Two
newly ordained deacons, who narrowly escaped the Saturday’s
a bomb explosion in Pune, said they were happy to rescue several
victims.
Deacons Joemon Kurusingal
and Roy Mathews, students of Pune’s Papal seminary, were
ordained on Feb. 13 morning. They were going to visit patients
in government-managed hospital in the city later in the evening
when the bomb exploded near a restaurant they had just passed.
The blast killed
nine people, including two foreigners, and wounded 45 others.
“I saw the
place strewn with flesh and blood,” said Deacon Mathews
and added he saw “a chaotic scene, with people weeping
loudly and thousands of people crowding the area.”
The shaken seminarians
then helped carry dead bodies and the injured before the police
cordoned off the area.
The duo was among
16 seminarians from various dioceses who were ordained deacons
that day. Deacon Kurusingal belongs to Jammu-Srinagar diocese
in Jammu and Kashmir state while Deacon Mathews is being trained
for Kalyan diocese in Maharashtra state.
Seminary rector Jesuit
Father Pradeep Sequeira said his students’ involvement
“was a real witness to Christ and sharing the grief of
the victims and the city.”
Capuchin
Bishop Peter Celestine Elampassery of Jammu-Srinagar also lauded
his deacon’s “prompt response.”
On Feb.
14, all churches in Poona diocese prayed for the blast victims,
Father Malcolm Sequeira, diocesan spokesperson said.
The priest said he
had rushed to the blast site after hearing the news that night
and spoke to the police who did not want any helpers. “By
1.30 am, all bodies were cleared and police had cordoned off
the area,” he added.
Police said the restaurant,
German Bakery, packed by foreign nationals was a “soft
target” of terrorists. However, their real targets were
Osho Ashram, which has hundreds of foreigners, and Chabhad House,
a Jewish prayer centre, but failed to enter them.
Police said commandoes
are posted at the two places frequented by mostly foreigners.
Ma Amrit Sadhana,
spokesperson of Osho International Meditation Resort, said her
center has “beefed up security” as they fear terrorists
targeting them to spread panic “as visitors to Osho commune
come here from all over the world.”
Acharya (teacher)
Rajneesh set up the ashram in 1974