Cardinal Zuppi leads seven-hour prayer, naming every child killed in Holy Land war
[Religion News Service — Vatican City] Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, the head of the Italian Bishops’ Conference, led a prayer vigil Aug. 14, on the eve of the Feast of the Assumption, where he read the name of every child who has died in the conflict between Israel and Hamas since the start of the war in the Holy Land two years ago.
“We pronounce their names one by one,” Zuppi said at the start of the vigil. “They ask us all to commit ourselves to finding or pursuing the path to peace with greater intelligence and passion, starting with a ceasefire and offering the conditions for doing so, from the release of hostages to not taking an entire people hostage.”
Zuppi took turns with dozens of other members of his diocese reading the names and ages of the 16 Israeli children who died during the Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Hamas and the 12,211 names of the Palestinian children who have died following Israel’s occupation of Gaza up until July 25, 2025. The names of the Israeli children were taken from Israeli government data, while the names of the Palestinian children were compiled by the Gaza Ministry of Health. The document was 469 pages long, which took roughly seven hours to read, starting in the afternoon and going until late in the evening.
The prayer took place in the park of Monte Sole di Marzabotto, not far from Zuppi’s diocese in Bologna. The location was highly symbolic, since the prayer occurred in the ruins of the Church of Casaglia, burned by Nazis, who between Sept. 29 and Oct. 5, 1944, destroyed the area and killed almost 800 people, including children.
“This is to remember, to pay attention, from this place which is a place of suffering and that has since always been a place to remember all victims,” Zuppi said.
The initiative was organized by the monastic community of the Small Family of the Annunciation, which cares for the ruins of the Nazi attack and preserves its memory. The School of Peace at Monte Sole is an institution committed to promoting peace and tolerance.
“It is an insistent prayer so that the war may cease, so that the weapons may fall silent, so that humanity may prevail,” the cardinal said.
Zuppi was selected by Pope Francis to be his peace envoy in Ukraine, where he used his experience as a peace mediator to help in the exchange of hostages between Russia and Ukraine and in reuniting Ukrainian children with their families. During the conclave that elected Pope Leo XIV, he was considered papabile, meaning a likely contender for the papacy.
Catholic leaders have been taking a strong stance against the war in Gaza in recent weeks as deaths escalate and the enclave faces starvation. The International Union of Superiors General, which brings together all the leaders of women’s religious congregations, launched a day of fasting and prayer on Aug. 4, calling “for justice and reconciliation.”

