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Pope Leo surprises priests in southern Lebanon with message of peace

Pope Leo XIV delivered a surprise message of peace and hope to 13 priests from southern Lebanon, near the Israeli border, by unexpectedly joining their video call from Rome on Wednesday. The pontiff assured them they were in his prayers and expressed his wish for peace to soon prevail along the volatile frontier.

The Lebanese Catholic and Maronite priests had gathered online for a scheduled morning meeting with the Vatican’s ambassador to Lebanon, Archbishop Paolo Borgia. To their astonishment, Borgia then announced that Pope Leo was also present and wished to speak with them.

The holy men, hailing from southern villages and towns including Rmeich, Ain Ebel, Debel, and Marjayoun, were visibly moved by the unexpected encounter.

Father Najib al-Amil, the parish priest of Rmeich, who participated in the online session, shared his reaction. “(The pope) gave us peace and his blessings,” he stated. “His words were reassuring, particularly as we live in constant worry over here.”

Christian villages along the border with Israel have been mostly spared intense Israeli bombardment that has caused wide destruction in other parts of predominantly Shiite southern Lebanon. However, the situation remains tense in southern Lebanon despite a ceasefire that went into effect on April 17, as Israel and the militant Hezbollah group have continued their attacks despite the truce.

Al-Amil said the pope spoke in French with the priests during the video call that lasted about a minute and urged them to stay in their hometowns.

“Pray with me so that peace prevails. God willing, peace is near,” al-Amil quoted the pope as saying.

The Vatican spokesman didn’t immediately respond when asked for details of the call. The Vatican did say that Leo had a meeting on the agenda Wednesday with the Holy See’s ambassador to Lebanon, though no details are ever released of such audiences.

When Pope Francis used to call the parish priest in Gaza, as he was known to do every evening during Israel’s attacks on the Palestinian enclave, the Vatican always declined to provide details, describing the initiative as a personal pastoral act by the pope.

A few days before Wednesday’s call, the Israeli military demolished a Catholic convent in the border village of Yaroun, according to officials.

The military says it does not intentionally target religious institutions. However, in a statement Saturday, it stated it damaged a house without religious signs while destroying Hezbollah infrastructure in Yaroun, without realizing it was a church building.

The Israeli military said the building in Yaroun was part of a compound that Hezbollah militants had used in the past to fire rockets toward Israel, and it released photographs of an intact building at the site.

Two local officials from Yaroun and a nun who spent time at the convent in recent years told the AP that the photos posted in the Israel statement were of another building next to the convent that housed a clinic and archbishopric, and that the Israeli military had bulldozed the convent.

Lebanon’s state news agency also reported that the convent was demolished.

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