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October 19-25, 2008 Issue |
Posted 10/14/08 at 12:00 PM
BAGHDAD, IRAQ — Leaders are calling
for Americans to come to the aid of the Church in Iraq in the face of continued
violence targeting Christians. Two Christian men were killed Oct. 4 in Mosul,
contributing to a “climate of panic” among the small community there.
Hazim Thomaso Youssif, 40, and Ivan
Nuwya, 15, were both killed in the Iraqi city, contributing to a long list of
attacks against Christians in the war-torn country. Youssif was ambushed in
front of his clothing store, and Nuwya was shot to death in front of his home
located near the local mosque of Alzhara.
A source for Asia News in Mosul
reported that there is a “climate of panic” among the Christian community there
and that the city “has become the holocaust of the Christians.”
Father Ninous Ibraheem knows about
that panic.
He remembers how two years ago,
having made the precarious journey from Syria to Iraq without incident, he
prepared to offer Mass in Dora, the Christian area in southern Baghdad.
Immediately after Mass, Father
Ninous walked into the church’s courtyard to the blast of a car bomb. Another
was detonated moments later as it rolled through the fleeing congregation. At
the same time, another church within walking distance suffered the same terror.
It’s a risk Father Ninous takes
every time he returns.
The next time he went back, in
February of this year, only one church of the original 13, St. Shmoni,
remained. “One of them was turned into a mosque,” he said through a translator,
his voice full of exasperation. “It became routine that people thought there
was no one doing services.”
Forty-seven Christians were killed
in Iraq in 2007, including three priests. Among them was Father Ragheeb Aziz
Ghanni, who was killed with three subdeacons June 3 while leaving church after
Mass.
The Christian community has already
dwindled to less than half its number from five years ago. Some 1 million
Christians lived in Iraq in 2003; today that number is barely 400,000.
Father Ninous reported that more
than 45,000 Chaldeans have immigrated to Syria, where he has served for the
past two years. Every time he returns to Iraq, he finds the situation in
Baghdad’s Dora neighborhood a little more secure, yet in need of more relief.
“The last time I went to do services,” he lamented, “I had to go door to door
just to get people to come out.”
The October violence in Mosul, in
northern Iraq, shattered the calm impression left from recent statements by
Bishop Andreas Abouna, auxiliary bishop of the Chaldean Church in Baghdad, who
reported an improvement in conditions for Iraqi Christians.
“The situation is much better,” he
told the Register recently, on a visit to London. “Over the last three months
it has been improving … You can go anywhere.”
“Bishop Abouna lives in northern
Baghdad, and the situation in central Baghdad is very different,” Father Ninous
explained. “We don’t have water, churches, bishops ... nothing.”
Those Christians remaining in the
Dora area of Baghdad, Father Ninous said, stay by choice because they do not
want to be refugees. “The only way those Christians survived in Baghdad is
because of the assistance that’s coming from outside,” he said. “Those who
returned did so because they could not afford to live elsewhere. Their life is
miserable: no water, food, medicine or doctors.”
Conditions are especially difficult
after dark. “If someone gets hurt or killed in the middle of the night, no one
dares to go to the hospital,” Father Ninous noted. “They’re afraid they’ll be
attacked by the police, or that their car will be detonated. If they stay alive
through the night, they do, but there’s no one to assist them.”
Such oppression has hit the economy,
too, with price gouging running rampant, according to the priest. “Every family
needs $1,000 a month just to survive,” he said. “There are generators outside
on the streets, and they have to purchase electricity on a monthly basis. They
need $20 daily for gas to pour into the generators. The water that comes every
two weeks — sometimes once a month — is so dirty that not even the flies and
ants will go in it.”
Ancestral ties, however, run very
deep. “They don’t want to leave their ancestral homeland,” said Juliana
Taimoorazy, founder and president of the Iraqi Christian Relief Council, based
in Chicago. “This was the first nation to convert in light of the Gospel, and
the people still speak Aramaic, the language Jesus spoke. Many Iraqi Christians
want to return; they don’t want to be refugees. But in order to return, they
need basic necessities.”
Taimoorazy thought it crucial to
mention that most Muslims do not show hatred toward Christians. “In fact,” she
emphasized, “there have been cases where Muslim neighbors have come to the
assistance of Christians under attack.”
Congressman Thaddeus McCotter,
R-Mich., chairman of the House Republican Policy Committee and a practicing Catholic,
has heard of these conditions from his constituents. “The Chaldean community in
America is painfully aware of this because of their familial and community
ties,” he said. “More than half of the community is displaced, and there’s
trouble getting in humanitarian relief.”
He
expressed his concerns in a fax to Pope Benedict XVI before the Holy Father’s
meeting with Iraq’s Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in July. “The Pope did raise
the question,” McCotter confirmed, “but we’re not seeing any constructive steps
being taken yet. The Prime Minister needs to step up to the plate and allow his
people the God-given right of the free exercise of religion. So many Americans
have made the ultimate sacrifice to bring that God-given liberty to Iraq.”
Promoting liberty, said McCotter, is
the core, the bedrock, of American foreign policy: “It is a moral good. Doing
the right thing leads to the right results. We don’t want to give the
impression that this is something that can be put off to the next presidency.”
Bishop Bawai Soro, of the Chaldean
Catholic Church in California, also exhorted Christians to act quickly.
“American Catholics truly need to
know about the plight of their sisters and brothers in Christ in Iraq so they
can help them,” he said. “They have been persecuted, kidnapped, and murdered by
Islamic fundamentalists so much that almost half of their population has left
Iraq already. The Maliki government … has not been able to provide any security
for this 3% to 4% segment of the general Iraqi population.”
Bishop Soro, known among Chaldeans
as Mar Bawai, pointed to an initiative by Bishop Sarhad Jammo: a formal plan
for protecting Iraqi Christians, which both of them presented to the National
Security Council in July.
“The initiative has had a lot of
support among certain U.S. government departments, but obviously not all,” he
said. “The majority of Iraqi Christians are agreeing with his initiative.”
The initiative formulates the rights
of Iraqi Christians, elevates the status of the Chaldean, Syriac and Assyrian
Christians to an equal footing with that of the Iraqi Arabs and Kurds
(Muslims), grants them the right to autonomy (both moral and territorial), and
establishes a “fair system” for distribution of funds needed to complete
projects and other demands of Christians.
Mar Bawai is hopeful about the
initiative, but knows of the great task ahead. “Given the severity of the
damage already done to the soul and psyche of the Christian community,” he
said, “it is not even expected that the fulfillment of such a brilliant plan …
will fully succeed to secure and protect Christianity in Iraq and preserve it
in the Middle East.”
The bishop, who recently came into
communion with the Catholic Church, along with almost 3,000 members of his
formerly Assyrian Church of the East congregation, made one final appeal to
Christians worldwide: “The future is truly bleak, but as Christians, we thank
the Lord for every attempt people make to save it. Please do your best to
help.”
Stephen Mirarchi writes
from Tampa,
Florida.
Information
Some organizations assisting Iraqi Christians:
• Catholic Near East Welfare Association: CNEWA.org
• Franciscan Foundation for the Holy Land: FFHL.org
• Iraqi Christian Relief Council: IraqiChristianRelief.org
• Assyrian Aid Society of America: AssyrianAid.org
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