A Kenyan member of the Missionaries of Charity killed in an attack on a nursing home in Yemen was remembered during a memorial Mass as defending her Catholic faith at the time of her death.
Auxiliary Bishop David Kamau of Nairobi said in his homily April 16 at the Holy Family Minor Basilica that Sister Mary Judith, who was born Anastasia Kanini and was one of four women religious killed when gunmen stormed the nursing home, did not die in vain.
Directing his attention to the 62-year-old mother of the slain nun, Agnes Kasangi Kimutu, Bishop Kamau said, "Mother, do not worry about your daughter. She has gone to heaven and she could probably be interceding for us at this moment."
The four Missionaries of Charity and 12 other people were killed by uniformed gunmen, who entered the home the sisters operate for the elderly and disabled in Aden.
The superior of the Missionaries of Charity at the home survived by hiding, according to the Vatican's Fides news agency. Fr. Tom Uzhunnalil, an Indian Salesian priest who had been living at the home since Holy Family Parish in Aden was sacked and burned in September, was missing after the attack.
The dead included two sisters from Rwanda, Sisters Mary Marguerite and Sister Mary Reginette, and Sister Mary Anselm of India.
The hundreds of people in attendance also prayed for Uzhunnalil.
"May the good Lord spare the life of Father Tom, who all along has been instrumental in the pastoral mission of the slain sisters at Aden, Yemen. May the captors do no harm to him and that may the good Lord shower him with freedom from the captors," prayed a nun during the prayers of the faithful.
Prayers also were offered for another Kenyan Catholic nun, Sister Mary Carmeline, a Missionary of Charity who was born as Bernadette Nzembi and hailed from the Makueni, the same hometown as Sister Mary Judith. Sister Mary Carmeline was killed in Sierra Leone in 1999 during the country's 11-year civil war as she prepared food for hundreds of people displaced by the violence.