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Compass Feature: Iraqi Christians Fleeing to Jordan, Syria

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  • Compass Feature: Iraqi Christians Fleeing to Jordan, Syria

    Compass Feature: Iraqi Christians Fleeing to Jordan, Syria

    FEATURE NEWS from COMPASS DIRECT
    Global News from the Frontlines

    Summary:
    AMMAN, Jordan, and DAMASCUS, Syria, October 6 (Compass) -- Written threats,
    kidnappings, bombings and murder by Muslim extremists are driving thousands
    of Iraq's minority Christian population out of their ancestral homeland,
    fleeing for safety to neighboring Jordan and Syria. An Orthodox bishop in
    Syria warns that if the emigration continues at the present rate, there
    could be no more Christians in Iraq in 10 years' time. But one Iraqi church
    leader said he believes the Christian community would go underground first,
    to avoid such a possibility. Iraqi Christian refugees interviewed in Amman
    and Damascus admit that recent church bombings in August and September
    helped to spark the recent exodus. But individual attacks carried out
    against them by instigators of the local rising tide of Islamic
    fundamentalism were also a factor. They said they are specifically targeted
    because of their Christian faith and are viewed as collaborators with the
    occupying U.S. forces because "they share the same religion." Militants also
    try to kidnap them because they believe Christians have Western connections
    and therefore access to more money than other Iraqis. Although Iraq's
    2,000-year-old Christian community had expressed hope that a change in
    government would usher in a new era of full religious freedom, they now
    believe that the very existence of the church in Iraq is under threat.

    **********
    Iraqi Christians Fleeing to Jordan, Syria
    Christian leaders say Iraqi church's future threatened.
    by Dale Gavlak

    AMMAN, Jordan, and DAMASCUS, Syria, October 6 (Compass) -- A quiet but
    steady hemorrhaging of Iraq's ancient Christian presence is underway and
    little is being done to stem the flow.

    Written threats, kidnappings, bombings and murder by Muslim extremists are
    driving thousands of Iraq's minority Christian population out of their
    ancestral homeland, fleeing for safety to neighboring Jordan and Syria.

    "The Christians are experiencing an absence of leadership," explained Hala
    Hikmat, a recent arrival from Baghdad who has joined thousands of her
    countrymen in Syria. "We have no leaders who are communicating our urgent
    needs to the authorities, so consequently each person has to take care of
    themselves." Their urgent needs, as expressed by Hikmat, are for protection
    and for a stand to be taken on Christians' behalf.

    A string of church bombings in August and September sent anywhere from
    30,000 to 40,000 Christians fleeing the country, according to estimates by
    Iraqi government and church officials. And they admit that hundreds more
    families out of Iraq's 750,000 Christians are leaving each week.

    The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) disputes these
    figures, saying they are too high. But UNHCR offices in Amman and Damascus
    admit that it is hard to know exactly how many Iraqi Christians are
    currently in Jordan and Syria.

    Of the 4,000 Iraqi families officially registered as refugees with the
    agency in Damascus, more than half are Christians. It is believed that there
    are larger numbers of Iraqis in Syria because it is cheaper to live there
    than in Jordan. Iraqi Christians also said they have stronger cultural and
    spiritual ties to Syria. Syrian authorities estimate there are about 300,000
    Iraqis in the country.

    "The Syrian government has been extremely generous to the Iraqis," explained
    Abdelhamed El Ouali, UNHCR head in Damascus. "It has kept the borders open
    without political considerations. And it believes it has a sacred duty to
    allow Iraqis who need safety to stay as long as necessary. But I am afraid
    if the numbers continue to rise dramatically without any international
    assistance, the situation here could change," he warned.

    A member of Iraq's Chaldean Catholic community, who refused to give her name
    for fear of reprisals against family members, said she lived near one of the
    churches that was bombed in Baghdad last August. "I received a letter
    threatening me. It also claimed that the church where I served would explode
    while I was inside," she said, "unless I paid $300,000.

    "We are poor people and do not have such money, so I took my husband and my
    son and we fled to Syria," she said.

    The synchronized bombings of five churches on August 1 and a car bombing at
    a Baghdad church on September 10 sent shock waves through the Christian
    community. Iraqi officials blamed al-Qaeda ally and Jordanian
    terror-mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi for the attacks.

