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Terror's next target in Iraq

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  • Terror's next target in Iraq

    World Magazine
    Aug 6 2004

    Terror's next target in Iraq

    CHURCH ATTACKS: In the first coordinated assault on one of Iraq's
    most important minorities, Islamist insurgents murder 12 and injure
    60 Christians at worship. The success of the interim government's
    response represents the next test of its legitimacy - and of national
    unity in post-Saddam Iraq | by Mindy Belz


    Most churches in Iraq hold services Sunday evening for a simple
    reason: Here, as in the rest of the Muslim world, the Christian
    Sabbath is a workday. So the coordinated attacks that struck the
    Christian community on Aug. 1 arrived in time for maximum carnage.

    At six in the evening - just as most services begin - a car bomb exploded
    outside the Armenian church in Karada, a Baghdad neighborhood that
    was the heart of the Christian community before and during British
    colonial rule and where old-line churches post-Saddam thrive. Minutes
    later an explosion rocked the Catholic Syriac Church, also in Karada.
    Then, as the Chaldean Church of St. Peter and St. Paul emptied from
    evening mass, two blasts hammered the compound. Bombers also struck
    Mar Elya church in north Baghdad. At nearly the same time and 220
    miles north, two car bombs exploded in central Mosul outside Mar
    Polis church.

    Glass sprayed into nearby homes, parked cars erupted in flames, and
    massive plumes of smoke rose into the air. Fellow worshippers crawled
    over the wreckage in search of Bibles, crosses on necklaces, and
    other tokens to identify the scattered portions of the dead.
    Ambulances and police swarmed. U.S. Army helicopters responded to the
    smoke visible miles away, patrolling low overhead what had become - in
    less than an instant - a war zone.

    Chaldean Catholic priest Faris Toma stood in the wreckage outside his
    church where dozens of cars were upended and several propelled into
    the sanctuary by the force of the blasts. `We cannot understand why
    or how they could do something like this,' he said. `All we can do is
    ask God to give them forgiveness and grant us peace.'

    Remarkably, out of hundreds of worshippers attending targeted
    churches and the snugly built neighborhoods where they reside, the
    attacks killed a dozen people - 10 from Mr. Toma's church - and injured
    about 60. If the deaths were miraculously minimized, the
    choreographed stab at Iraq's Christian minority maximized the fear
    factor. More than a year after war ended and insurgency began, it was
    the first attack on Christian houses of worship.

    Iraqi Christians now feel they are not only a minority but a targeted
    minority,' said Nabil Haj, a U.S. military engineer and
    Lebanese-American who attends church in Baghdad. `Even evangelical
    practice and preaching is under attack.'

    Newer churches in Baghdad say they received threats ahead of the
    bombings. At the Christian Missionary Alliance church two blocks from
    the Catholic compound, where the worst attack took place, a warning
    letter from the `Fallujah Mujahideen' arrived four days before the
    Sunday bombings. Churchgoers told WORLD that they have received a
    variety of intimidating messages from militants ever since the
    Fallujah siege by U.S. forces in April, linking them to Western
    religion and vowing retaliation. Those threats could signal that
    Christians - numbering somewhere between 700,000 and 800,000 - are next
    up on the terrorists' target list.

    Experts increasingly pinpoint Fallujah and the surrounding Anbar
    province as the sending agent behind bombings. The dusty city of
    300,000, located in the desert 40 miles west of Baghdad, is a locus
    of Saddam loyalists and Islamic fanatics. U.S. forces fought
    unsuccessfully - from ground and air - to control the city and rout
    opposition elements after Fallujahans killed four U.S. defense
    contractors and hung their bodies from a bridge last spring.

    Under a controversial pact, U.S. forces have agreed not to enter
    Fallujah at all, leaving local militias and other militants in the
    hands of former Saddam loyalists fueled by anti-American clerics. In
    five months, the 4th Marine Regiment's Second Battalion has engaged
    in over 200 firefights in the area, absorbing close to 300 casualties
    while killing more than 1,000 guerrillas, according to former
    assistant secretary of defense F.J. Bing West, who is writing a book
    on the fight for Fallujah.

    An insurgency with churchgoers and Bible believers at its bullseye
    comes as many churches, particularly those launched after the war,
    are straining at the highest points on the growth chart. Just weeks
    before the bombing, Christian Missionary Alliance pastor Ghassan
    Thomas told WORLD his Sunday evening services - which began only a year
    ago with less than 50 attendants - attract more than 450 worshippers.
    The church meets in an already expanded house and is looking for its
    third home. Mr. Thomas was administering communion Sunday evening
    when the blasts at the Catholic complex two streets over shook the
    Alliance building, knocking books from shelves and causing lights to
    flutter. `It shook the whole building,' he said, `and people started
    screaming and leaving.'

    How many Christians will come back is the question church leaders are
    asking themselves. `Many people can no longer go to church regularly,
    they are forced by bombings to meet in homes' one pastor said. `With
    this explosion many Christians are planning to leave Iraq.'

