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Mixed blessings for Iraqi Christians, year after war against Saddam

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  • Mixed blessings for Iraqi Christians, year after war against Saddam

    Agence France Presse
    March 15, 2004 Monday

    Mixed blessings for Iraqi Christians, a year after war against Saddam

    by PATRICK KAMENKA AND JENNIE MATTHEW

    BAGHDAD


    Faced by rampant insecurity and indiscriminate bombings nearly a year
    after the start of the 2003 war, Iraq's depleted Christian community
    is more frightened but less politically suffocated than under Saddam
    Hussein.

    Never in a position to threaten him, the Christian minority did not
    suffer Saddam's full brutality, but most of its members are overjoyed
    to be rid of the hardships that marked his rule.

    Christian villages were destroyed, churches were ransacked and
    thousands emigrated, particularly after the regime closed bars, clubs
    and off licences after the 1991 Gulf war to harness support from
    conservative Muslims.

    But, with Saddam in prison, none of them is rushing home.

    "For sure, no one wants to come back," says Shmaonel Tito Jajo, the
    owner of an Assyrian social club in central Baghdad, whose three sons
    live abroad.

    "Before it was a dictatorship. Now it is lack of security, it's the
    same."

    For the Christians, like most Iraqis since the collapse of 30 years
    of totalitarianism, the unchecked crime, shootings and bombings of
    today are their primary fear and at the heart of any fleeting
    nostalgia for the past.

    "We have no security, no independence ... (we have lost our)
    government, stability, our president and our ministries," said Father
    Louis Shabi, parish priest of Baghdad's St Joseph Chaldean Church.

    The 2,500 families who worship at his church pray for peace, he said.

    "Saddam's government was for all Iraqi people. We had someone to talk
    to," about our difficulties, he added.

    When asked whether life is better after Saddam than before, Catholic
    Patriarch Emmanuelle-Karim Delly, says, "To be frank, no, not at the
    moment."

    He added, "Christians are afraid to go out, as are Muslims. They are
    more frightened than before, of car bombs, explosions. We didn't have
    this before."

    Off licences in Baghdad and the southern city of Basra have been
    blown up, six or seven Christian social clubs in the capital remain
    shut. Parties rarely linger after dusk.

    Osama "bin Laden said he would target the Christians. Zarqawi the
    Shiites and the Americans," said Entranik Yagish Artim, 51, a guard
    at the Lady of Flowers Armenian Catholic Church.

    Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who has a 10-million-dollar price on his head,
    is the prime suspect behind bombings in the holy city of Najaf and at
    the United Nations in Baghdad.

    "So far, thank God, there is no problem between us and the Muslims.
    We have lived together for two centuries as brothers," said Delly.

    "What concerns us is terrorism, we're afraid of people coming from
    outside our country to put benzine in our fire," said Kaisir Odisha
    Mikho, a manager in an upmarket hotel in Baghdad's smart Karrada
    district.

    For some others, there is no question that they are better off now.

    Despite working at the heavily fortified Assyrian Democratic Movement
    headquarters, once owned by Saddam's fedayeen, party official Boutros
    Khamis Gilyana says that Christians at last can breathe.

    Private schools in Baghdad will begin teaching in Assyrian next year
    and he dismissed attacks on liquor shops in Basra as strikes on the
    British forces, and customers, based there.

    Assyrian parents are also free to name their children freely, after
    being forced to used from a trimmed list by the Baathist regime.

    But others are wary as followers of the revered Shiite leader, Grand
    Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, flex their political muscle in the
    countdown to self-rule before June 30.

    Kurdish demands for federalism in the north are another concern.

    "If there was no racism I would say I'm an Iraqi first. Right now
    there is a kind of racism, Shiite, Sunni, Christian, Kurdish," said
    Jojo.

    Some 750,000 Christians live in Iraq, most of them from the Chaldean
    faith, Iraq's largest Christian denomination, which comes under the
    umbrella of the Roman Catholic Church.

    Before UN sanctions were imposed after Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990,
    two million Christians, about nine percent of the population, lived
    in Iraq.
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