Last Sunday I presented the background to three of the Iraqi Christian martyrs in the new reliquaries on our parish High Altar. Today I relate the background of the fourth martyr: Fr. Ragheed Ganni, Chaldean Catholic priest of the Holy Spirit parish and secretary to the Bishop of Mosul, the martyr Archbishop Faraj Radho. My source material is taken from an article by Rody Sher, A Priest and Martyr for the Faith: The Cause for the Beatification of Father Ragheed Ganni. (Erbil, Iraq, August 19th, 2022, CNA).
Father Ganni, considered one of the most influential martyrs of the Catholic Church in Iraq, was killed by fanatical terrorist on June 3rd, 2007, after celebrating the Divine Liturgy in the Church of the Holy Spirit in Mosul … Father Ragheed was born in Mosul in 1972, where he complete his university studies, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering. He had loved the Church since childhood and learned its liturgical rites and melodies. He decided to devote his life to the Church in the sacred priesthood … Bishop Georgios Jarmo sent him to Rome in 1996 to begin his priestly formation journey. He studied at the Irish Institute and continued his studies in theology at the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas—the Angelicum.
He had a strong desire to return to Mosul and serve the believers and members of his Church who were in tribulation due to the persecution of extremist Islamic groups since 2003. His wish was granted; he returned to Mosul and committed himself to serving its people, in addition to teaching at the Babylon College of Philosophy and Theology, in 2004.
During this period, the city of Mosul suffered from campaigns of intimidation, kidnapping, and killing of Christians, in addition to bombing many churches and monasteries. Many people were forced to seek refuge and escape to other cities and villages in northern Iraq, and many families were forced to migrate to other countries, fearing for their lives and their faith.
These challenges were not an obstacle to Father Ragheed, who continued all pastoral activities, celebrated Masses in the various churches in his diocese, and provided moral and spiritual support to his church children even in the most challenging times.
Father Ragheed constantly said: “The terrorists want to end our lives, but the Eucharist gives us life. When I hold the cup of the Eucharist in my hands, I say: This is the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world. I feel His power overwhelm me. I hold the cup in my hand, but He is the One who holds me and us all, defying the terrorists and making us united in His boundless love.”
He emphasized more than once in his conversation with those close to him that he would continue to spread the message that obligated him to be a missionary in the name of Christ, saying: “The terrorists think that they are killing us physically or scaring us spiritually with their brutal methods. Many Christian families have fled because of the abuses committed against them, but the paradox is that we have come to realize, through the violence of the terrorists, that the dead and risen Christ gives us life. This gives us hope and helps us survive every day.”
The threats directed at Father Ragheed continued because of the various activities he led with the youth of the Church. His ministry angered the terrorist groups in Mosul, and death threats began to emerge.
The terrorists arrested him after he celebrated the Divine Liturgy with three deacons: Basman Yusef Daoud, Waheed Hanna Isho, and Ghassan Essam Bidawid. At that time, the terrorists asked him: “Did we not ask you not to open the church for prayer?” He replied, “How can I close the House of God in the face of worshippers?” These were the last words uttered by Father Ragheed Ganni, days before he became a martyr for Christ and His Church.
Father Ragheed Ganni realized that the Islamic terrorists would not let him live, given his disobedience to their orders and his continued celebration of the liturgy in Mosul, so he wrote his last prayer on October 12, 2006:
“Lord, I don’t think they will look at my prayer/Although it was a pessimistic prayer, everyone knew me as an optimist./And perhaps, for a moment, they forgot. They wondered why I was so optimistic,/ They have seen me smiling, braver and stronger in the most difficult situations,/ But, when they remember the times of troubles I lived, and the hardships I’ve been through,/ The ones that showed how weak I am and how capable You are./ You revealed how fragile I am and how strong You are,/ They will know that I, my Hope, have always spoken of You/ Because I knew You, and You were the reason for my optimism/ Even when I knew my death was near,/ But let me be with You now,/ May I please put it before You,/ You know better than I what time we are living./ I am a human being and know how weak a person is./ I want You to be my strength so that I will not allow anyone to insult me in the priesthood that I hold./Help me not to weaken and surrender myself in fear for my life./ Because I want to dies for You, to live with You and with You./ Now I am ready to meet You;/ Help me not to lose time for trial/ Because I told You that I knew man, but I also said that I knew You,/ O my Strength, my Power, my Hope.”
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes is Newton and Needham Massachusetts' oldest Roman Catholic Parish. Founded as Saint Mary Parish in 1870, it was renamed "Mary Immaculate of Lourdes" when the new Church was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1910. In addition to being a regular territorial parish of the Archdiocese of Boston it is also a "Mission Parish" since 2007 with a special apostolate for the Traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal).
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