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Father Tom says Islamic State captors took care of his needs, never caused him physical harm
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Father Tom says Islamic State captors took care of his needs, never caused him physical harm

The Associated Press • September 16, 2017, 20:05:20 IST
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A Catholic priest from India who was freed after being held 18 months in Yemen says he was never physically harmed during his captivity, even if his captors feigned hitting him on videos seeking ransom

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Father Tom says Islamic State captors took care of his needs, never caused him physical harm

Vatican City: A Catholic priest from India who was freed after being held 18 months in Yemen said Saturday that he was never physically harmed during his captivity, even if his captors feigned hitting him on videos seeking ransom. Officials said they had no knowledge of ransom having been paid. Reverend Tom Uzhunnalil was kidnapped from a home for senior citizens in Aden, southern Yemen, established by Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity in March 2016. [caption id=“attachment_4039351” align=“alignleft” width=“380”]File image of Father Tom Uzhunnalil. Image courtesy: Twitter @Sushma Swaraj File image of Father Tom Uzhunnalil. Image courtesy: Twitter @Sushma Swaraj[/caption] Four nuns were killed during the attack. Uzhunnalil’s voice broke as he publicly expressed his condolences. “I thank God almighty for this day. He saved me healthy enough. Clear mind. Emotions under control until now,” the 59-year-old Uzhunnalil said. “God has been extremely kind to me. No gun was pointed at me.” He said that when the home for senior citizens was attacked, he identified himself as an Indian, and he was brought to another room “while they killed the others.” Indian officials announced his release on Tuesday, and images show a bearded, gaunt Uzhunnalil descending from an airplane in Muscat, Oman. The priest said he had been transferred from Yemen by car to Oman, and then brought by air to the capital before continuing his journey to Rome. The priest said he didn’t know his kidnappers’ identities or affiliations and believed their motive was ransom, although the head of Uzhunnalil’s Salesian order, Don AF Artime, said they had no knowledge of any ransom having been paid. “No one ever told us that they asked for money. No one asked us for even a euro,” Artime said. “We don’t know anything about this. This is the whole truth. And I believe that Father Tom knows even less.” The mechanisms behind his release also were unclear, but the Vatican has thanked the Sultan of Oman in a statement, and Uzhunnalil thanked leaders in his native India. The priest said that his captors never harmed him, even if in some videos they made it appear that way in an effort to get a speedy response in negotiations. They provided tablets to treat his diabetes and took care of his basic needs. He was transferred several times during his captivity, but he doesn’t know where he was held. His captors kept their faces covered in his presence, he said. Artime said the priest lost about 30 kilogrammes during the ordeal, and described his health as “very delicate, very weak,” adding “he is calm of spirit.” During his captivity, Uzhunnalil said he prayed and exercised his mind by reciting Mass by memory. When he was loaded into the trunk of a car when he was first kidnapped, Uzhunnalil said that the tabernacle from the altar inside the senior home was at his feet. His hands weren’t tied, and he was able to reach under the velvet cloth and touch it, confirming that it contained four or five Eucharistic hosts that he had blessed the day before. “So I said to myself, without the knowledge of God, nothing will happen to me,” he said.

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