    (In the aftermath, few Iraqi Christians who spoke to WORLD were
    willing to be identified in print, obviously fearing for their
    safety. Underscoring the concern, an Iraqi employee of The New York
    Times covering the church bombings had his name withheld from the
    paper's report.)

    Church leaders find themselves in an unhappy predicament: posting
    guards and setting up walls around facilities where they have worked
    hard to be good neighbors.

    At St. Peter and St. Paul church, Catholic groundskeepers bolted
    gates normally left ajar. At the Alliance church, workers hauled an
    oversized flatbed truck to one end of the street as a barrier. At the
    other end, they posted guards next to a barricade of bricks, logs,
    and cardboard barrels. At St. George's Anglican Church, an
    evangelical congregation whose building was renovated through joint
    efforts of Iraqi Christians and U.S. chaplains, signs advertising
    English-language services came down.

    At the Presbyterian church in Mosul, one of Iraq's longer-standing
    congregations started by missionaries in 1820, both pastor and
    congregation have found themselves under increasing vigilance. Last
    month the pastor's own wedding was moved north to an affiliate church
    in Dohuk after threats from a local mosque to disrupt his services.
    Twelve guards stood watch outside during the marriage ceremony, even
    after it was relocated. During the Sunday blasts, Iraqi police
    defused a bomb near the Presbyterian church after two bombs went off
    outside Mar Polis, a traditional Aramaic-speaking church in central
    Mosul, killing one and wounding at least 15.


    Christians have lived in Iraq for 2,000 years. The Assyrian Church of
    the East is the oldest in Iraq; it was founded in a.d. 33. Chaldeans,
    many of whom continue to speak and/or worship in Aramaic, the
    language of Jesus, are the majority among the descendants of early
    Mesopotamian Christians. Orthodox churches blend with Eastern-rite
    Catholics who recognize the pope but maintain some measure of their
    own autonomy - all in all, making for a liturgical soup of Armenian
    Catholics and Armenian Orthodox, Syrian Catholics and Syrian
    Orthodox, along with Greek Orthodox and Greek Catholic communities,
    Anglicans, Baptists, and evangelicals. Christians reportedly numbered
    1 million before the 1991 Gulf War, when many left for the West. Now
    their numbers are around 800,000.

    Since the most recent war, churches are growing in both number and
    size. More importantly, they are acquiring a multiethnic face, as
    Assyrians and Chaldeans, Kurds and Turkomans, even former Baathists
    and an occasional Muslim convert - freed from the police state - can
    worship together. Clergymen, too, have formed transethnic and
    transdenominational ties because for the first time in memory they
    can travel the country freely and meet together. A pastor's
    conference last spring attracted dozens of clergymen, including many
    recent returnees.

    Once isolated congregations also are learning to work in partnership
    with one another and with parachurch groups. The St. Peter and St.
    Paul church, which also includes a seminary and health clinic, has
    been a focus for community outreach and charity. Given the facility's
    extensive damage and security concerns, however, outreach may have to
    wait.

    Muslims and Christians showed signs of solidarity in the
    traditionally mixed neighborhoods of Karada and elsewhere. After all,
    mosques were first bombed months ago. One local glass shop offered to
    repair church windows at wholesale. Muslim neighbors showed up at
    hospitals to check on burn victims. Christian clergy visited Muslim
    homeowners nearby to see whether they suffered damage.

    Iraq's Shiite and Sunni leaders issued public statements against the
    attacks. Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani denounced the `criminal campaign
    targeting Iraq's unity, stability, and independence.' The Association
    of Sunni Muslim Scholars condemned the attacks as `totally remote
    from any religious or humanitarian norms.'

    Iraq's national security adviser Mowaffak al-Rubaie said Christians
    should not interpret the attacks as a warning to leave Iraq. `We
    can't afford to lose any of them, to be quite honest with you,' Mr.
    Rubaie said. `Iraq will be a big, big loser. This blow is going to
    unite Iraqis.'

    Government leaders have increased awareness about the importance of
    the Christian minority, which has a strong business presence, higher
    education levels, and more open and steady ties to the West.

    Deputy Prime Minister Barham Saleh promised beefed-up security near
    churches. He said authorities would hunt down those responsible. `The
    Christian community in Iraq is respected and valued,' he told
    reporters. `They are loyal Iraqi citizens, and any attack on them is
    an attack on all decent Iraqis,' adding, `We are determined to defeat
    the terrorists who so brutally seek to disrupt social peace.'

    With singed cars as a reminder and fear as a companion, Christian
    survivors are hard-pressed to find a silver lining in the week's
    death toll. But many may now more purposefully join Muslims, truck
    drivers, government leaders, and U.S. soldiers who - left to puzzle
    together the who, what, when, and where - more urgently want to know
    how to stop the killings. - -

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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