The Catholic Church beatified in the city of Oran on Saturday seven French monks and 12 other clergy killed during Algeria's civil war, the first ceremony of its kind in a Muslim nation.
May
"Monsignor Pierre Claverie... and his 18 companions, faithful messengers
of the Gospel, humble artisans of peace... from now on be called blessed,"
said papal envoy Cardinal Angelo Becciu, reading the decree of beatification,
the first step on the path to Roman Catholic sainthood.
Claverie,
58, was killed with his driver on August 1, 1996 when a remote-controlled bomb
exploded at his residence in Oran.
He was
among 19 clergy to be beatified, after their murders in a series of grisly
atrocities between 1994 and 1996.
The
ceremony was held under tight security at the esplanade of the Chapel of our
Lady of Santa Cruz overlooking the Mediterranean city.
Some 1,200
people attended the ceremony, including pilgrims, relatives and friends of the
beatified, many of whom came from abroad.
Opening the
ceremony, Archbishop Paul Desfarges of Algiers paid tribute to "the
thousands and thousands of victims of the Algerian civil war", describing
them as anonymous heroes.
A minute of
silence was then observed.
Algeria's
1991-2002 war between government forces and Islamists left up to 200,000 people
dead.
In a
message read during the ceremony by Becciu, Pope Francis spoke of his hope that
"this celebration helps to heal the wounds of the past and create a new
dynamic of meeting and living together".
The 19
clergy were declared martyrs by the Vatican in January 2018, since they were
slain "in odium fidei", or out of hatred for the faith.
Pope
Francis himself spoke of the beatification in prayers at Saint Peter's Square
in the Vatican on Saturday.
"May
this beatification be an incentive for all to build a world of fraternity and
solidarity together", the pope said.

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