Posted on 08/26/2004 6:32:41 AM PDT by billorites
WHAT ARE the Muslims doing? asked Brother Louis, a deacon at the Our Lady of Salvation, an Assyrian Catholic church in Baghdad minutes after it had been bombed. Does this mean that they want us (Christians) out?
Well, yes, it does. Our Lady of Salvation was just one of five churches attacked in a series of coordinated explosions in Baghdad and Mosul on Aug. 1, a Sunday, between 6 and 7 oclock in the evening. In total, these car bombings killed 11 persons and injured 55. In addition, the police defused another two bombs.
The timing of the assault guaranteed a maximum number of casualties. August 1 is a holy day for some Iraqi Christian denominations and because Sunday is an ordinary workday in mostly Muslim Iraq, Sunday services take place in the evening.
The five bombings were by no means the first attacks targeting Iraqs Christian minority since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. Others, according to the Barnabus Fund (an organization assisting persecuted Christian minorities), were bunched together at the end of 2003 and included a missile attack on a convent in Mosul; bombs placed (but defused) in two Christian schools in Baghdad and Mosul; a bomb explosion at a Baghdad church on Christmas Eve; and a bomb placed (but defused) at a monastery in Mosul.
In addition, Islamists have attacked the predominantly Christian owners of liquor, music and fashion stores, as well as beauty salons, wanting them to close down their businesses. Christian women are threatened unless they cover their heads in the Islamic fashion. Random Christians have been assassinated.
These assaults have prompted Iraqi Christians, one of the oldest Christian bodies in the world, to leave their country in record numbers. An Iraqi deacon observed some months ago: On a recent night the church had to spend more time on filling out baptismal forms needed for leaving the country than they did on the (worship) service. . . . Our community is being decimated.
Iraqs minister for displacement and migration, Pascale Icho Warda, estimates that 40,000 Christians left Iraq in the two weeks after the Aug. 1 bombings. Whereas Christians make up just 3 percent of the countrys population, their population of the refugee flow into Syria is estimated anywhere between 20 and 95 percent. Looking at the larger picture, one estimate finds that about 40 percent of the community has left since 1987, when the census found 1.4 million Iraqi Christians.
Although Muslim leaders uniformly condemned the attacks (Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani termed them criminal actions, while the interim Iraqi government bravely declared that This blow is going to unite Iraqis), they almost certainly mark a milestone in the decline and possible disappearance of Iraqi Christianity.
This seems all the more likely because Christians, due mainly to Islamist persecution and lower birth rates, are disappearing from the Middle East as a whole.
At present rates, the Middle Easts 11 million Christians will in a decade or two have lost their cultural vitality and political significance.
It bears noting that Christians are recapitulating the Jewish exodus of a few decades earlier. Jews in the Middle East numbered about a million in 1948 and today total (outside Israel) a mere 60,000.
In combination, these cleansings of two ancient religious minorities mark the end of an era. The multiplicity of Middle Eastern life, most memorably celebrated in Lawrence Durrells Alexandria Quartet (1957-60), is being reduced to the flat monotony of a single religion and a handful of approved languages.
The entire region, not just the affected minorities, is impoverished by this narrowing.
Daniel Pipes, (www.DanielPipes.org), is director of the Middle East Forum and author of Miniatures (Transaction Publishers).
We should have invoked the Ann Coulter Doctrine: Kill their leaders and convert the survivors to Christianity.
"Think like us or die!"
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