Orthodox Voices
Thursday, July 10
IRAQI CHRISTIANS IN NEED
Registration no: 1119427
June 23, 2008, 4:00 a.m.
Another Surge Needed
Support the Christians in Iraq.
By Robin Harris
In Iraq the "surge" is working, but at the same time the Iraqi
Christian community is dying. Hardly anyone seems to know, and those
who know don't seem to care. In former times, the violent persecution
of Christians in a country effectively under the rule of a Western,
Christian power would have been unthinkable. But not, it seems, in the
enlightened 21st century.
The names may be complicated. The facts are not. The Chaldo-Assyrians
constitute what remains of the original, non-Arab, population of the
area. Iraq's principal Christian communities today belong to the
Chaldean (Catholic) Church, Syrian Orthodox Church, and the Assyrian
Church of the East. All use Aramaic, the language spoken by Christ.
Despite successive persecutions and constant pressures, Christianity
has continued in Iraq since, according to tradition, it was brought
there by St. Thomas the Apostle.
But Christianity now faces extinction. The 1987 census recorded 1.4
million Christians in Iraq. Numbers began to drop as conditions
deteriorated after the first Gulf War. There were, though, around
800,000 at the time of the U.S-led invasion of 2003. Of these, about
half have now left the country altogether, while more than 100,000 are
internally displaced persons.
There is no mystery as to why. With other (still smaller) religious
minorities, such as Yazidis and Mandaeans, Iraq's Christians are
suffering sustained persecution. While constituting less than 4
percent of the population of Iraq, Christians constitute 40 percent of
the refugees leaving the country. Most of these have found refuge in
Syria and Jordan, where they are living in utterly degrading
conditions. The current rate of Christian exodus is estimated at about
2,000 a day.
Members of all religions have been affected by the violence since the
toppling of Saddam Hussein. But Christians are in a worse position
since they suffer directly because of their Christian faith. Targeted
by Islamist extremists, they are confronted by demands to convert,
death threats, looting of their homes and businesses, systematic
intimidation, abductions for ransom, bombings, and frequently murder.
Because Christians are known to be weak they and their property are
also prey to gangsterism. Churches and church leaders are particular
targets for Islamists. The 65-year-old Chaldean archbishop Paulos
Faraj Rahho of Mosul was abducted and murdered in March. Numerous
priests and deacons have been tortured and shot or beheaded. At least
40 churches have been burnt.
The Iraqi Christian community has disappeared altogether from many
areas of the country. Baghdad is rapidly emptying of its once
flourishing Christian community, whose members have fled north to the
traditional Christian homeland in the towns and villages of the plains
of Nineveh. But here too they are hugely vulnerable. The regionally
dominant Kurds, with whom relations have historically been bad and
occasionally bloody, have little interest in offering protection. The
Shia-dominated government in Baghdad is distant, unsympathetic, and
has its own interests and problems. Even the relative success of the
U.S. surge strategy has brought difficulties for the Christians,
because the struggle with al-Qaeda is now focused on the regional
centre Mosul, where Christians had hoped to find security. The
Christian population itself is unused to bearing arms. It has no
militia to defend it. It has no regional protectors. It is subject to
pressures of illegal land confiscation and annexation, aimed at
pushing it out of its last refuge.
And an immediate humanitarian crisis threatens. It is estimated that
6,000 Christian families (30,000 people) in towns and villages of the
Nineveh plains lack ration books. The aid which comes to the region is
channeled through the Kurdish authorities so, naturally enough, is
directed to the Kurds, at the expense of the less powerful Christians.
NGOs are almost entirely absent. Open sewage flows through streets
separating ruined or makeshift structures, where families live in fear
and squalor. There is little work, less education, and no hope.
The situation can thus correctly and without exaggeration be described
as desperate. The best long-term hope for the Christians is the
success of America's and the Iraqi government's war against al-Qaeda.
Stability is what all Iraqis need — and the Christians, as the
weakest, need it more than most. But under current conditions, the
Christian community will simply not survive to see the benefits.
Immediate, focused action is required to offer effective protection
and aid. Giving Christians their own police force and local autonomy
as well as guaranteeing humanitarian relief — both for the internally
displaced population and the refugees — must be the priorities.
Unfortunately, until now there has been a conspiracy of near-silence.
Some in the U.S. administration have been unwilling to have public
attention drawn to the problem, for fear it would undermine support
for the surge strategy. Other countries — with the notable exception
of Germany — do not wish to do so either, for fear that they will be
expected to take in more refugees. (Britain has a particularly
shameful record in this respect). Meanwhile, diplomatic circles have a
politically correct repugnance against any initiative directed towards
helping a particular religious group — especially, of course, a
Christian one. At an international level, only the pope has called for
urgent action to avert the tragedy.
America and her allies have now to decide whether they are prepared to
see the imminent extinction of Iraq's nearly-2,000-year-old Christian
community. Such an outcome is not inevitable, but it would certainly
be irreversible. If ever there were a test for the West's — and
America's — Christian conscience, this is it.
— Robin Harris is consultant director of the London-based Politeia
think tank and a former adviser to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
source: http://www.icin.org.uk/pages/Another_Surge_Needed.html
IRAQI CHRISTIANS IN NEED
Registration no: 1119427
Christianity became rooted in Iraq from the first Christian centuries.
The Christian community of Iraq has been an important part of the
fabric of Iraqi society at all times.
They made substantial contributions to the emergence of the Abbasid
civilization that flourished on Iraqi soil as well as the building of
modern Iraq. They have always been proud of their country in which
they lived from ancient times and to which they are attached by bonds
of history that go back to the Assyrians and the Babylonians.
Recent attacks on the Christians of Iraq, their churches and their
religious leaders
The recent attacks on the Christians of Iraq, their churches and their
religious leaders and the resulting displacement are heartbreaking. It
is estimated that more than half of the Christian population has fled
the country and a lot more displaced within the country to safer
areas. UNHCR have reported that 44% of asylum seekers reaching Syria
since their register started in 2003 are Christians, despite the fact
that Christians form only 4% of the Iraqi population.
While neighbouring countries have been generous in receiving the
displaced people, resources are limited and many are reduced to
dependence on relatives who live in more prosperous countries. Those
who do not have any such help need immediate support and it is those
people that ICIN intends to reach for.
As Christians we continue to pray asking our Benevolent Creator to
protect his creation in Iraq both Christian and Muslim, and while we
pray for all world leaders that they may be enlightened to take the
right decisions in steering our beloved country to safety, we feel we
want to make some contribution towards the sufferings of those
displaced people who do not have the privilege of somebody to protect
them.
It is the suffering of those vulnerable displaced people that our
charity tries to address by giving financial help through our churches.
Meanwhile, the tragedy of the Iraqi Christians continues.
Labels:
Eastern Churches,
Iraq refugees,
War
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