Gaza City: Two dead and seven injured in attacks on Church grounds

Two women were shot dead by snipers in the church grounds of the Catholic Holy Family parish in Gaza City on December 16, according to a press release by the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, sent to the international charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN). Seven other people were injured. On the same day, several projectiles hit the convent of the Missionaries of Charity, which is in the same compound and housed more than 50 people with disabilities.

Samar Anton and her daughter Nahida, shot and killed by a sniper while sheltering in the church compound of the Holy Family Parish, Gaza, 16 December 2023. Holy Family Parish

According to project partners of ACN, the two women killed were Samar Anton and her mother, Nahida. Both were fatally injured when they tried to get to safety in a parish building. The Latin Patriarchate stated that the snipers were Israeli military. "Seven more people were shot and wounded as they tried to protect others inside the church compound”, the statement continues.

Injured people receive Holy Communion on 17 December. Holy Family Parish

No access to ventilators

Several rocket attacks destroyed, among other things, the power generator in the aforementioned convent, causing a fire and rendering the building uninhabitable. The Mother Teresa Sisters and the 54 people with disabilities they cared for were able to get to safety but “are currently displaced and without access to the respirators that some of them need to survive", the patriarchate writes.

Furthermore, local contacts told ACN that on Thursday, two workmen who were attempting to repair the water tanks of the parish building, which explosions had damaged, were shot by snipers and died of their injuries. One contact wrote to ACN: "Please intensify your prayers for us. God alone knows how to help."

Holy Mass at Holy Family Parish Gaza on 13 December.

Help for Christians in Israel and the Palestinian Territories

Holy Family is the only Catholic parish in the Gaza Strip; currently, several hundred Christians are sheltering in the church grounds, including children, senior citizens and people with disabilities. The Christian population of Gaza before the war was estimated at around 1,000.

In cooperation with the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, ACN is supporting the Christian community in Gaza in procuring food and medicine. In addition to this, ACN is aiding the Christians in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, who have also been affected by the consequences of the war, as well as Christian migrant workers in Israel.