Georgia Bulletin

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Vatican City

Sudanese Catholic condemned for apostasy freed, meets pope

By CAROL GLATZ, Catholic News Service | Published August 7, 2014

VATICAN CITY (CNS)—Meeting a Sudanese woman who risked execution for not renouncing her Catholic faith, Pope Francis thanked Meriam Ibrahim for her steadfast witness to Christ.

The pope spent 30 minutes with Ibrahim, her husband and two small children July 24, just hours after she had arrived safely in Italy following a brutal ordeal of imprisonment and a death sentence for apostasy in Sudan.

Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, Vatican spokesman, told journalists that the encounter in the pope’s residence was marked by “affection” and “great serenity and joy.”

They had “a beautiful conversation,” during which the pope thanked Ibrahim for “her steadfast witness of faith,” the priest said.

Ibrahim thanked the pope for the church’s prayers and support during her plight, Father Lombardi said.

The Vatican spokesman said the meeting was a sign of the pope’s “closeness, solidarity and presence with all those who suffer for their faith,” adding that Ibrahim’s ordeal has come to represent the serious challenges many people face in living out their faith.

The pope gave the family a few small gifts, including papal rosaries.

Ibrahim, a 26-year-old Catholic woman originally sentenced to death for marrying a Christian, had been released from prison in Sudan June 23 after intense international pressure. But she was apprehended again the next day at the Khartoum airport with her husband, Daniel Bicensio Wani, who is a U.S. citizen, and their nearly 2-year-old son and 2-month-old daughter, who was born in prison just after Ibrahim’s death sentence.

Charged with possessing fake travel documents, Ibrahim was not allowed to leave Sudan, but she was released into the custody of the U.S. Embassy in Khartoum, where she then spent the following month.

Italy’s foreign ministry led negotiations with Khartoum for her to be allowed to leave Sudan for Italy.

She arrived in Rome July 24 aboard an Italian government plane accompanied by her family and Italy’s vice foreign minister, Lapo Pistelli, who led the talks that ended in her being allowed to leave Sudan.

The president of the group Italians for Darfur, Antonella Napoli, helped organize Ibrahim’s visit with the pope.

“Meriam will achieve her dream and see the pope. I had promised her that when we met,” Napoli tweeted.

Ibrahim joined the Catholic Church shortly before she married in 2011. She was later convicted of apostasy and sentenced to death by hanging. Sudan’s penal code criminalizes the conversion of Muslims to other religions, which is punishable by death.

The Khartoum Archdiocese, which followed her case, had said Ibrahim had never been a Muslim because her Sudanese Muslim father abandoned the family when she was 5, and she was raised according to her mother’s faith, Orthodox Christian. Despite pressure to renounce Christianity in order to be freed, Ibrahim refused.

The family arrived in Manchester, New Hampshire, on July 31, according to news reports. Ibrahim has reportedly been granted asylum in the United States.


A Catholic News Service video is posted here.