Mother of slain US journalist thanks Pope Francis for support

VATICAN CITY (RNS) Diane Foley said her family had been deeply moved when the pope telephoned them in August 2014 soon after her son James' brutal beheading. She wanted to thank him personally.

Bishop of Manchester, Peter Anthony Libasci, speaks during a vigil on for slain journalist James Foley at the Rochester Commons in Rochester, N.H., on Aug. 23, 2014.  Photo by Shawn St. Hilaire/Democrat Photo

Diane Foley, mother of deceased journalist James Foley, at the Foreign Press Club in Rome. RNS photo by Josephine McKenna

VATICAN CITY (RNS) The mother of American journalist James Foley, who was executed by the Islamic State group in Syria, has traveled to Rome to thank Pope Francis for the sympathy and support he gave her family after her son’s death.

Diane Foley, who heads a foundation established in her son’s honor, came to Rome to promote a documentary about her son’s life. She met the pope after attending Mass at the pope’s Santa Marta residence inside the Vatican on Friday (March 3).

Pope Francis during his visit to Sarajevo, on June 6, 2015. Photo courtesy of Reuters/Dado Ruvic

“It was such a gift to be in the presence of such a holy man,” Foley told Religion News Service on Monday (March 6). “I hadn’t had a chance to thank him. For me it was profound.”


Foley, a devout Catholic, said her family had been deeply moved when the pope telephoned them in August 2014 soon after the journalist’s brutal beheading. She wanted to thank him personally.

“It was just very beautiful that he called to tell us how sorry he was and how we were in his prayers and how Jim had truly been a martyr,” she said.

[ad number=“1”]

“He was very loving. He was one of the good people, among the many hundreds of good people who lifted us up after Jim’s death.

“He was one of the voices of love. I was just so touched.”

James Foley, a 40-year-old freelance journalist from Rochester, N.H., disappeared on Nov. 22, 2012, while reporting about the Syrian civil war.

[ad number=“2”]

At the time, the Islamic State group said his execution was in retaliation for U.S. airstrikes on the Islamic group’s positions in northern Iraq. Before his killing the organization had also demanded a ransom $132.5 million from his parents and political concessions from the United States.

Foley said her Catholic faith had helped her through the trauma of losing her son.


Bishop of Manchester, Peter Anthony Libasci, speaks during a vigil on for slain journalist James Foley at the Rochester Commons in Rochester, N.H., on Aug. 23, 2014. Photo by Shawn St. Hilaire/Democrat Photo

“Without my faith I don’t know if I could have survived to be honest,” she said. “It has carried me through. To have the head of the Catholic faith reach out to me is so humbling when you think of all the tragedies in the world.”

[ad number=“3”]

Her local church had helped her contact the Vatican ambassador in Washington D.C. to set up her meeting with the pope.

The James W. Foley Legacy Foundation fights for journalism safety and protection and the safe return of U.S. hostages abroad.

(Josephine McKenna covers the Vatican for RNS)

 

Donate to Support Independent Journalism!

Donate Now!