By LEE KEATH
A Syrian acolyte girl listens to the sermon, during prayers for nuns held by rebels, at the Greek Orthodox Mariamiya Church in Damascus, Syria, Sunday Dec. 8, 2013. The fears of Syrian Christian minority that they are being targeted in the country’s civil war were hiked by the taking of the Greek Orthodox nuns by rebels who captured a mainly Christian town north of the capital. (AP Photo/Lee Keath)
Mideast Syria Christians
Syrian acolyte girls listen to the sermon, during prayers for nuns held by rebels at the Greek Orthodox Mariamiya Church in Damascus, Syria, Sunday Dec. 8, 2013. The fears of Syrian Christian minority that they are being targeted in the country’s civil war were hiked by the taking of the Greek Orthodox nuns by rebels who captured a mainly Christian town north of the capital. (AP Photo/Lee Keath)
Mideast Syria Christians
A Syrian man holds his daughter, during prayers for nuns held by rebels, at the Greek Orthodox Mariamiya Church in Damascus, Syria, Sunday Dec. 8, 2013. The fears of Syrian Christian minority that they are being targeted in the country’s civil war were hiked by the taking of the Greek Orthodox nuns by rebels who captured a mainly Christian town north of the capital. (AP Photo/Lee Keath)
Yohanna al-Asher al-Yazeji
Yohanna al-Asher al-Yazeji, Greek Orthodox patriarch for the Levant, calls for prayers for nuns held by rebels, at the Greek Orthodox Mariamiya Church in Damascus, Syria, Sunday Dec. 8, 2013. The fears of Syrian Christian minority that they are being targeted in the country’s civil war were hiked by the taking of the Greek Orthodox nuns by rebels who captured a mainly Christian town north of the capital. (AP Photo/Lee Keath)
Yohanna al-Asher al-Yazeji
Yohanna al-Asher al-Yazeji, Greek Orthodox patriarch for the Levant, calls for prayers for nuns held by rebels, at the Greek Orthodox Mariamiya Church in Damascus, Syria, Sunday Dec. 8, 2013. The fears of Syrian Christian minority that they are being targeted in the country’s civil war were hiked by the taking of the Greek Orthodox nuns by rebels who captured a mainly Christian town north of the capital. (AP Photo/Lee Keath)
Yohanna al-Asher al-Yazeji
Yohanna al-Asher al-Yazeji, Greek Orthodox patriarch for the Levant, calls for prayers for nuns held by rebels, at the Greek Orthodox Mariamiya Church in Damascus, Syria, Sunday Dec. 8, 2013. The fears of Syrian Christian minority that they are being targeted in the country’s civil war were hiked by the taking of the Greek Orthodox nuns by rebels who captured a mainly Christian town north of the capital. (AP Photo/Lee Keath)
Mideast Syria Christians
Syrian acolyte children listen to the sermon, during prayers for nuns held by rebels, at the Greek Orthodox Mariamiya Church in Damascus, Syria, Sunday Dec. 8, 2013. The fears of Syrian Christian minority that they are being targeted in the country’s civil war were hiked by the taking of the Greek Orthodox nuns by rebels who captured a mainly Christian town north of the capital. (AP Photo/Lee Keath)
Mideast Syria Christians
Syrian acolytes perform their rites during a service for nuns held by rebels, at the Greek Orthodox Mariamiya Church in Damascus, Syria, Sunday Dec. 8, 2013. The fears of Syrian Christian minority that they are being targeted in the country’s civil war were hiked by the taking of the Greek Orthodox nuns by rebels who captured a mainly Christian town north of the capital. (AP Photo/Lee Keath)
Mideast Syria
Clergymen attend prayers for nuns held by rebels, at the Greek Orthodox Mariamiya Church in Damascus, Syria, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2013. The fears of Syrian Christian minority that they are being targeted in the country’s civil war were hiked by the taking of the Greek Orthodox nuns by rebels who captured a mainly Christian town north of the capital. (AP Photo)
Mideast Syria
Syrian Christians and Muslims offer prayers for nuns held by rebels, at the Greek Orthodox Mariamiya Church in Damascus, Syria, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2013. The fears of Syrian Christian minority that they are being targeted in the country’s civil war were hiked by the taking of the Greek Orthodox nuns by rebels who captured a mainly Christian town north of the capital. (AP Photo)
Yohanna al-Asher al-Yazeji
Yohanna al-Asher al-Yazeji, Greek Orthodox patriarch for the Levant, center, offers prayers for nuns held by rebels, at the Greek Orthodox Mariamiya Church in Damascus, Syria, Sunday Dec. 8, 2013. The fears of Syrian Christian minority that they are being targeted in the country’s civil war were hiked by the taking of the Greek Orthodox nuns by rebels who captured a mainly Christian town north of the capital. (AP Photo)
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DAMASCUS (AP) — Syrian Christians offered prayers Sunday for a group of more than a dozen nuns and orphanage workers held by rebels for nearly a week, fueling fears in the minority community that they are being targeted by extremists among the fighters seeking to oust President Bashar Assad.
