Egypt's Copts bid farewell to their 'martyrs'

Apr 11, 2017

Women in black screamed and wailed in pain while others silently wept.

Over screams of despair, Coptic Christian mourners bade farewell Monday to their "martyrs" killed in a jihadist bombing at Saint Mark's church in Egypt's coastal city of Alexandria.

At funeral services, Copts insisted they will "pray for the rest of our lives" and keep going to church, despite Sunday's twin bomb attacks on churches in Alexandria and Tanta, north of Cairo, that cost 45 lives.

After three deadly attacks in four months, following a December suicide bombing which killed 29 worshippers in a Cairo church, mourners chanted for the dismissal of Interior Minister Magdy Abdel Ghaffar.

At Mar Mina monastery, 50 kilometres (30 miles) from Alexandria, wooden coffins holding some of the victims' bodies were placed near the altar as applause echoed in a packed church to pay tribute to the victims.

Women in black screamed and wailed in pain while others silently wept.

After prayers, scouts carried the coffins, to the sound of drum beats, to the cemetery, also inside the monastery.

"They are holding a procession for the martyrs, who will be met with another procession in heaven... How beautiful is this?" said a woman mourner, her voiced choking with sadness.

The first of the suicide bombings claimed by the Islamic State jihadist group went off inside Mar Girgis church during Palm Sunday mass in Tanta, killing 28 people.

The second struck outside Saint Mark's church, killing 17 people after the suicide bomber was prevented from entering the building.
- Security lapse -

The mourners took their anger out on security services and the interior minister, vowing their faith would not waver in the predominantly Muslim country where Copts make up around 10 percent of the 92-million population.

"Leave, leave, Abdel Ghaffar," they chanted.

"There was a serious security lapse in Tanta, but not in Alexandria," said Mohamed Sobhy, 33, an organiser of the funerals for those killed at Saint Mark's.

But Sabah, a 35-year-old woman who lost her cousin in the Alexandria blast, disagreed. "Of course there's no security. If there were, this wouldn't have happened," she said.

Pray for 'rest of our lives'

Chanting "I am a Christian till judgement day," the mourners pledged not to abandon their faith.

Mina, a 52-year old government employee, said: "If the aim of these attacks is for us to stop going to church... this will not happen. We will pray for the rest of our lives."

Another mourner, Sabah, said: "We've got used to this. On every occasion, on every feast, there is an explosion."

Although Copts traditionally do not hold funerals during Holy Week leading up to Easter Day, prayers were held on Monday to ease the pain of the Coptic community.

IS has been waging a deadly insurgency in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula and has claimed scores of attacks on security forces there.

"Targeting police does not produce much reaction and they want to create instability, so the Copts are the weakest link," said Sharaf, a 52-year-old government employee.

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