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The funeral of the supreme leader reshuffles the cards in the USA-Iran file; the diplomatic neglect of Christian minorities, however, continues.
On July 10, 2026, Vatican News confirms that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, was buried in Mashhad. Tensions between Tehran and Washington immediately flare up: the technical talks initiated in June, particularly around the June 19 protocol, are now suspended pending the reconfiguration of Iranian power. On the same July 9, LifeSiteNews reported the lifting of restrictions imposed on Catholic parishes in Dubai during the USA-Iran crisis, which had closed churches during Holy Week and Easter.
We had noted, in issue 2 (week 27), the absence of any clause protecting Christians in the USA-Iran protocol of June 19, 2026. Khamenei's death reshuffles the political cards, but it does not fundamentally change them for the Church: Christians in the Holy Land and Iran remain outside any explicit diplomatic guarantee. The Patriarchs of Jerusalem, in their joint appeal of July 3, 2026, recalled that the Christian presence in the region has decreased from 20 percent (1948) to less than 2 percent today. This diplomatic oversight is doctrinally serious. The social doctrine of the Church, Sollicitudo rei socialis (John Paul II, December 30, 1987, § 39-40), reminds us of the requirement of universal solidarity, particularly towards persecuted minorities. The lifting of restrictions in Dubai, however, offers a local sign of easing, without regional guarantees.
Geopolitics changes face, persecution remains. Entrust to Saint Ignatius of Antioch, martyred in the 2nd century for the faith, the suffering Church of the Middle East, in union with the Holy Father's prayer for peace.
Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.
USA-Iran Agreement: Signed Protocol, Hormuz Opened Then Closed Again, Christians Await