Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Ragheed Ganni

23 bytes added, 9 years ago
assyrian clean up, added [[CAT:O|orphan]] tag
{{Orphan|date=May 2015}}
 
'''Ragheed Aziz Ganni''' (20 January 1972, [[Mosul]], [[Iraq]] – 3 June 2007, Mosul) was a [[Chaldean Catholic Church|Chaldean]] [[Eastern Catholic Churches|Catholic]] priest. On June 3, 2007, [[Trinity Sunday]], the Sunday after [[Pentecost]], he was killed along with three subdeacons including his cousin Basman Yousef Daud, Wahid Hanna Isho, and Gassan Isam Bidawed in front of Mosul's [[Holy Spirit]] Chaldean Church where he was parish priest. Fr. Ragheed had just finished celebrating the Sunday evening [[Divine Liturgy]] ([[Mass (liturgy)|Mass]]).<ref>http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=9442 Accessed September 5, 2012</ref> The three deacons had recently decided to accompany Fr. Ragheed because of threats against his life. After Mass as he was walking away from the church with Daud and as Isho, Bidawed, and Isho's wife followed by car, the group was stopped by unknown armed men. One of the gunmen shouted at Fr. Ragheed that he had warned him to close the church and demanded to know why he didn't do it. Fr Ragheed replied asking "How can I close the house of God?" The gunmen ordered the woman to flee. Then after the gunmen demanded that the four men convert to Islam and they refused they were shot down.<ref>http://www.aina.org/news/20090603124803.pdf Accessed 9-6-2012</ref> The car was then set with explosives to deter interference and so that the bodies would remain abandoned. Several hours passed until a police bomb-squad defused the devices allowing corpses to be recovered.<ref>http://www.asianews.it/news-en/The-Chaldean-Church-mourns-Fr.-Ragheed-Ganni-and-his-martyrs-9443.html Accessed September 5, 2012; http://www.chaldean.org/CommunityPages/ChaldeanChurches/MotherofGodChurchMIUSA/tabid/113/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/146/Will-The-World-Continue-to-Remain-Indifferent-as-Chaldeans-Are-Massacred.aspx Accessed September 5, 2012</ref>
After completing a degree in Civil Engineering at Mosul University in 1996 and after performing obligatory military service under the [[Saddam Hussein]] regime<ref>http://angelicumnewsletterblog.blogspot.com/2011/06/iv-anniversario-dell-deliv-anniversary.html
Accessed 9-12-2012</ref> Ganni entered the seminary in Iraq. In 1996 Ganni's bishop sent him to [[Rome]] for further study. Ganni is an [[List of people associated with the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas|alumnus]] of the [[Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum)|Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas ''Angelicum'']] where he completed a licentiate in ecumenical theology in 2003. He was ordained a priest in [[Rome]] on October 13, 2001 at the [[Pontifical Urbaniana University]].
During his study in Rome he resided at the [[Pontifical Irish College]] where he played soccer for the College. The annual showcase 5-a-side tournament played in May between the Scots, English, Beda and Irish Colleges has been named the "Ragheed Cup" in his honor.<ref>http://www.scotscollege.org/the-scots-college-magazine/summer,-mmx/it's-not-the-winning-that-counts.aspx Accessed 9-12-2012</ref>
Fr Ganni celebrated his first Mass in Chapel at the Irish College. Today Fr. Ragheed is one of the nine figures represented in the apse of that chapel where the relics of St. [[Oliver Plunkett]] rest in the altar there wrapped in the priestly stole of Fr. Ragheed.<ref>http://www.irishcollege.org/college-chapel/dedication-chapel/ Accessed September 5, 2012</ref> Fr. Ragheed regularly offered mass for the [[Lay Centre at Foyer Unitas]] which was at the time housed on the grounds of the Irish College.
Fluent in Arabic, Italian, French, and English, Fr. Ragheed served as a correspondent for the international agency “Asia News” of the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions.<ref>http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/articolo/145921?eng=y Accessed September 5, 2012</ref>
Bot, bureaucrat, administrator
328
edits