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  • Violence robs Iraq of Christian heritage

    Aljazeera.net, Qatar
    May 14 2006

    Violence robs Iraq of Christian heritage
    By Firas al-Atraqchi

    Sunday 14 May 2006, 8:32 Makka Time, 5:32 GMT


    Christian children sing carols in a church in Baghdad last year


    The flight of religious minorities escaping violence in post-war Iraq
    is threatening to rob the country of its once diverse Christian
    heritage.



    In the early 1980s, Iraq's Christian population numbered 1.4 million
    but economic strife brought on by the war with Iran and UN sanctions
    after the 1991 Gulf War pushed some in the ancient community to
    emigrate.

    Nevertheless, the Christian community continued to enjoy religious
    freedoms in the majority Muslim country until the US-led invasion of
    2003, says Adli Juwaidah, a former director of cultural relations in
    Iraq's ministry of higher education.

    "The relationship with the [former Baathist] ruling regime was good
    and it trusted them, but it is important that significantly this was
    because the Christians did not interfere in politics and did not have
    political ambition," he told Aljazeera.net.

    But after the fall of Baghdad in April 2003, the Christian community
    found itself under attack and tens of thousands have since fled the
    country in fear of religious persecution.

    "The days of officially preached religious tolerance during Saddam's
    rule are gone and freedom to worship now gives way to fear about an
    impending Islamisation of Iraq," a United Nations High Commissioner
    on Refugees (UNHCR) study of Iraqi Christians said in 2004.

    On August 2, 2004, more than a dozen Christian worshippers were
    killed when five Armenian, Assyrian and Chaldean churches came under
    co-ordinated attacks in the capital Baghdad and the northern city of
    Mosul.

    Nine other churches were attacked before the end of the year.

    Shop owners threatened

    In addition to church bombings, Christian shop owners selling alcohol
    have been targeted by groups trying to enforce Islamic laws.

    Stores selling music tapes and CDs, mostly owned by Christian
    merchants, have also been firebombed and their owners told to stop
    "corrupting Islamic society".

    In 2004, leaflets were left at the homes of Christian families
    warning the "men of the households" to adhere to Islamic law and
    ensure that women were dressed "conservatively", which often refers
    to Islamic attire.


    Churches in Baghdad and Mosul
    have come under bomb attacks


    Young Christian women have reported harassment and intimidation in
    the streets to don veils or scarves to cover their hair.

    Fayrouz Hancock, an Iraq-Australian computer programmer now living in
    the US, says Iraqi Christians are fleeing "because of the
    difficulties of practising their faith and leading normal social
    lives in a country that has turned conservative due to the threats
    from extremists".

    She also blames the breakdown in security in the country.

    In early May, the United States Commission on International Religious
    Freedom (USCIRF) warned that religiously motivated attacks signalled
    "an exodus that may mean the end of the presence in Iraq of ancient
    Christian and other communities that have lived on those same lands
    for 2,000 years".

    Michael La Civita, assistant secretary for communications for the
    Pontifical Mission, a Vatican development agency working in the
    Middle East, says there is no "outright" persecution of the Christian
    community.

    Social discrimination

    However, "there is social discrimination of Iraqi Christians. And
    since the collapse of central authority (beginning with the second
    US-led invasion), Iraqi Christians have been targeted by extremists",
    La Civita told Aljazeera.net.

    "As a result, large numbers of Iraqi Christians are leaving Iraq,
    settling in Jordan, temporarily. Because Middle Eastern Christians
    are typically middle class, well educated, speak a number of European
    languages and have family in the diaspora, they find refuge in the
    West."


    Practising their faith has become
    difficult under extremist threats


    Exact figures of how many Christians have left since the US invasion
    are hard to come by. The Iraqi government has not issued any figures
    on the community and many who have left do not register with any
    refugee or aid organisations.

    "Western sources seem uninterested in writing about their number or
    situation," says William Warda, an Assyrian researcher and webmaster
    of Christians of Iraq, a website that monitors news and information
    on the community.

    "Christians of the Middle East have practised a pacifist form of
    Christianity and have always strived to live in peace with their
    neighbours regardless of their religion," he said, adding that the
    Iraqi Christians are afraid to complain fearing retaliation.

    Terrified community

    Soon after the August 2004 church bombings, reports from the
    Iraq-Syria border indicated 40,000 Iraqi Christians had fled to
    Damascus and Aleppo, with thousands more crossing into Turkey.

    La Civita says figures from the Holy See indicate less than 300,000
    Catholics (Chaldean, Syriac and Armenian Catholics) remain in Iraq.

    "The days of officially preached religious tolerance during Saddam's
    rule are gone and freedom to worship now gives way to fear about an
    impending Islamisation of Iraq"

    UNHCR report

    NA, a 35-year-old Christian woman in Basra, who agreed to be
    identified by her initials only, is alarmed by the new Iraq and the
    militias which roam the streets of her once beautiful city.

    A few weeks ago, as she walked to her church a few blocks from her
    home, she and a female friend and their children were accosted by two
    men on a motorbike who shouted anti-Christian slurs.

    "The police were standing there without trying to prevent them from
    harassing us, I was terrified, not only for myself but for the whole
    group and especially the little ones," she said.

    The men on the motorbike left once the entourage entered the
    sanctuary of the church.

    But Basra area churches are also declining in number.

    Death threats

    In previous weeks, two churches closed when their reverends fled for
    Jordan after receiving death threats.

    "The number of Christian families leaving is growing," NA says.

    "I don't know the exact number, but from around me each month more
    than 10 families are fleeing, and that's just the families I can see
    at the Catholic Church."

    While she says she refuses to don the headscarf, she will leave the
    country at the first chance she gets.

    "I fear for my life because they are killing people without any
    reason, and making others leave their jobs just because they are
    Sunni or Shia and the Christians in here are like a very weak old
    person ... we don't know what to do or where to go," she told
    Aljazeera.net.

    Sectarian havens

    With Baghdad and other cities unofficially becoming demarcated into
    sectarian neighbourhoods, Christian families have found themselves
    particularly vulnerable.

    While the cities of Mosul and Falluja, for example, are considered
    Sunni safe havens and Karbala and Najaf are Shia safe havens, there
    are no regions where Christians are a majority and therefore could
    escape to.


    With no militias to protect them,
    Christians are feeling vulnerable

    The result has been that many have left the country entirely.

    Furthermore, Christians do not have the support of militias which
    many Sunnis and Shia are afforded because of tribal affiliations.

    "At least the Kurds, Shia and the Sunnis [have] well equipped
    militias to protect them from wholesale attacks against them, and
    they have allies who will come to their help if there is a civil
    war," Warda said.

    Friar Yousif Thomas, a Chaldean Catholic in Baghdad, says all-out
    sectarian conflict means Christians will be caught in the middle.

    "If a civil war is declared between Shia and Sunni, it is
    comprehensible that Christians cannot defend themselves. The choice
    of going out is very bitter for the majority of them, but do they
    have any other choice?" he says.

    Grim future

    Despite the difficulties in practising their faith and threats, an
    Iraq bereft of Christians is difficult for the community to grasp.

    Christians pre-date Islam by some 700 years and have lived in the
    area known as Mesopotamia (modern day Iraq) since St Thomas the
    Apostle preached in 30 CE and founded the East Syriac Church.

    "I can't imagine an Iraq without Iraqi Christians, says Hancock.

    "Iraqi Christians contributed to Iraq with their skills and loyalty
    to the country. It is sad to watch what happened to them for the last
    three years."
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