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Iraq's shrinking Christian minority struggles to survive

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  • Iraq's shrinking Christian minority struggles to survive

    Iraq's shrinking Christian minority struggles to survive

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 16, 2004 Saturday 4:44 PM GMT

    BAGHDAD Oct 16 -- The coordinated attacks on five Baghdad churches
    Saturday sent tremors through Iraq's small Christian community, which
    finds itself being set adrift amid a tide of rising Islamic extremism.

    The dawn attacks across Baghdad caused no casualties but were the
    latest assault on Iraq's ethnic mosaic as insurgents seek to sow
    dissension among Iraq's Muslim majority and dwindling Christian
    community.

    Five explosions in the span of an hour was one more blow to an
    embattled minority that was shrinking even before the recent spate
    of attacks.

    The community stood at 1.4 million people according to a 1987 census
    but has since shrivelled to 700,000 during a turbulent period of war
    and years of crippling sanctions.

    "The attackers have one goal: sowing strife in the heart of Iraqi
    society. But they will not destroy our unity," said Yunadam Kanna,
    a Christian representative in Iraq's interim parliament.

    "Churches are easy targets because they are places of worship open
    to all.""

    Iraq's Christian community, numbering just three percent of Iraq's
    25 million population, has been heavily targeted in the unrest that
    has swept Iraq following last year's US-led invasion and some have
    picked up and left.

    At the start of August, four attacks against Christian targets in
    Baghdad and two others in Mosul left 10 people dead and 50 injured in
    what the government said was the work of suspected al-Qaeda operative
    Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi.

    Liquor stores, owned by Christians, have been blown up by Islamic
    militants. And Christian families, many considered wealthy by Iraqi
    standards, have been targeted by kidnappers for huge ransoms.

    Following the August bombings, Iraq's Displacement and Migration
    Minister Pascale Icho Warda, herself a Christian, said 40,000
    Christians had left Iraq.

    Shocked by the latest outbreak of violence, the patriarch of the
    Chaldean Church, Monsignor Emmanuel Delly, said: "If the government
    is powerless, what can we do.

    "We call on them (attackers) not to touch the holy sites."

    Iraq's provisional constitution, signed in March, guarantees freedom
    for all religions, but it has not assuaged the anxieties of the
    small community amid the torrent of violence and identity politics
    sweeping Iraq.

    The 1970 constitution adopted under the old regime also guaranteed
    freedom of religion and prohibited any religious discrimination.

    It also acknowledged that the people of Iraq consisted of "two
    principal nationalities," Arab and Kurd, and "other nationalities"
    whose rights were considered legitimate.

    In December 1972, the head of the ruling Baath Party identified these
    by decree as the Assyrians, Chaldeans and Syriacs.

    The Chaldeans, whose 600,000 people represent the majority of
    Christians in Iraq, are an oriental rite Catholic community.

    Their church emerged from the Nestorian doctrine, which it renounced
    in the 16th century while preserving its rites. Former deputy prime
    minister Tareq Aziz, currently in US custody, is the best known of
    the Chaldeans.

    The Assyrians, believed to number about 50,000, are Christians who
    remained faithful to the Nestorian doctrine.

    The Nestorian church became a dissident movement in 431 AD after
    the Council of Ephesus. They affirm that Christ has two separate
    personalities -- namely human and divine -- and not a single
    personality possessing both human and divine nature as Roman
    Catholicism and Orthodoxy believe.

    In Iraq, there are also Catholic and Orthodox Syriacs, Catholic and
    Orthodox Armenians, and since the time of the British mandate after
    World War I, Protestants, Anglicans and Roman Catholics.

    Many Iraqi Christians still speak Aramaic-Syriac, a dialect of Aramaic,
    the language of Christ. During the 1970s, bilingual cultural magazines
    in Arabic and Syriac were published and radio and television programmes
    were transmitted in Aramaic.

    In the northern region of Kurdistan, Christians number about 150,000,
    mostly Chaldeans.

    Since the fall of former president Saddam Hussein's secular regime,
    many of Iraq's Christians have kept a lower profile for fear of being
    equated with the largely Christian US-led forces in the country.
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