Posted on 04/20/2006 4:23:50 PM PDT by Coleus
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After Iraqs Baathists seized power in 1968, they celebrated by stringing Jews up in a Baghdad square. With the remnant of Iraqs Jewish population having long since fled the country, Christians have become todays victims of choice. Sunni, Shia, and Kurd may agree on little else, but all have made sport of brutalizing their Christian neighbors, hundreds of whom have been slaughtered since the U.S. invasion. As a result, Iraqs ancient Christian community, now numbering roughly 800,000 and consisting mostly of Eastern rite Chaldean Catholics and Assyrian Orthodox Christians, dwindles by the day. According to Iraqi estimates, between 40,000 and 100,000 have fled since 2004 many following their own road to Damascus across the Syrian border or to Jordan, while many more have been displaced within Iraq. As for the country that loosed the furies against them, the United States refuses to provide Iraqi Christians protection of any kind. From his synod in Baghdad, the most prominent Christian clergyman in Iraq, Chaldean Patriarch Emmanuel Delly, denies the obvious. There is no persecution of Christians, the septuagenarian archbishop insists. All Iraqis have problems. The fiction has become canonical among Iraqi Christian leaders, who maintain it to avoid inciting their tormentors. Many members of Iraqs clergy, for example, dismiss as gross exaggeration reports that tens of thousands of Christians have fled Iraq.
But however much the clergy may deny it, Iraqi Christians suffer for their faith. Along with kidnappings and assassinations, church bombings beginning with the destruction of five churches in August 2004 have become a staple of Christian life in Iraq. To disguise their faith, Christian women, particularly in Iraqs south, tuck their hair under hijabs, while fewer and fewer attend church, performing Mass in homes and sometimes, like their ancient Christian ancestors, in crypts instead. Even the Kurds, so often depicted as saints in Iraqs morality tale, have taken to pummeling Christians; the Kurdish religious affairs minister said last year that those who turn to Christianity pose a threat to society. Commenting on a recent pogrom against Christian students in Mosul, Yonadam Kanna, the only Christian elected to Iraqs new parliament, says, The fanatics blame us for doing nothing. They blame us for being Christian.
The blame accrues, in part, because of real and imagined ties to the West and to the Western power occupying Iraq. There is, in truth, a cultural affinity between Iraqi Christians, many of whom speak English (and, as such, account for a large percentage of the U.S. militarys interpreters), and the mostly Christian soldiers occupying their country. [Local Christians] were very supportive of having us in Mosul, says Colonel Mike Meese, who served with the 101st Airborne Division in the heavily Christian city. Theyd have our soldiers go to Mass with them. But as soon as their American protectors departed, the citys Christians became targets their churches sacked and their archbishop kidnapped. In Baghdad, too, insurgents routinely execute Christians who work alongside the Americans. Threatened by her neighbours, a Christian friend of mine who worked in the Green Zone quit her job and today rarely leaves her house.
But having been massacred over the centuries by Ottomans, Kurds and Arabs alike, most Christians know better than to rely on the goodwill of others. |
To the lengthy indictment of Christians, their persecutors have also added the charge of proselytizing. Unlike American soldiers, who mean to save Iraqi lives, the American evangelicals who followed on their heels mean to save Iraqi souls. There is a difference. Evangelizing to Iraqis carries with it risks that evangelizing to, say, Latin Americans does not. The infusion of pamphlets and missionaries from organizations like the International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention enrages Iraqi Muslims, who, Iraqi Christian leaders claim, increasingly conflate their congregants with the crusaders and, too often, treat them as such. The evangelicals have caused such problems for us, says Kanna. They make the Sunni and Shia furious. Even though Iraqs Christians suffer in the name of their American coreligionists, their fate seems not to have made the slightest impression on much of the evangelical establishment. Their Web sites and promotional literature advertise the importance of creating new Christian communities in Iraq while mostly ignoring the obligation to save ancient ones. Nor, with a few exceptions, have mainstream church leaders in the United States broached the subject, either. Dr. Carl Moeller, the president of Open Doors USA, an organization that supports persecuted Christians abroad, pins the blame on Christianitys own sectarian rifts. The denominations in Iraq arent recognized by Americans, he explains. The underlying attitude is, Theyre not us.
