National News

Six Haitian Nuns Kidnapped in Latest ‘Reign of Terror’ Blamed on Gangs

People fleeing gang violence take shelter at a sports arena in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Sept. 1, 2023. On Oct. 2, the U.N. Security Council authorized the deployment of an international security mission to aid Haiti’s own police force in countering gang violence, which has spiraled out of control in recent months. Haiti has reported more than 3,000 homicides in 2023, and over 1,500 incidents of kidnapping for ransom. (Photo: OSV News/Ralph Tedy Erol, Reuters)

WASHINGTON — Church leaders around the world are pleading for the release of six women religious kidnapped in Haiti Jan. 19 and are urging the country’s government to crack down on gang violence. 

A letter released Jan. 21 by the Archdiocese of Port-au-Prince and the Haitian Conference of Religious called for the safe release of the kidnapped sisters without conditions.

It said Haitians are tired of the “reign of terror” they have experienced and called on government officials to protect the Haitian people and their property.

The Church leaders also said they were distressed that there hasn’t been a serious response to kidnappings taking place in the country for more than two years and said the ongoing violence has “plunged the country into an increasingly confusing and chaotic situation.”

The women religious belong to the congregation of the Sisters of St. Anne. The sisters and two others who were on a bus in Port-au-Prince, the country’s capital, were also kidnapped.

Their order, founded in the Canadian province of Quebec in the 1850s, started its ministry in Haiti in 1944 and currently has 40 sisters there working on educational projects.

No one has publicly claimed responsibility for the abduction but many suspect it is the work of gangs that are active in Port-au-Prince. The location where the kidnapping took place is controlled by the Grand Ravine and Village de Dieu gangs.

Pope Francis appealed for the sisters’ release after praying the Angelus at St. Peter’s Square Jan. 21. He said he learned of their kidnapping with sorrow. He prayed “for social harmony in the country” and for a “stop to the violence, which causes so much suffering to that dear population.”

A statement by the group Aid to the Church in Need USA, headquartered in Brooklyn, pointed out that in 2023, armed groups were accused of killing 4,000 Haitians and at least 3,000 kidnappings. The country is in chaos, it said, marked by violent protests demanding that Prime Minister Ariel Henry be removed from office.

Father Morachel Bonhomme, president of the Haitian Conference of Religious, has asked people to pray for the sisters to find a way out of their situation. “These too many kidnappings fill the consecrated people of Haiti with sadness and fear,” he said in a statement.

The priest prayed that “the spirit of strength be given” to the sisters and that the solidarity of the people of Haiti and the world would help them “overcome this difficult ordeal.”

Edward Clancy, director of outreach of Aid to the Church in Need, USA, said that priests and religious are risking their lives in serving the poorest and most vulnerable people in Haiti. “Their courage is an expression of Christian charity. It is an abomination that gangs target them for kidnapping,” he said.

Aid to the Church in Need is supporting dozens of projects in Haiti and has been active in the country for many years, stepping up its efforts after the earthquakes of 2010 and 2021. The group helped restore and rebuild damaged churches and church buildings and provide ongoing support for women religious and seminarians.