Rome Newsroom, Jul 22, 2025 / 09:38 am
Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa spoke on Tuesday about the devastation of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, emphasizing that the Church “will never abandon” the city’s long-suffering people.
Describing the extent of the destruction in Gaza at a press conference held at the Notre Dame of Jerusalem Centre, Pizzaballa said he and Greek Orthodox Patriarch Theophilos III of Jerusalem witnessed during their July 18 pastoral visit the inadequate living conditions families have been forced to live in.
“We walked through the dust of ruins, past collapsed buildings and tents everywhere: in courtyards, alleyways, on the streets and on the beach,” he told journalists on Tuesday. “Tents that have become homes for those who have lost everything.”
“The Church, the entire Christian community, will never abandon them,” he said.
While expressing particular solidarity with Christian communities in Gaza, the cardinal emphasized that the Church’s “mission” in Gaza is open to all people.
“Our hospitals, shelters, schools, parishes — St. Porphyrius, the Holy Family, the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital, Caritas — are places of encounter and sharing for all: Christians, Muslims, believers, doubters, refugees, children,” he said.
Reiterating Pope Leo XIV’s July 20 Sunday Angelus appeal to the international community to observe international humanitarian law and protect civilians, the cardinal said delaying humanitarian aid to Gaza is “a matter of life and death.”
“Every hour without food, water, medicine and shelter causes deep harm,” he said.
“We have seen it: men holding out in the sun for hours in the hope of a simple meal,” he continued. “This is a humiliation that is hard to bear when you see it with your own eyes.”
Calling the deprivation of basic necessities “morally unacceptable and unjustifiable,” Pizzaballa said he and Theophilos III support the work of all humanitarian actors — “local and international, Christian and Muslim, religious and secular” — to help the people of Gaza.
Besides highlighting the horrors of war, the cardinal said he also witnessed testimonies of faith and “the dignity of the human spirit” in those he and the Greek Orthodox patriarch encountered during their pastoral visit.
“We met mothers preparing food for others, nurses treating wounds with gentleness, and people of all faiths still praying to the God who sees and never forgets,” he recalled at the press conference.
“Christ is not absent from Gaza,” he said. “He is there — crucified in the wounded, buried under rubble and yet present in every act of mercy, every candle in the darkness, every hand extended to the suffering.”