide bombs and semi-automatic weapons. Police have said all eight
attackers are dead.
In the wake of the attacks, Paris archbishop Cardinal André Vingt-Trois
in a Nov. 14 statement appealed for the grace to be “artisans of peace.”
He stressed that “we must never despair of peace if we are to build
justice.
“Faced with the violence of men,” he said, “we can receive the grace of
a steadfast heart without hate.” The French prelate called for people
to not give in to panic or hatred.
“This morning I pray and I invite the Catholics of Paris to pray for
those who were killed yesterday and for their families,” Cardinal André
Vingt-Trois continued. He also called for prayers for the injured, those
working to help those affected by the crisis, and the nation's leaders
in order that they “remain together in unity and peace of heart.”
"We ask for the grace to be artisans of peace. We must never despair of peace, if you justice," he said.
The BBC reports that French president Francois Hollande has called the attacks “an act of war” by ISIS.
The French president declared a nationwide state of emergency soon after
the rampage began and closed the country's borders. Parisians were
urged to stay in doors.
This is the second and deadlier of two sieges against Paris by Islamic terrorists in 2015. 12 people were killed on Jan. 7 when Islamic terrorists stormed the headquarters of satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo
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