The seizure of the 12 Greek Orthodox nuns and at least three other women is the latest attack to spark panic among Syria’s Christians over the strength of al-Qaida-linked militants and other Islamic radicals in the nearly 3-year-old revolt against Assad’s government. A priest and two bishops previously kidnapped by rebels remain missing, and extremists are accused of vandalizing churches in areas they have captured.
Rebels seized the nuns on Monday from the Greek Orthodox Mar Takla convent when fighters overran Maaloula, a mainly Christian village north of Damascus that lies on a key highway and has changed hands several times in fierce fighting between rebels and government forces. The group, along with three women — themselves orphans — who work in the convent’s orphanage were taken to the nearby rebel-held town of Yabroud.
The eldest of the nuns is nearly 90 years old, and the youngest of the orphanage workers is in her mid-teens, according to Mother Superior Febronia Nabhan, head of the Saidnaya Convent.
On Friday, a video was released of the nuns, in which they denied being kidnapped, saying they were in good health and that fighters had taken them to a location away from the combat out of concerns for their safety.
The video only stoked the worries of Christians who gathered Sunday for a Mass at the Mariamiya Church in Damascus, the main Greek Orthodox church in the country.
“They’re coming after us,” Odette Abu Zakham, a 65-year-old woman in the congregation who lives in the nearby historic Christian district of Bab Touma. “All they do is massacre people, all they know is killing.”
Another woman at the Mass noted that in the video, the nuns appeared in their black robes but with no signs of religious symbols on them. “They didn’t even let them wear their crosses,” she said. “This just shows they aren’t capable of respecting Christians.”
“It’s been a week. If they’re only holding them for their safety, they could have handed them over by now,” she said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation against herself or her family.
Christians and other minorities tend to support the government of Assad, who comes from a Shiite offshoot sect. Syria’s Sunni Muslim majority form the backbone of the uprising against Assad. But nationalist fighters among them have been overshadowed by the increasing power of extremists, including Syrian rebels who have taken up hard-line al-Qaida-style ideologies and foreign fighters.
In his sermon at the Mass, the Greek Orthodox patriarch for Antioch and All the East, Yohanna al-Yaziji, asked “anyone with any connection, direct or indirect” to intercede to win the group’s return. “We hope this will happen today, not tomorrow. We urge everyone to adhere to the logic of dialogue and peace, not to violence and weapons.”
He carefully avoided describing the nuns as “kidnapped” or asking for their release — praying only for their “return” — a sign of concerns among Church officials that any statements could enflame the situation.
The rebel faction that released the video, aired on Al-Jazeera television, did not identify itself, and no faction has announced it is holding the group. Syrian opposition activists and Church officials have said the al-Qaida-linked group Jabhat al-Nusra, or the Nusra Front, is holding them.
One activist said a Syrian Christian businessman is trying to mediate between the Nusra Front and the government for their release in return for the release of seven Saudi fighters. The activist spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the secret mediation, but did not have further details. Greek Orthodox Church officials would not comment.
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AP correspondents Albert Aji in Damascus and Bassem Mroue in Beirut contributed to this report.