(OSV News) — Catholics across the Middle East are reeling with shock and sorrow, and responding with prayer, amid joint strikes Israeli and U.S. forces launched on Iran Feb. 28.
U.S. President Donald Trump described the attacks as part of “major combat operations” to overthrow Iran’s regime in order to “defend the American people.”
Trump, who gave an 8-minute statement from his Mar-a-Lago residence, warned that “the lives of courageous American heroes may be lost, and we may have casualties.”
Separately, Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz announced the Feb. 28 “preemptive strike” against Iran, with a state of emergency declared across Israel.
The strikes follow a June 2025 attack by the U.S. that saw precision strikes on three Iranian nuclear facilities — Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan — which Trump at the time said were aimed at destroying Iran’s nuclear enrichment capacity.

Casualties reported in Iran strikes
Iran’s capital of Tehran, along with several cities across the nation, has been struck, with conflicting early reports as to whether Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is among the country’s senior leaders killed in the initial assault.
Iran has retaliated with several counterstrikes, targeting Israel and several U.S.-interest locations across a number of Middle East nations, including Dubai, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain and Qatar. Flights across the Middle East have been disrupted.
Casualties on both sides are still being assessed amid the ongoing exchanges, but Iran’s foreign minister, Seyed Abbas Araghchi, claimed on the X social media platform that a girls’ school in Minab was bombed in the U.S.-Israeli air assault and showed a photo.
“Dozens of innocent children have been murdered at this site alone,” he said. “These crimes against the Iranian People will not go unanswered.”
Iranian media has put the toll at least 63 students killed and 60 injured, but there is not yet independent confirmation of the strike and casualties.

Arabian churches call for calm, prayer
Bishop Aldo Berardi, apostolic vicar of northern Arabia — who shepherds the estimated 2.2 million Catholics, most of them migrant workers from other nations, in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia — issued a Feb. 28 statement on Facebook, urging the faithful “to remain calm, united in prayer, and attentive to the safety of everyone.”
“Please follow carefully the instructions of civil authorities and take all necessary precautions in your homes, workplaces, and parishes,” said Bishop Berardi.
He also directed “all parish priests and rectors to take appropriate action and to make the necessary decisions, with prudence and responsibility, to ensure the safety of the faithful entrusted to their care.
“Let us remain united in faith and charity, caring especially for the elderly, the sick, and the vulnerable,” said Bishop Berardi. “May the Lord protect you and your families, and may Our Lady of Arabia, our mother, watch over us all.”
In Doha, Qatar, Our Lady of the Rosary Church announced on its website that it would “remain closed until further notice,” given “recent events in Qatar” and “the advisory issued by the ministry.”

Catholics in Holy Land caught off guard
In Israel, Benedictine Father Nikodemus Schnabel — rector of Dormition Abbey on Mount Zion in the Old City of Jerusalem and abbot of Tabgha, the community’s priory on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee — sheltered with some 60 pilgrims at Tabgha, the traditionally revered site of Jesus Christ’s multiplication of the loaves and fishes.
Father Schnabel, who was at Tabgha since Feb. 27 for a chapter meeting of his community — told OSV News he was caught off guard by the attacks.
“It was always in the air that maybe something could happen,” he explained. “But it was then a surprise that it really happened today, especially before Wednesday, because Wednesday there were plans for a new round of negotiations.”
He said their international group, which included children and the elderly, had been in the shelter for two hours, describing the time — which video obtained by OSV News showed the pilgrims praying and singing — as unifying amid the attacks.
“It was a good experience. We don’t know each other, but then we sing songs in different languages. We pray together,” he explained.
Father Schnabel added it was also “very interesting,” saying, “I love that it was not — nobody was in fear about his or her life.”

‘Islands of hope’
He said the experience was an example of Benedictine hospitality, one of the charisms of the order.
“Very often I say, ‘I want that our two monasteries are two islands of hope in an ocean of suffering,'” said Father Schnabel. “And this was exactly the feeling. We were also today an island of hope in an ocean of suffering.”
Jesuit Father John Paul, rector of the Tantur Ecumenical Institute — located on a 40-acre hilltop campus between Bethlehem and Jerusalem — told OSV News that his morning had been spent “in and out of shelters,” although he believed “Jerusalem is not a target area.”
The priest, whose institute is staffed by both Palestinians and Israelis, pointed to the sorrow evoked by the strikes, which follow the Israel-Hamas war and ongoing tensions between Israel and Palestinians living in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.
“Overall, with local Palestinians” there is “a feeling of real sadness — my guess is with Israelis as well,” said Father John Paul.

Praying for Iran, Israel and all
Father Schnabel said he and the pilgrims at Tagbha were praying for all affected.
“We pray for the others … So let’s pray for the people in Iran. Let’s pray for the people in Israel. Let’s pray for the people in Palestine. Let’s pray for the people in the region who are facing this situation,” he said. “Let’s pray for the people who are have no shelter like we have, and for all who are not understanding what’s going on.”
Gina Christian is a multimedia reporter for OSV News. Follow her on X @GinaJesseReina. Paulina Guzik, international editor of OSV News, contributed to this report. Follow her on X @Guzik_Paulina.
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