Ragheed Aziz Ganni was born on 20 January 1972 in the predominantly
Sunni city of
Mosul, Iraq. After completing a degree in Civil Engineering at Mosul University in 1996 and fulfilling obligatory military service under the
Saddam Hussein regime Ganni entered the seminary in Iraq. In 1996 Ganni's bishop sent him to
Rome for further study at the
Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas Angelicum where he completed a licentiate in ecumenical theology in 2003. He was ordained a priest in
Rome on 13 October 2001 at the
Pontifical Urbaniana University. During his study in Rome he resided at the
Pontifical Irish College where he played soccer for the College. The annual showcase 5-a-side tournament played in May among the Scots, English, Beda and Irish Colleges has been named the "Ragheed Cup" in his memory. Ganni celebrated his first Mass in the Chapel at the Irish College. Today Ganni is one of the nine figures represented in the apse of that chapel where the relics of Saint
Oliver Plunkett rest in the altar wrapped in the priestly stole of Ganni. Ganni regularly offered Mass for the
Lay Centre at Foyer Unitas which was at the time housed on the grounds of the Irish College. Fluent in Aramaic, Arabic, Italian, French, and English, Ganni served as a correspondent for the international agency
Asia News of the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions. Ganni was finishing his degree in
Rome when the
Iraq war broke out. Ganni had received permission from his bishop to return to the
Angelicum in Rome to work on a doctorate in ecumenism. In a prewar interview he expressed his opposition to the invasion of Iraq fearing that Iraqi Christians would be targeted and persecuted. He looked forward to returning to his native land to serve the Church and people there. He did so after
Saddam Hussein was ousted from power in 2003. ==Death==