An evangelical church in Chiapas, Mexico, was attacked and burned this week, just a day before Pope Francis visited the region.
Early morning on February 15, the Fuente de Fe, Alabanza y Poder
church in Zinacantán city was raided and subject to an arson attack, according to Evangelical Focus.
Unidentified assailants broke into the church, damaging a window and
the door in the process, and gathered around 200 chairs, the pulpit,
curtains and tables and burnt them. The fire that ensued damaged the
ceiling.
Due to the Pope's visit to the region, the police office in the city
was closed, and the church's pastor, Ciro Díaz Méndez, was therefore
unable to report the attack. However, he – along with a legal
representative – went to the church to verify the damages.
The next day, Pope Francis spoke against exploitation and oppression
of the indigenous people of Chiapas, saying the world should seek
forgiveness for their treatment of them.
"How well we would all do, to do some soul searching and learn to say sorry," Francis said.
Evangelical Focus noted that "the Pope did not mention any of the
attacks and aggressions some Mexican evangelical communities have
suffered in the recent years, most of the times (sic) just for not
renouncing their faith."
This latest attack against evangelical christians in Chiapas, Mexico
is not an isolated incident. On 4 January, armed villagers raided and
destroyed the homes of Protestants in Leyva Velazques village, Chiapas,
forcing them to flee to nearby mountains.
Protestants are a minority religion in Mexico and "in the rural areas
where we see persecution, many villages and their councils are
dominated by adherents to syncretistic Catholicism," ICC's advocacy
manager, Nathaniel Lance, previously reported.
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