Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States


The Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States is a diocese of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria located in the United States of America and encompassing the states of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Texas.Khalil served in several churches and was reported repeatedly throughout the years to Bishop Youssef and many Priests, little was done to bring him to justice.

History

The Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States was established in 1993 by Pope Shenouda III of Alexandria in response to the growing number of Coptic Orthodox Churches abroad. was the first Coptic Orthodox Diocese to be established in the United States.

Scandals

Pedophilia

On July 14th 2020, after public decelerations by a victims, the pedophile priest Hegomen Reweis Aziz Khalil was exposed and later defrocked. Khalil served in several churches and was reported repeatedly throughout the years Khalil assaulted several girls and women in the diocese during the sacrament of confession. Khalil was moved to another diocese following the discovery.
Khalil served in several churches and was reported repeatedly throughout the years within the church community, little was done to bring him to justice. In a leaked church investigation it was revealed that priests and doctors from the community councillor members to keep quiet in order to not defame the church, to prevent Khalil from going to prison and potentially being killed there, and to prevent church leaders of the diocese from being prosecuted in the United States.
Pope Tawadros II and the late Pope Shenouda re both aware of the priest's actions but did little to reprimand him. Bishop Youssef, the current bishop of this diocese, was well aware of the priests actions since before 2002 and never reported Fr. Khalil to authorities.

Statistics

Parishes and schools

As of 2015, the Diocese of the Southern United States operates 64 parishes. However, only 38 of these of formal churches, the other 28 are categorized as communities, which means that they are congregations, and usually possess a church building, but are not full 'churches' yet in that they are not large enough by diocesan standards to be recognized as churches. Communities are served by a visiting priest from a recognized church.

Churches

Florida
Georgia
Louisiana
Tennessee
Texas
Alabama
Arkansas
Florida
Georgia
Louisiana
New Mexico
Oklahoma
Tennessee
Texas
The diocese currently operates only one school, but religious education is often provided to children in the form of Sunday School classes at local Coptic churches.
Tennessee
The Diocese of the Southern United States publishes three magazines,

Bishops