    A university student visiting Syria from Baghdad said she wanted to attend
    mass at the Chaldean Church of St. Terese of Little Jesus while she was in
    Damascus because there was little opportunity now to worship back home
    without fear. "We can't attend services because all of the churches are
    threatened with explosions," she said. "No one knows what will happen now."

    Most of Iraq's Christians are Chaldean eastern-rite Catholics who are
    autonomous from Rome but who recognize the pope's authority. Other Christian
    denominations in Iraq include Roman and Syrian Catholics; Assyrians; Greek,
    Syrian and Armenian Orthodox; Presbyterians; Anglicans; and evangelicals.

    One Baptist woman from Baghdad who also refused to give her name said she
    had taken to wearing a head-covering when going outside, simply to protect
    herself and her children. "It is very risky now to go out on the streets in
    Iraq without a scarf on your head," she said. "When I dared to do it, people
    shouted at me from a passing car that I had to respect Islamic traditions in
    a country where Muslims are the majority."

    But the woman said that was not the main reason why her family fled Iraq.
    Her husband is a university professor. She explained that because he is a
    Christian and an educated professional, he was a double target for
    militants. "They have been killing university professors. They want to rid
    Iraq of intellectuals.

    "We have received threats and letters saying they have not incurred enough
    casualties. We were frightened and decided to leave."

    Although Iraq's top Shiite Muslim cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani,
    has condemned the assaults on churches as "hideous crimes," Muslim leaders
    have largely refused to criticize the killings of Christians who work for
    the U.S. military or sell liquor. Beauty salons and shops selling music
    cassettes run by Christians have also been targeted because they are deemed
    offensive to strict Islamic practices.

    Christian businessman Sawa Eissa said it was more than threats that forced
    him and his family out of Baghdad and over the border to Jordan. He said
    militants linked to renegade Shiite Muslim cleric Moqtada al-Sadr recently
    kidnapped and tortured him until his family paid ransom money.

    "A gang came to my shop with machine guns and forced me into a car where I
    remained for nine days," he said. "They wanted $200,000 from me.

    "They repeatedly hit me and poured boiling water all over my body. I was
    held hostage until my family paid them $50,000 to finally get me released."

    Eissa, who is in his mid 50s, now walks with a cane and burn marks are
    visible on his body. He said he and his family hope to find permanent refuge
    in Australia because he cannot find legal work in Jordan.

    An Iraqi church leader, Noel Farman, said other Iraqis have also become
    victims of the escalating violence and militant clashes with U.S. and Iraqi
    forces. But because Christians are much fewer in number, he argued, attacks
    against them have a disproportionate impact.

    "Christians in Iraq are becoming more and more of a minority, and they are
    being sacrificed for the sake of the war against terrorism taking place on
    the battlefield of Iraq," he said. "We feel depressed, because we are
    considered like a 'playing card' that outside forces can manipulate for
    their own aims.

    "We Iraqis of various religious and ethnic backgrounds are used to living
    together and enjoying good relationships, but now these relations are being
    exploited," Farman explained, shaking his head.

    The number of Christians in Iraq is expected to drop as long as hostilities
    continue in the country, in line with their already steady decline over the
    past 15 years. Before the 2003 war, Christians represented one million out
    of Iraq's 25 million inhabitants, while a 1987 census recorded their number
    as 1.4 million.

    A Syrian Orthodox bishop, preferring not to be named, said he feared Iraq's
    Christian population could totally disappear within a decade if emigration
    continues at its current rate. But Farman was more hopeful. He said the
    Iraqi church was resilient and would move underground if the circumstances
    worsened.

    Yet even in these troubled times, there are stalwart Christians who are
    choosing not to leave their homeland. A small group of Pentecostal
    Christians who visited Amman recently from Baghdad reported that their
    church is growing, despite some outward pressure. In another instance, a
    family returned to the Iraqi capital in order to start a Bible study with
    women from one of the Catholic churches targeted in the August blasts.

    Without a strong Christian presence in Iraq, or candidates in the upcoming
    elections who insist on a separation between religion and the state, the
    country could move precariously toward becoming a theocracy dominated by
    Islamic parties and clerics. Iraqi Christians said they do not want to leave
    their country, but without the needed recognition and support of their
    rights, staying there is becoming a more difficult proposition.

    END

    **********
    Copyright 2004 Compass Direct


    Compass Direct
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    Santa Ana CA 92799-7250
    USA
    TEL: 949-862-0314
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    E-mail: [email protected]
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