A peace-making pastor and a well-known convert from Islam have been murdered in an attack on a church in Yaribori, Katsina State, Nigeria.
On 7 July, Islamist militant gunmen burst into a worship service, and shot and killed Pastor Emmanuel Na’allah and his friend, Samaila Gidan Taro, a teacher who had converted from Islam. A woman, thought to be the wife of another pastor, was abducted. All three were loved and respected leaders in the Christian community.
Image: Pastor Emmanuel Na’allah (Image: Darius Nusa, CAN Secretary, Katsina)
“He was a fearless voice,” said Musa Likita, a local farmer. “He worked with Muslim youth and never stopped speaking against violence.”
Pastor Emmanuel Na’allah’s name is not well-known, but it is clear his life touched many others in the rural farming community where he lived. Pastor Emmanuel continued to serve even though he knew the dangers – having previously received death threats from Islamist radicals. “If I must die, let it be in the service of God and peace,” he had told his congregation.
“He [Pastor Emmanuel] stood between them and us,” an eyewitness told Nigerian media. “They killed him without mercy and dragged a woman away.”
Another eyewitness added, “Reverend Na’allah stood before the pulpit and tried to reason with them. They shot him without hesitation.”
During the attack, Samaila Gidan Taro was also targeted. His conversion from Islam had caused a stir in the local community, and eyewitnesses report that the 15-20 gunmen were screaming “Death to infidels” when they entered the village.
“Those who knew Pastor Emmanuel Na’allah knew his work bringing Christians and Muslims together,” says John Samuel*, Open Doors’ legal adviser for sub-Saharan Africa. “He was the kind of leader who challenges extremist narratives of religious division. Emmanuel’s life speaks to the leadership of many Christian leaders of Nigeria and Africa. His murder is an attack on the very possibility of religious harmony.”
These murders and abduction are sadly increasingly common in Nigeria. Large-scale killings, targeting Christian communities, have devastated multiple states in Nigeria in 2025: more than 200 people were killed in Yelewata in June, while at least 113 people were killed in Bokkos and Bassa communities in Plateau State over Easter. In mid-July, gunmen killed more than 30 residents in Bindi, Plateau.
Nigeria is among the most dangerous places on earth to be Christian, at number seven on the World Watch List. If countries were ranked solely by violence, it would be number one: recent Open Doors research shows that more Christians are killed for their faith in Nigeria than the rest of the world, combined.
Believers in Nigeria need your prayers – and so do millions of other grieving, injured and vulnerable Christians in many parts of sub-Saharan Africa.
Use your voice to help stop the violence and start the healing. Sign the Arise Africa petition, calling for protection, justice and restoration for Christians and other religious minorities in sub-Saharan Africa.
*Name changed for security reasons
For Pastor Emmanuel’s and Samaila’s grieving loved ones to know God’s Fatherly arms encircling them
For the Nigerian government to have wisdom and alacrity in responding to the escalating violence affecting Christians in the nation.
That their legacy of peace and hope would bring lasting change to the region
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