The abysmal plight of Iraqs Christians, needless to say, long predates the arrival of the Americans. Since the first century, when Christianity first came to Nineveh province, Iraqi Christians have been cursed by geography. With its fields of mud burnt red by the sun, much of Nineveh the ancestral home to a large number of Assyrian Christians that runs from Mosul to the Syrian border in Iraqs northwest corner resembles a Martian landscape. Thousands of feet above the plains, a small U.S. outpost atop the Sinjar mountain range shines at night, a beacon to many of the Christians, Yazidis and other persecuted minorities who populate the province below, a number of whom initially greeted the Americans as their saviours. But having been massacred over the centuries by Ottomans, Kurds and Arabs alike, most Christians know better than to rely on the goodwill of others. Nor is this knowledge merely the result of their experiences under foreign rule. Even though the Christian presence in Iraq predates the arrival of Islam, in the Iraqi Muslim imagination, Christians will always be emissaries of the West. Because they operate a disproportionate share of Iraqs liquor, music and beauty shops industries deemed sinful in various interpretations of Islam insurgents accuse them of embodying the licentiousness of all things American and have burned hundreds of liquor stores to the ground. Where Iraq was once awash in pop music CDs sold by Christian vendors, a more recent CD circulating in Mosul features the beheading of Christians.
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It was against this backdrop that Fadis family raced to save his kidnapped nephew from a similar fate. Luckily, Fadis father, a doctor, was able to produce the US$30,000 ransom. Eight days after his abduction, the captors released Fadis nephew. But the ordeal shook his family so badly that, a month later, they spirited the boy off to Jordan. If, today, we all had a place to go, tomorrow there wouldnt be a Christian left in Iraq, Fadi says. As for Fadi himself, who first applied to leave Iraq in 1998 while Saddam Hussein was in power, last years kidnapping made him even more anxious to flee. With the doors to the United States sealed shut, he placed his faith in other Western countries. While over 40,000 Iraqi Christians have fled their homeland since the invasion, last year the United States permitted fewer than 200 Iraqis to immigrate. As for the thousands of remaining Christian refugees, until recently, the UNs High Commissioner for Refugees didnt even bother referring their cases to the United States, knowing the country had no inclination to take them in.
Their case files amount to proof of Washingtons callousness. There is, for instance, the Iraqi Christian who saw her husband gunned down in the street. Following the assassination of two more family members, she fell into a crippling depression, unable to care for her two-year-old child. Caught up in a bureaucratic tangle, her American relatives have gotten exactly nowhere trying to get her out of Iraq. Another sister of an Iraqi-American, a Christian woman with four children, lost her husband, killed while serving as a U.S. military interpreter. Her family, too, has been reduced to pleading her case before unconcerned State Department officials. A heartfelt advocate for Iraqi Christians, Representative Jan Schakowsky, a Democrat from Illinois, calls embassies, by her account, at all hours of the night, but the policy since the war began is, Were not granting asylum. ... There is no processing of refugees from Iraq. The reasons derive from post-September 11 security restrictions and, in the telling of a senior administration official, from the fiction that Iraqis, now liberated, no longer endure systematic persecution.
Fortunately for Fadi, other Western governments have offered a more candid assessment, and, after seven years of waiting, one just informed him he will be granted his visa. He can barely contain his glee. I feel happy because I go to a new place where I feel free, he says. But his case counts as a rare exception. Before leaving Baghdad last month, I got a taste of the desperation felt by Iraqi Christians left behind. Samira, a sad woman in her fifties who comes once a day to cook for an Iraqi friend, showed me a photograph of a woman in her thirties. She had a favour to ask: Would I marry her daughter? The proposition had nothing to do with me, per se. She simply wants to get her Christian daughter out of Iraq. Last year, insurgents murdered Samiras son. As a sign of respect, his Muslim friends transported the body to Najaf for burial in the Shia holy city. A kind gesture, to be sure, but Samira wants her son buried in a Christian cemetery. The sons Shia friends refuse to surrender his body, and, not being Muslim herself, there is no one to whom she can effectively or safely plead her case. Like most Iraqi Christians, she has nowhere to turn.
bump for publicity
Bump to self for later read.
