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Before Bahrain established the Gulf’s first church in the 1930s, priests would visit from Iraq to perform services for a small Catholic community.
Now, its ranks swollen by foreign workers, mostly from India and the Philippines, the community is preparing to wel-come the pope, the leader of the world’s 1.3 billion Catholics.
Pope Francis’s visit this week, his second to the Arabian peninsula, will be especially emotional for Najla Uchi, whose father Salman built the Sacred Heart church that opened on Christmas Eve, 1939.
After lighting candles at her home in Manama, capital of the tiny Gulf nation, Uchi pulls out folders of old photos of her father and a medal he was awarded for building the church.
“My father left his hometo-wn, the Iraqi capital Baghdad, a long time ago,” she told AFP. “He came to Bahrain and settled here.”
More than 80 years after its consecration, the Sacred Heart is on the pontiff’s itinerary in the Muslim-majority monarchy who-se Catholics now number about 80,000.
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