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Removed and then killed, a catechist from the Saint-Joseph parish confirms the trend: the vibrant figures of local faith are now targets.
On July 10, 2026, Vatican News in German reports, based on a statement from the Saint-Joseph parish of the Archdiocese of Kaduna transmitted to the Fides agency, the kidnapping and subsequent assassination of the catechist Victor Paul. The parish priest describes the circumstances of the kidnapping and the killing. The community is shaken: the circumstances confirm the persistence of targeted attacks against Christians in northern Nigeria, in a context where the Archdiocese of Kaduna remains chronically exposed to armed violence.
We had reported, in issue 2 (week 27), the study by the Observatory for Religious Freedom in Africa (2020-2026) establishing that Christians have borne a disproportionate burden of violence in Nigeria, contradicting the so-called "agropastoral" media narrative. The murder of Victor Paul confirms the trend: catechists, living figures of faith transmission in rural parishes, are now targets. Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) recalls in its Nigeria reports that several thousand Christians have been killed since 2015 in the Middle Belt and Northern states. Open Doors ranks Nigeria 6th worldwide in its 2026 World Watch List of Christian persecution. The doctrine, Dignitatis humanae (Vatican II Council, December 7, 1965, § 2), makes religious freedom a fundamental right of the human person: international inaction is becoming increasingly difficult to justify.
A catechist is a faithful person who has answered a call. His death is not counted as a statistic: it is a concrete martyrdom, offered to the community. Pray for Victor Paul, for his loved ones, and for the Saint-Joseph parish of Kaduna.
Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.
Nigeria: The Silent Persecution in the Middle Belt