One Killed in Attack on Retired Missionaries’ Home in France

An assailant fatally stabbed a 54-year-old resident of the retirement community, which is operated by the Society of African Missions.

Saint-Etienne Church in Montferrier-sur-Lez, France.
Saint-Etienne Church in Montferrier-sur-Lez, France. (photo: YouTube/benjaminmontpellier)

MONTPELLIER, France — An attack at a French retirement home for missionaries to Africa late on Thursday has left dead one caregiver. The residents have been evacuated and are now safe, but the perpetrator is still at large.

The attacker, armed with a shotgun and a knife, entered the retirement community of Green Oaks in Montferrier-sur-Lez, six miles north of Montpellier, the night of Nov. 24.

The Montpellier prosecutor, Christophe Barret, has said the attack is not believed to be linked to Islamist terrorism, but was a “local” crime with an identified suspect who has ties to the home, the BBC reported.

The community, home to 60 residents, is run by the Society of African Missions. Most residents are members of the Society of African missions, though there are some members of the Sisters of Our Lady of the Apostles and a few laywomen.

Police were notified of the attack after a nurse escaped the scene. The attacker had fled, however. He had stabbed to death one woman, who was 54.

“For us Christians, faced with an absurd gesture that can’t be explained, there is only prayer,” Father Francois du Penhoat, provincial of the Society of African Missions, told La Croix after the attack.

Father Olivier Ribadeau Dumas, secretary general of the French bishops’ conference, tweeted: “Our prayers reach out also to the missionaries attacked in their retirement home in Herault. May God grant his Peace to all.”

France has been under a state of emergency since Islamic State attacks killed 130 in Paris last November.

Shannon Mullen, Editor-in-Chief of CNA

Meet CNA’s New Editor-in-Chief, Shannon Mullen (July 31)

A new era has begun at the Catholic News Agency even as the news cycle continues to bring challenging stories both inside the Church and around the world. This week on Register Radio, we get to know Shannon Mullen, the new editor-in-chief of CNA. And then, we are joined by the Register’s Washington Correspondent, Lauretta Brown, to catch up on the latest pro-life news from the nation’s capital.

Shannon Mullen, Editor-in-Chief of Catholic News Agency.

EWTN’s Catholic News Agency Names Shannon Mullen as Editor-in-Chief

“As a young newspaper reporter, I drew great inspiration from Pope John Paul II’s annual remarks on World Communications Day,” Mullen said adding, “He emphasized that even those in the secular media could serve as apostles in the cause of human dignity, justice and the pursuit of truth."