Posted on 12/19/2015 2:34:46 PM PST by NYer

The United States and other nations won't take them because they do not have refugee status. The people among whom they have taken refuge won't grant them residency privileges. And nearby countries, where some have gone, won't allow them to work.
If anyone was ever in a no-man's land, it's the 125,000 or so internally displaced Iraqi Christians in northern Iraq.
As the United States prepares to welcome potentially tens of thousands of refugees from Syria's Civil War, and debate continues over whether the vetting is good enough to weed out jihadists, an international human rights lawyer says it's important to remember that Christians who fled the Islamic State group in Iraq are still holed up in camps in the Kurdish part of that country.
Nina Shea, director of the Hudson Institute's Center for Religious Freedom and former member of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, spearheaded an effort to help Iraqi IDPs resettle in the West. The tens of thousands of Christians who fled Mosul and towns and villages on the Nineveh Plain as ISIS swept in over the summer of 2014 are facing their second winter in Kurdistan.
Shea knows how difficult it is for IDPs to find refuge in the West. She struggled to help an Iraqi Dominican sister get a tourist visa this past spring so that she could testify before Congress about the plight of her fellow Christians in the Middle East.
The 149 IDPs, aged two months to 72 years, come from the Mar Elia church camp in Erbil. They include a former U.S. military translator, a dentist, a scientist, a lab technician, a mechanic, several farmers and small-business owners. Father Douglas Bazi, himself a former hostage of Islamic jihadists, approached Shea this summer for help in getting his IDPs to a better place.
Shea enlisted the help of others, including security expert Joseph Assad, who vetted the refugees to ensure that none posed a security risk to receiving nations. Shea contacted officials in a dozen or more countries. Most, including the U.S., said no.
It was the small Central European country of Slovakia that finally agreed to accept the Iraqi Christians, after being urged to do so by a key Vatican official who is Slovakian.
Earlier in the year, Pope Francis had spoken about the âgenocideâ of Christians taking place in the Middle East and asked Catholic parishes and religious institutions in Europe to welcome refugees flooding into Europe. Shea believes that had something to do with the development.
The first group arrived in Slovakia last week, on a plane chartered by Glenn Beck's Mercury One charity.
From all appearances, it looks like a pretty permanent move. In the first months after ISIS swept in and forced Christians out, there was hope that residents might return after ISIS was defeated. Christian leaders continued to hope that the Church could maintain a presence in lands where the faith has survived for almost two millennia.
But Shea contends that Christian IDPs in Kurdistan have âdim prospects of ever returning home.â They realize that retaking Mosul would be a difficult task, and even if they were able to get back they would find that in many cases their former neighbors appropriated their homes. Baghdad has not supported the Christian community, and some feel that the emerging geopolitical landscape will have no room for Christian communities.
âNobody expects these countries to remain countries,â Shea said in an interview. âThe former CIA director Michael Hayden said in testimony, âIraq no longer exists, Syria no longer exists, and they ain't coming back,' meaning that you're going to have different borders, there's going to be a Kurdistan, a Shia area, a Sunni area. But no one in any government is talking about a Christian area.â
Slovakia is the first country to accept a large group of displaced Iraqi Christians. Four days after Slovakia opened its doors, on December 14, and after closely observing the Center's project, the neighboring Czech Republic announced it too would admit Iraqi Christian IDPs, beginning in January.
Ping!
The US should take them all. They would assimilate easily.
Saw this story last night on 20/20..these Christians are being slaughtered in Iraq for not denouncing their Christian faith, this pastor has risked everything to help these Christians escape and you can bet that Obama wouldn’t want these refugees here since they are NOT Muslim. You could tell last night in the report that they were trying to lump Muslims and Christians together but the pastor had none of it, he mentioned specifically Christians being slaughtered they are the ones who need the help
The fool Obama and his rino and dem allies are so responsible for this extreme injustice of only unvetted Islamic peoples allowed into America to be put on welfare and taken care of by slave taxpayers. But as Jesus teaches in the Word of God, “ Vengence is mine, I will repay”, saith the Lord God of Israel. Those people, Islamic terrorist or any godless pagan religion, or godless Americans who support the evil of the left, and all rinos who steal from Americans, all will stand before the LOrd and Judge of all men, Jesus Christ the Lord, and receive for the good and or evil they have done.
And that is why O won't take them.
So true.
We have been asking the Feds to send us some Syrian and Iraqi Christians for three years now. We have, for better or for worse, a great deal of experience with refugees here and know what to do. The government has always said NO. Now the rumor, and that’s all it is at this point, says that the Feds and Catholic Charities will be sending us 5,000 Syrian Mohammedans. I expect we’ll be fine. Like I said, we know what to do to make this work and God knows the quality of the food around here will get a bump up...but you know, the population of my town is now 15% Mohammedan. We’ve done our part and you’d think that the Latin Church would give a little back to us in the form of our co-religionists but no. It’s having a detrimental effect on membership in the Latin parishes around here; people saying they want nothing to do with a diocese which is clearly selling out our community for Federal money. People are leaving the Latin parishes in large numbers, most of them just staying home on Sundays. Frankly I’m surprised the bishop hasn’t given the Mohammedans one of the empty churches for a mosque.
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