Bump
But.........Islam is the "religion of peace". How could this be? Surely the vast majority of peace loving Muslims wouldn't allow this to happen in Iraq's new "democracy" right? Sigh...
We are so blessed in our country.
Christians in many ther parts of the world are seen as criminals. If the ACLU gets their way, we would go down that path.
Christians have it bad in Muslim nations.
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Why aren't we giving immigration preference to Iraqi Christians? Our military needs translators, and as Christians, they're going to be more loyal than other Arabs. And letting them come here brings in a million highly loyal and grateful folk.
BUMP
Good question. I wonder about that.
Amen! Good people like these would not only make a very positive contribution, but are more than willing, able, and motivated to do so. They certainly would be illegals coming in to suck on the welfare teat at tax payers' expense! By, these good Iraqi Chrisitians are more than welcome to immigrate here.
Dear Freepers in Christ,
Please keep me posted whenever any of you post articles on Iraqi Christians or on Christians in any part of the Middle East.
In The Risen Lord,
"Why aren't we giving immigration preference to Iraqi Christians? Our military needs translators, and as Christians, they're going to be more loyal than other Arabs. And letting them come here brings in a million highly loyal and grateful folk."
You could have asked a similar question in about 1938, except you'd have to substitute "German Jews" for "Iraqi Christians."
Thanks for posting, Coleus.
Thank you for posting. It makes me sick that so many Christians are persecuted for their faith. I pray that one day Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Palestine, Libya, Algeria, Iraq, Tunisia, Morocco and all of the other formerly Christian nations allow their handful of remaining Christians to live in peace.
Dear Freepers in Christ,
I came across an interesting article regarding Iraqi Christians and Catholics in the Northern City of Mosul in Iraq from ASIA NEWS.
Here it is.
IN THE RISEN LORD JESUS CHRIST,
http://www.asianews.it/view.php?l=en&art=5961
21 April, 2006
IRAQ
Police station set up near Mosul Church; Christians fears and courage
There are fears that the two buildings will be an easy target of attack. Despite their misgivings, believers continue to fill the church for mass. The parish priest said Easter celebrations have never been as well attended as this year.
Mosul (AsiaNews)
The opening of a police station near a church in Mosul gives cause for great concern to the local community. What in any other country would be a guarantee of more security has the opposite effect in Iraq. Here, churches and police are the preferred targets for attacks and reprisals of all kinds, Fr Ragheed Ganni told AsiaNews. He is the Chaldean parish priest of the Church of the Holy Spirit, already the victim of an attack in summer of 2004. Last month, they opened a police station next door to my church.
If this means a guarantee of security for you, for us, it poses a great danger. The priest talked of an Easter of explosions and fear but added that he had never seen such a large number of believers at the celebrations as this year.
More than four months after historic elections in Iraq, we are still without a government, said Fr Ganni. There is no security to manage the escalation of violence of daily blasts and murders. The idea is gaining ground that human beings are the least precious commodity, in fact, that they cost nothing. The aim of these criminals seems to be kill as many you like, there are many in Iraq and they are worth less than animals.
Despite bomb blasts and threats, Easter celebrations in Mosul were well attended by the community. On Good Friday, the city woke up to a massive blast: a car bomb struck a police station, killing six people and injuring dozens. Another blast went off in the street leading to the Church of the Holy Spirit, frequented by civilians, army and police, said the parish priest. Despite all this, the churches were packed with people, even more than last year.
Saturday was little better. There were explosions everywhere from the early morning, but we were heartened by the baptism of 10 children. At 4pm, we celebrated the Easter vigil and on Sunday, in the presence of more than 1,500 people, we held Sunday Mass.
On Easter Monday, believers going to church came in for intimidation. Fr Ganni himself received a telephone call early in the morning, warning of three car bombs the vehicles were allegedly encircling the church in a bid to attack it. Fortunately, it was untrue, but in any case, we would have had no authorities to turn to for protection. At times, we get the impression that no one in the world can hear the voice of the innocent who cry.
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