Aleppo, she noted, is the "most important city" and the "economic center of the country," so terror groups targeted the city and besieged it for a full year. Electricity was available only one to two hours a day. Water came every 10 to 15 days.
"Then the city became war every single day," Sr. Maria said. "And we have been living like that for five years."
The Christian neighborhoods and churches have been targeted the most, she noted. There has been "total destruction" in the Christian communities, Fr. Rodrigo said, "especially during the important feasts of the Christian year."
"So we always expect a massive attack during Christmas and Easter … They destroy our churches, monasteries, shelters, everything."
After the Muslim preaching and prayer on Fridays, he said, his community would be "targeted, threatened, directly attacked, because we were the only Christian community in the area."
Christians, he said, "are kidnapped, tortured, martyred, beheaded, cut in pieces."
"Regularly they broke the windows of our houses and cars, or there were times when they entered into the houses of our consecrated sisters with knives, threatening of rape or martyrdom, commonly harassed them when they had to go on the streets."
"Or they threw their cars or motorcycles against the children of our small Christian school. I personally defended my children from them."
A Christian cemetery was also destroyed and the corpses desecrated and displayed in public, he said.
A Christian woman was tied to a pillar and beaten by passers-by until she would ask to convert to Islam. However, she never asked to convert, Sr. Maria said.
And children and priests have been special targets for brutality. They have been "buried alive" in front of their mothers, and beheaded with their heads put on spikes in public squares.
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"Girls, mostly between 10 and 15 years old, are raped, up to ten times a day or more," Fr. Rodrigo said, "and sold in the successful and growing prostitution market from the region and in the Western countries."
Priests have also been targets of hatred. Fr. Rodrigo recounted the story of a 75 year-old Dutch missionary priest who "was kidnapped and shot twice in the back of the head because he was feeding the [poor]."
Other priests Fr. Rodrigo has talked to have had their bones broken and teeth knocked out, and have been starved nearly to death.
"Why? Political bias? Ethnic cleansing? He's a priest, an imitator of Christ. The reason of this is the hatred of Jesus Christ," Fr. Rodrigo said.
"If they persecute me, said our Lord, they will also persecute you. Christ is a sign of contradiction, and we are going to be the sign of contradiction in Syria and Iraq."
For Fr. Rodrigo, "the motivation of today's genocide is the same from the very beginning, from the roots of our very difficult coexistence with Islam."