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EGYPT: Rare new Church to be built in new town
By John Pontifex

Bishop Mina of Guizeh in Egypt
Catholics in Egypt are seizing a rare opportunity to build a church in a country where permission normally takes up to 30 years and requires the signature of the president himself.
Outlining the plans, Bishop Antonios Aziz Mina of Guizeh explained that the church in question was being fast-tracked because it will be the first such structure to be built in a new town close to 6th of October City, a fast-growing metropolis, south of the capital, Cairo.
Bishop Mina stressed that the plans were still in their infancy but added that the scheme looks set to move ahead quickly because the Egyptian authorities make exceptions for church structures proposed for new urban areas.
He told Aid to the Church in Need that the government had allocated a 300-square-metre plot of land on which to build both the church and a school.
Emphasising a huge influx of people to the area around 6th of October City – especially the young – Bishop Mina said: “Our people are very strong in their faith and they keep saying they want a church.”
The bishop added: “It will be very easy for this church to be built. It is because the government follows the line that in every new urban area there should be a church.”
Bishop Mina is turning to Aid to the Church in Need for help with the project.
The cost of the scheme is estimated at £250,000 and in due course the bishop will present Aid to the Church in Need with a formal request for help. The project will be co-financed by a number of different agencies.
The bishop said he will have more details on costs after receiving a structural engineer’s report, expected soon.
The project’s swift progress is in marked contrast to the normal procedure in Egypt where church building is problematic. Obtaining approval can take decades and requires the personal authorisation of the president.
Bishop Mina is also turning to Aid to the Church in Need for help with plans for two pastoral centres – one for a parish in Guizeh city itself and another in a nearby village.
The charity has also supported the diocese with nurseries, small schools, social and pastoral centres and medical dispensaries.
The bishop thanked Aid to the Church in Need for its ongoing help in his diocese, which includes sponsorship of annual summer camps for youngsters receiving Christian education during the school holidays.
The diocese has five major seminarians, a comparatively high number for a diocese which numbers less than 6,000 Catholics and was only created in 2003.
Ever since the diocese was established, the charity has given key support for Guizeh, whose name is well known because the Pyramids are located there.
Bishop Mina went on: “I assure the prayers of my people for the benefactors and other friends of Aid to the Church in Need.
“Aid to the Church in Need’s warm spirit of generosity I will take back with me to Egypt to share with my people.”
Bishop Mina’s diocese is part of the Coptic Catholic Church, which numbers 250,000 in a country where the majority Christian denomination – the Coptic Orthodox Church – has between eight and 10 million faithful.
Across the country, Aid to the Church in Need has given ongoing support for projects including training for priests, monks and religious Sisters, as well as Christian education and formation including Aid to the Church in Need’s Child’s Bible.
Find out more about Aid to the Church in Need’s projects to build new churches and chapels
