Dhaka : “Go and seek out the homes of Christians that are the farthest from your parishes and visit them. Bring the joy of the Gospel to these families. Their members need closeness and spiritual advice.”  Cardinal Patrick D’Rozario, archbishop of Dhaka  asked at a ceremony held at the Archbishop’s Residence in Dhaka for a group of priests,  nuns and lay Catholics.

“Many Christian families are hurting,” Card D’Rozario said. “They need love and compassion. So you – priests, brothers and nuns – have to visit them, listen and share their words. Family members want to hear words of hope. Men and women religious are needed to take care of them.”

The cardinal noted that “our main goal is to take pastoral care of families, because the family is a small church. It is the root of the Church.” Indeed, “Can a tree live if the roots are cut?” he asked. “This is why we have to take care of the family.”

Bangladesh “needs more trained people to respond better to the needs of our people,” the prelate added. Citing Pope Francis, he went on to say that “We all need to pray at least two minutes a day as a family. The husband prays for his wife, the wife prays for her husband, the children pray for their parents. Everyone must pray for one another and feel God’s presence in their lives.”

In a country with a Muslim majority, where Christians account for just 0.6 per cent of the population (out of more than 160 million inhabitants), mixed marriages are commonplace. In light of this, the archbishop of Dhaka called for renewed interest in the real meaning of the marital bond.

“Many people,” he said, “think that marriage is only a social tradition. They do not know that it is a calling from God. The family is the mirror of God’s love. For this reason, it is not just a matter of tradition, but a tangible sign of God.”

For his part, Benedict Alo D’Rozario, former executive director of Caritas Bangladesh, called on the cardinal “to listen to the demands that come from Catholics, so as to meet the challenges facing the Catholic Church in Bangladesh. We expect the Cardinal to be always impartial, loving and just,” he explained, “because he is close to Christ.”